The Globe and Mail - 02.11.2019

(John Hannent) #1

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2019 | THEGLOBEANDMAIL O REPORTONBUSINESS | B15


The CEO ofTC Energy Corp.says
the company is cleaning up and
investigating the cause after an
“unfortunate” Keystone pipeline
leak in North Dakota spilled an es-
timated 1.45 million litres of oil
earlier this week.
North Dakota Governor Doug
Burgum has asked the company
to review its inspection and mon-
itoring in light of the spill, but
Russ Girling defended TC Ener-
gy’s spill response on a confer-
ence call Friday to discuss its
third-quarter results.
“In this instance, our leak de-
tection systems enabled us to re-
motely shut down the pipeline
and our crews moved to the scene
immediately,” he said.
“Today, we are focused on
cleaning up the site, determining
the cause and returning the line
to service.”
The Republican governor
spoke Thursday night to officials
at the Calgary-based company
formerly known as TransCanada
Corp., said Burgum spokesman
Mike Nowatzki.
The conversation came two
days after the company shut
down the pipeline after the leak
was discovered.
Mr. Burgum said in a statement
he “received assurance” from the
company that the spill would be
cleaned up “as thoroughly and
quickly as possible.”
On its website, TC Energy says
the spill has affected about 2,000
square metres of land, or “less
than half the size of a football
field,” and the estimated 9,120
barrels of oil were “approximate-
ly half the size of an Olympic-
sized swimming pool.”
North Dakota regulators said
some wetlands were affected, but
not any sources of drinking water.
The pipeline remained closed
Friday and the cause of the spill
was still unknown, said the state’s
environmental quality chief,
Dave Glatt.
About 15,900 litres of crude oil
have been recovered from the
spill, Mr. Glatt said. Workers were
expected to dig up a portion of the
underground pipeline within the
next few days to inspect it, he
said.
“The company has the spill
contained and nothing is moving
off-site,” Mr. Glatt said.
Crude began flowing through
the US$5.2-billion Keystone pipe-
line in 2011.
It’s designed to carry crude oil
across Saskatchewan and Manito-
ba, and through North Dakota,
South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas
and Missouri on the way to refin-
eries in Patoka, Ill., and Cushing,
Okla.
The pipeline spill and shut-
down come as the company seeks
to build the US$8-billion Keys-
tone XL pipeline that would carry
oil sands oil from Alberta to refin-
eries in Texas. The proposed pipe-
line has drawn opposition from
people who fear it will harm the
environment.
President Donald Trump is-
sued a federal permit for the ex-
pansion project in 2017, after it
had been rejected by the Obama
administration.
TC Energy reported on Friday
its net income slipped in the third
quarter after it sold $3.4-billion in
assets in the first nine months of
the year.
The company said net income
came in at $739-million for the
quarter ending Sept. 30, com-
pared with $928-million for the
same quarter a year earlier.
Adjusted earnings, which ex-
clude a variety of tax impacts
from its asset sales, were $970-
million or $1.04 a share, up from
$902-million or $1.00 a year earli-
er.
Analysts had expected adjust-
ed earnings of $922-million, or 98
cents a share, according to finan-
cial markets data firm Refinitiv.
TC Energy also announced a
$1.2-billion expansion of its west-
ern Canadian gas-gathering sys-
tem called the West Path Delivery
Program, which is to connect with
the US$335-million GTN XPress
Project recently announced by its
U.S. limited partnership, TC Pipe-
Lines LP, to deliver the volumes to
downstream markets.
It said the West Path project is
underpinned by about 260 mil-
lion cubic feet per day of new firm
service contracts with terms that
exceed 30 years, starting in late
2022.

