Feb 27 TransCanada Corp has offered to sell stakes in two U.S.
natural gas pipelines to fund other projects including its recently
purchased Columbia natural gas network, the Calgary-based company said
on Monday.
The move comes after TransCanada, Canada’s No. 2 pipeline operator,
sold other assets and offered new shares late last year to help fund its
$10.3-billion acquisition of the Columbia Pipeline Group, a deal that
eased concerns over its outlook, which had been hindered by challenges
on crude pipelines.
TransCanada said it would sell its 49.3 percent stake in the Iroquois
system and its remaining 11.8 percent stake in the Portland system,
both serving the U.S. Northeast, to TC PipeLines LP, a partnership in
which it holds a 27-percent stake.
Financial terms were not disclosed, but a 25.9 percent stake in
Iroquois system sold for $286.5 million in 2015, and TransCanada last
year sold a 49.9 percent stake in the Portland pipeline to TC PipeLines
for $223 million.
“This offer demonstrates the meaningful role that TC PipeLines, LP
can fulfill in funding a portion of our C$23 billion near-term capital
program,” TransCanada Chief Executive Russ Girling said in a statement.
According to TransCanada, its near-term projects also include the
Nova Gas Transmission Ltd and Canadian Mainline natural gas systems,
minor crude pipelines and power generation projects in Canada and gas
pipelines in Mexico.
TransCanada’s outlook has been clouded by regulatory challenges to
two proposed pipelines projects from Canada’s oil heartland of Alberta,
Energy East to the East Coast and Keystone XL to the Gulf.
While the United States under President Donald Trump has been
favorable toward Keystone XL, analysts have said it was unclear how
quickly the pipeline could go ahead if approved.
TC PipeLines said the offer was subject to approval by its board of directors.
The Iroquois pipeline extends from the TransCanada Mainline system at
the U.S. border near New York to markets in the U.S. Northeast. The
Portland pipeline connects with the TransQuebec and Maritimes pipelines
at the Canadian border and the Tennessee gas system near Boston.
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