The project is 83% complete and the company is targeting “mechanical completion” by the end of this year, TC Energy said.
The price tag for TC Energy Corp.’s Coastal GasLink project has jumped to $14.5 billion — more than double the original estimate — as labor woes plague a pipeline that will supply Canada’s first major liquefied natural gas export plant.
The cost may rise an additional $1.2 billion beyond that estimate if more delays extend construction into 2024, the Canadian pipeline operator said Wednesday. The company indicated it might increase the size of a planned $5 billion asset-sale program to help pay for added costs, based on “strong market interest.”
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The company said in November that Coastal GasLink’s costs would be much higher than anticipated, but it didn’t provide a number at the time.
The new cost estimate is slightly higher than expected, and TC Energy’s warning of another possible increase “will be an overhang for the stock,” RBC Capital Markets analyst Robert Kwan said in a note.
The pipeline, which will feed the Shell Plc-led LNG Canada plant in Kitimat, has been delayed by a series of challenges including COVID-19, skilled-worker shortages and protests by environmentalists. .
The project is 83% complete and the company is targeting “mechanical completion” by the end of this year, TC Energy said.
“We are disappointed with the increase in the Coastal GasLink Project costs,” CEO Francois Poirier said in a statement. “We continue to be laser-focused on safely completing this critical piece of energy infrastructure at the lowest possible cost.”
Calgary-based TC Energy will take a impairment charge on its Coastal GasLink investment when it reports fourth-quarter results.
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