THECANADIANPRESS

TC ENERGY (TRP)
CLOSE:$67.18,UP79¢

TCEnergy


defends


responseto


pipelinespill


DAN HEALINGCALGARY

U.S. job growth slowed less than expected
in October as the drag from a strike atGen-
eral Motors Co.was offset by gains else-
where and hiring in the prior two months
was stronger than previously estimated,
offering some assurance that consumers
would continue to support the slowing
economy.
While the Labour Department’s closely
watched monthly employment report on
Friday showed the unemployment rate
picking up from near a 50-year low of 3.5
per cent last month, that was because of an
influx into the labour force in a sign of con-
fidence in jobs markets.
The report came on the heels of data
this week showing a further slowdown in
economic growth in the third quarter as a
trade tensions-induced slump in business
investment deepened. Manufacturing’s
struggles appear to have persisted early in
the fourth quarter, with a survey on Friday
showing a measure of factory activity re-
maining in contraction territory for the
third straight month in October.
The U.S. Federal Reserve cut interest
rates on Wednesday for the third time this
year, but signalled a pause in the easing cy-
cle that started in July when it reduced bor-
rowing costs for the first time since 2008.
“The current economic expansion looks
set to continue at least through the first
part of next year despite the trade-war


drag,” said Gus Faucher, chief economist at
PNC Financial in Pittsburgh. “Today’s solid
jobs report means that the Fed, after cut-
ting its policy rate three times since the
summer, is likely to keep rates steady in
the near term.”
Non-farm payrolls increased by 128,000
jobs last month, with manufacturing shed-
ding 36,000 positions – the most since Oc-
tober, 2009,the government’s survey of es-
tablishments showed. Striking workers
who do not receive a paycheque during the
payrolls survey period are
treated as unemployed. The
strike by about 46,000 work-
ers at GM plants in Michigan
and Kentucky ended last Fri-
day.
Job growth last month was
also held back by the depar-
ture of 20,000 temporary
workers hired by the govern-
ment for the 2020 Census. Ex-
cluding the strike and these
temporary hires, economists
estimate payrolls increased
by about 190,000.
The economy created
95,000 more jobs in August
and September than previously estimated.
Economists polled by Reuters had forecast
payrolls rising by only 89,000 jobs in Octo-
ber.
The dollar was little changed against a
basket of currencies on the employment
report, while U.S. Treasury prices fell. U.S.
stocks were trading higher.
Job growth is slowing this year, averag-
ing 167,000 a month compared with an av-
erage monthly gain of 223,000 in 2018, in
part because of the nearly 16-month trade
war between the United States and China,

which has undermined business invest-
ment.
The U.S.-China trade war continues to
cast a pall over the longest economic ex-
pansion, now in its 11th year.
The Institute for Supply Management
(ISM) said its index of national factory ac-
tivity rose to a reading of 48.3 last month
from 47.8 in September, which was the
lowest level since June, 2009, when the re-
cession was ending. A reading below 50 in-
dicates contraction and October marked
the third straight month that
the index broke below the 50
threshold.
The index had declined
for six straight months. Al-
though the ISM’s forward-
looking new orders subin-
dex increased last month, it
remained in contraction ter-
ritory. The survey’s factory
employment index rose to
47.7 in October from 46.3 in
September.
Solid consumer spending
blunted some of the drag on
the economy from weak
business investment to limit
the slowdown in growth to a 1.9-per-cent
annualized rate in the third quarter. The
economy grew at a 2-per-cent pace in the
April-June quarter.
With the labour market steadily push-
ing up wages, consumers are likely to con-
tinue carrying the economy. Average hour-
ly earnings increased six US cents, or 0.2
per cent last month after being unchanged
in September. That kept the annual in-
crease in wages to 3 per cent in October.

REUTERS

People queue for a UPS job fair in New York on Friday. Job growth in the United States is slowing so far in 2019, averaging 167,000 each
month compared with an average monthly gain of 223,000 last year.SPENCERPLATT/GETTYIMAGES


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inOctoberamidGMstrike


0lidein•obgrowth,though


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woesinmanu{acturings ector


LUCIA MUTIKANIWASHINGTON


Thecurrent
economicexpansion
lookssettocontinue
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yeardespitethe
trade-wardrag.

