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Canada’s purchase of the Trans Mountain Pipeline: Financial and Economic Considerations – Updated CDEV Financial Reporting – May 2021

Published on May 10, 2021

In April 2021, the Canada Development Investment Corporation (CDEV) published its Annual Report for 2020. PBO examined this document as part of our ongoing monitoring of financial reporting on the Trans Mountain Pipeline (TMP) and Trans Mountain Expansion Project (TMEP). 

Current Operating Results of the Trans Mountain Pipeline System

As presented in Table 1, CDEV has now reported 28 months of operating results for the TMP system (September 2018 to December 2020, inclusive).[1],[2],[3]

Over the entire period, operating revenues totalled $1,045 million, arising primarily from transportation tolls from the ongoing operations of the TMP. Operating expenses were $546 million for the same period.

As of December 31, 2020, CDEV held $9.1 billion in outstanding loans to finance the acquisition and construction of the pipeline assets. The loans were financed by the Canada Account, administered by Export Development Canada (EDC), at a 4.7 per cent interest rate. Financing costs for Trans Mountain Corporation totalled $262 million. CDEV also reported a $251 million depletion and depreciation expense on its pipeline assets.

In its first 28 months of public ownership, CDEV-owned Trans Mountain Corp. (TMC) entities reported a total net income of $40 million.

Selected financial metrics of the unexpanded Trans Mountain Pipeline system
(Table 1)

$ Millions

 

 

 

 

Metric

 

Description

 

2018

2019

2020

Total

 

Operating revenues

129

476

440

1,045

Revenues contributed by CDEV-controlled TMC entities that own and operate TMP and TMEP.

Operating expenses

(81)

(226)

(239)

(546)

Includes operating and production, salaries and benefits, and other general and administrative expenses.

Depletion and depreciation

(34)

(111)

(106)

(251)

Reduction in the value of an asset over time (a common accounting concept).

Total financing costs

(50)

(141)

(71)

(262)

Under IFRS*, total financing costs include net interest costs and an unwinding of a discount of the decommissioning obligation.

Taxes

10

52

(7)

55

Tax recoveries due to negative earnings before taxes and changes in the provincial corporate tax rate.

Net Income (Loss)

(26)

51

16

40

For the 28 months ending December 2020, CDEV reported a net profit on TMC.


Sources:      CDEV Annual Reports (2018, 2019, 2020); PBO Calculations
Note:           *Figures are presented based on International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS).

 

Loans payable

As of December 31, 2020, CDEV had borrowed $9.1 billion to finance its pipeline assets. As reported in Table 2, these outstanding loans include $4.7 billion for the acquisition of the assets. The remaining $4.4 billion has funded construction activities related to TMEP. All loan facilities are due August 2023. The interest rate charged is 4.7%.

CDEV established a loan facility that allows it to borrow money as needed to finance construction. The limit of this loan facility was $2.6 billion until the end of 2019, which then increased to $4.0 billion on January 1, 2020. A Second Amending Agreement was executed on October 1, 2020, increasing the available credit to $5.1 billion, with an additional increase to $6.1 billion on January 1, 2021.[4]

Outstanding amounts by loan facility
(Table 2)

$ Millions

Facility

Outstanding amounts

Description

2018

2019

2020

 

Acquisition

4,670

4,670

4,670

 

This facility was used to fund the acquisition of entities controlling TMP and TMEP.

Construction

120

1,385

4,385

 

This facility is used to fund construction activities related to TMEP.

Canadian Energy Regulator 

500

-

-

 

CER required this amount for TMC “to have suitable financial resources to pay for any potential environmental damages.”[5] This was repaid in Q1 2019.

Total

5,290

6,055

9,055

 

 

Sources:      CDEV Annual Reports (2018, 2019, 2020); PBO Calculations

Notes:         Figures are presented based on International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). Figures are reported as of the end of the calendar year.

 

 

Sensitivity Analysis

CDEV performed a goodwill impairment test as of the end of 2020 and determined that it did not result in an impairment charge. CDEV notes that “despite changes in the economic environment due to the impact of the global COVID-19 pandemic, neither TMC’s existing operations nor TMEP construction has been materially impacted to date.”[6]

As part of this goodwill impairment test, CDEV conducted a sensitivity analysis based on the assumptions used to estimate the fair value of the pipeline system.[7] Table 3 outlines the results from the sensitivity analysis, and compares it to the results from their 2019 Annual report and PBO’s December 2020 report on the Trans Mountain Pipeline system.[8]

Sensitivity analysis of the value of the pipeline system
(Table 3) 

$ Millions

 

Discount rate increase by 0.25%

$600 million increase in TMEP capital expenditures

1-year delay in construction and operation of TMEP including a $600 million increase in capital expenditures

CDEV Annual Report 2019

(500)

(200)

(900)

CDEV Annual Report 2020

(700)

(200)

(1,200)

PBO Report

(400)

(200)

(1,200)


Sources:  CDEV Annual Reports (Note 14 in 2019, Note 13 in 2020); PBO Report “Trans Mountain Pipeline – Financial and Economic Considerations – Update (December 2020).
Note:    CDEV’s sensitivity analysis used slightly different parameters than the ones used in PBO’s December 2020 report. PBO inputted CDEV’s parameters into its model to compare the impact on the value of the pipeline system. 

For both the increase in construction costs as well as the 1-year delay and increase in construction costs, the impact on the fair value of the pipeline system is consistent with the results in the PBO report.  

There is a variation between CDEV and PBO’s analysis on the impact of a change in the discount rate. It is possible that some of the variation is a result of the difference in the methodologies used to calculate the value of the pipeline system. CDEV included a terminal value after twenty years of the TMEP being in service (with a growth rate of 2%), while PBO’s analysis only included cash flows for 40 years after TMEP’s in-service date.[9],[10]  CDEV has also further decreased the discount rate used from 8.6% at the end of 2019 to 8.1% at the end of 2020.

 
[1].              Canada Development Investment Corporation (2019). Annual Report 2018. https://www.cdev.gc.ca/wpcontent/uploads/2019/05/Canada-Development-Investment-Corp_2018_FA_ENGLISH_REV_04.08.2019Final.pdf

 

[2].              Canada Development Investment Corporation (2020). Annual Report 2019. https://www.cdev.gc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/CDEV-2019_Final-Art_English_03.31.2020_2.pdf

[3].              Canada Development Investment Corporation (2021). Annual Report 2020. https://www.cdev.gc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/Final-Combined-2020-AR-_ENG_-04.27.2021_edit3.pdf

[4].              Canada Development Investment Corporation (2021). Annual Report 2020. Note 17. https://www.cdev.gc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/Final-Combined-2020-AR-_ENG_-04.27.2021_edit3.pdf
[5]. Canada Development Investment Corporation (2018).  Third Quarter Report 2018.  https://www.cdev.gc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/CDEV-Q3-2018-Report.pdf

[6].              Canada Development Investment Corporation (2021). Annual Report 2020. Note 13 b). https://www.cdev.gc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/Final-Combined-2020-AR-_ENG_-04.27.2021_edit3.pdf

[7].              Canada Development Investment Corporation (2020).  First Quarter Report 2020.  https://www.cdev.gc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/CDEV-Q1-Report-3-31-19.pdf

[9].              Canada Development Investment Corporation (2021). Annual Report 2020. Note 13 b). https://www.cdev.gc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/Final-Combined-2020-AR-_ENG_-04.27.2021_edit3.pdf