Wednesday marks the official start date of the long-awaited $34-billion Trans Mountain oil pipeline expansion project.
Crown corporation Trans Mountain Corp. says as of Wednesday, the expanded pipeline from Alberta to the B.C. coast will be transporting crude oil.
The project involved twinning an existing pipeline that runs from Alberta to the B.C. coast.
It took more than four years to construct, and was one of the most costly infrastructure projects in Canadian history.
In a joint statement Tuesday, Alberta Premier Danielle Smith and Minister of Energy and Minerals Brian Jean said the startup of the project is great news for Albertans and Canadians.
“The completion of TMX is monumental for Alberta, since this will significantly increase our province’s output,” the statement read in part.
“We are excited that Canada’s biggest and newest oil pipeline in more than a decade can now bring oil from Edmonton to tidewater in B.C. This will allow us to get our energy resources to Pacific markets, including Washington State and California, and Asian markets like Japan, South Korea, China and India. Alberta now has new energy customers, and tankers with Alberta oil will be unloading in China and India in the next few months.”
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Alberta NDP leader Rachel Notley said in a statement the completion is a celebration for several reasons.
“Good construction jobs – 35,000 of them; a better return on our resources; diversification of our markets; significantly increasing product to tidewater for the first time in a generation,” Notley said.
“Getting TMX over the finish line hasn’t been easy. No government before ours was able to do it, and there are still skeptics who wonder how such a thing could be done. But Albertans know they deserve full value for their resources, not to mention the good jobs, both in its construction and operation, that will result from it. That’s why we were proud to champion this project then and now, because it’s in the best interests of Albertans and our fellow Canadians.”
The expansion increases the Trans Mountain system’s shipping capacity from 300,000 barrels per day to 890,000 barrels per day, and will help open up global export markets for Canadian oil.
The increased capacity is expected to help improve the price Canadian oil companies receive for their product.
But even though the project is now complete, question marks linger as the federal government has said it intends to sell the pipeline.
The government purchased the pipeline for $4.5 billion in 2018 in an effort to get the project over the finish line, and has stated it does not wish to be its long-term owner.
Experts say because the project’s price tag ballooned over the course of construction, the government will likely take a significant writedown if it sells.
Companies that ship oil on Trans Mountain are now subject to the new expanded system’s tariffs and tolls. But Trans Mountain is currently locked in a dispute with its oil company customers about these rising fees.
The Crown corporation has said the higher fees are necessary to help to cover the budget overruns, which it has said were caused by things like the COVID-19 pandemic, extreme weather, and the need to deal with archeologically significant sites along the pipeline’s route.
— with files from Global News.
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