Enbridge oil sands project is years early, says energy research company
Enbridge Inc., Canada's largest pipeline operator, wouldn't need to build the Northern Gateway project to export Alberta's oil-sands crude for almost a decade if TransCanada Corp.'s Keystone XL is approved this year, according to IHS CERA, an energy research company.
The 732-mile (1,177-kilometer) Northern Gateway pipeline would pump 525,000 barrels a day from near Edmonton, Alberta, to the port of Kitimat, British Columbia, where crude would be loaded on tankers bound for Asia. The line, scheduled to start in 2017, would reduce Canadian dependence on U.S. markets and compete with the Keystone XL, designed to pipe 700,000 barrels a day to refineries in Texas along the Gulf of Mexico by 2013.
Jackie Forrest, a director of global oil at IHS CERA, said there won't be enough oil sands production to support Northern Gateway's launch even if, as she expects, Keystone XL approval helps the output double in 10 years to 3 million barrels a day.
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