$1.4-billion Access Pipeline sale a symptom of growing oilpatch cash crunch

CALGARY – The $1.4-billion purchase of a stake in an Alberta oilsands pipeline is the latest deal in an ongoing garage sale of non-core assets by oil and gas producers struggling to survive.

On Thursday, privately held Wolf Midstream of Calgary announced it would buy a 50 per cent stake in the Access Pipeline from Oklahoma City-based Devon Energy with debt and $825 million provided by the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board.

The pipeline delivers diluted bitumen from Devon’s northern Alberta oilsands facilities to a transportation hub in Edmonton about 350 kilometres away.

Calgary-based oilsands producer MEG Energy (TSX:MEG), owner of the other half of Access, is also taking bids but said Thursday it hasn’t found a buyer yet.

Both firms say they are raising money to pay down debt as world benchmark oil prices remain at less than half of the US$107 per barrel they were at two years ago.

“When you’ve got commodity prices pulling back as they have, guys have less cash flow and so they’re under more pressure,” said infrastructure analyst Dirk Lever of AltaCorp Capital, noting that producers must keep drilling to maintain oil and gas output.

Lever said the situation plays into the hands of midstream companies looking to build their portfolios of pipelines, oil and gas processing plants and storage facilities, making them attractive to entities like pension funds looking for investments with long-term, stable returns.

“They own the road. You pay a toll to go on the road,” said Lever. “It doesn’t matter if it’s good times or bad times, the tolls are about the same.”

Earlier this year, Arkansas-based producer Murphy Oil Corp. announced the sale of two natural gas plants to midstream company Enbridge Inc. (TSX:ENB) for $538 million.

Pembina Pipeline (TSX:PPL), another midstream company, recently closed the $566-million purchase of a gas processing plant from producer Paramount Resources (TSX:POU).

Last week, Calgary-based Keyera (TSX:KEY) announced it would pay $112 million to take an additional 35 per cent ownership stake in a gas plant it built last year in partnership with producer Bellatrix Exploration (TSX:BXE), boosting its ownership to 70 per cent.

“I think in the current environment there’s no question that producers are looking a little bit more at the possibility of selling facilities that so they can raise funds to put into drilling, which is their core business,” said Keyera CEO David Smith. He said his company is actively looking to buy more midstream assets.

Wolf Midstream CEO Gord Salahor said the Access Pipeline purchase announced Thursday is his company’s first deal since winning CPPIB backing last year but it won’t be its last, adding that there’s a “window” of opportunity to buy from producers.

“We have a long-term mandate in this company to continue to grow, so we could see transactions maybe not quite this size but up to this size in the future,” he said.

He said the company also has a mandate from CPPIB to build new midstream facilities in the future.

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Note to readers: This is a corrected story. A previous version had an incorrect spelling for Devon Energy.

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