GUS FAUCHER
CHIEFECONOMIST,
PNCFINANCIAL

The Desjardins Group’s private data
breach is more widespread than was be-
lieved, and actually hit 4.2 million mem-
bers, the banking co-operative’s chief ex-
ecutive said on Friday.
President and chief executive officer
Guy Cormier told a news con-
ference that the revised
number – which represents
the entirety of the Levis,
Que.-based organization’s
membership – of victims.
Desjardins initially report-
ed in June that 2.9 million
customers had been impact-
ed by the theft – 2.7 million
individuals and 173,000 busi-
nesses in Ontario and Que-
bec.
Quebec provincial police
provided Desjardins with the
news on Thursday.
“This is not a new breach,
this is the same breach with
the same employee who did
the same pattern, but the bad
news today is that the SQ
[Quebec provincial police] is
sure that it’s for the whole
group and all the 4.2 million members,”
Mr. Cormier said.
On Friday, Desjardins wasn’t in a posi-
tion to specify whether more of its busi-
ness clients were also affected. Mr. Cormier
said any members who weren’t contacted
previously will be notified, beginning Nov.
4.
The co-operative said it would offer any
clients who had been victims of identity


theft access to lawyers and experts and re-
imburse them for certain expenses in-
curred as a result.
Mr. Cormier said that he hopes the pub-
lic takes notice of the efforts taken in the
past four-and-a-half months.
“I think they saw that Desjardins was re-
ally pro-active on that side,” Mr. Cormier
said.
“It’s really bad that yester-
day we received this informa-
tion from the SQ , but I think
compared to June 20, our
members can see, and they
saw Desjardins was standing
up and that’s what I hope
they see.”
In September, Quebec
Provincial Police questioned
17 people of interest and con-
ducted multiple property
searches as part of an investi-
gation dubbed “Portier.”
The force said it met with
91 witnesses around Quebec
City, Montreal and Laval ar-
eas, but didn’t make a formal
arrest.
Desjardins has said that a
single employee – since fired


  • was allegedly responsible
    for the breach detected in De-
    cember 2018.
    A police spokesperson said on Friday
    the investigation into the breach was con-
    tinuing.
    In addition, the Office of the Privacy
    Commissioner of Canada and Quebec’s Ac-
    cess to Information Commission are also
    investigating.


THECANADIANPRESS

Desjardinsleakaffected


4.2millionmembers


JULIEN ARSENAULTMONTREAL


Thisisnotanew
breach,thisisthe
samebreachwith
thesameemployee
whodidthesame
pattern,butthebad
newstodayisthat
theSQ[provincial
police]issurethat
it’sforthewhole
groupandallthe4.2
millionmembers.

GUY CORMIER
DESJARDINSGROUP
PRESIDENTANDCEO

FORTIS REPORTS
$278-MILLION
THIRD-QUARTER PROFIT

ST. JOHN’SCanadian utility
companyFortis Inc.says it
earned $278-million in the
third quarter to stay roughly in
line with a year earlier.
Fortis says the earnings for
the quarter ending Sept. 30
work out to 64 cents a share,
compared with earnings of
$276-million or 65 cents a
share last year.
Adjusted net earnings were
$287-million, or 66 cents a
share, compared with $277-
million or 65 cents a share last
year.
Earnings per share were in
line with analyst expectations
according to financial markets
data firm Refinitiv.
In the quarter, the company
announced a five-year spending
program of $18.3-billion, up by
a billion dollars from the prior
year’s plan, as Fortis looks to
move to cleaner energy and
strengthen its networks.
The company says the in-
vestment will help boost its
base rate from $28-billion this
year to $34.5-billion in 2022 and
to $38.4-billion in 2024.
Fortis says it is well ahead of
its goal of reaching 30-per-cent
renewable power in Arizona.
In British Columbia, its goal
is to reduce emissions by 30
per cent by 2030.
It’s also working in British
Columbia to capture natural
gas from landfills for an energy
source.
THE CANADIAN PRESS
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