Thursday, October 5, 2017

BC Hydro says three LNG companies continue to demand electricity, justifying Site C



BC Hydro says three LNG companies continue to demand electricity, justifying Site C

Documents provide some detail on which of the proposed LNG projects in B.C. are likely to be built



Will the LNG developments go ahead?Ian Smith/Postmedia News files


CALGARY — Despite recent project cancellations, BC Hydro still expects three LNG projects — and possibly a fourth, which is undergoing a feasibility study — will need power from its controversial and expensive Site C hydroelectric dam.
In a letter sent to the British Columbia Utilities Commission (BCUC) on Oct. 3, BC Hydro’s chief regulatory officer Fred James said the provincially owned utility’s load forecast includes power demand for three proposed liquefied natural gas projects because they continue to ask the company for power.
The letter and attached report provide some detail on which of the LNG projects proposed in B.C. are more likely to be built, given recent project cancellations.
The documents are also an attempt to explain why BC Hydro continues to forecast a surge in electricity demand in the province even though massive LNG projects proposed by Malaysia’s state owned oil company Petronas and China’s CNOOC Nexen have been cancelled.
An explanation is needed because B.C.’s new NDP government had promised the BCUC would review the need for the $9-billion Site C dam, which was commissioned to provide power for the province’s nascent LNG industry. The commission had specifically asked for an explanation of BC Hydro’s electric load forecast as it relates to LNG projects by Wednesday.
The three projects that continue to ask BC Hydro for electricity are Shell Canada Ltd.’s LNG Canada project, the Woodfibre LNG project and a future expansion of FortisBC’s Tilbury LNG storage facility.
None of those projects have officially been sanctioned but “service requests from industrial sector customers, including LNG, are generally included in our industrial load forecast,” the report noted.
In a redacted section of the report, BC Hydro also raises the possibility of a fourth LNG project, which is exploring the need for power in B.C.
“BC Hydro is currently undertaking feasibility studies for another large LNG project, which is not currently included in its Current Load Forecast,” one section of the report notes, though the remainder of the section is redacted.
The Site C dam, which has become a source of controversy in B.C. and was an important election issue, is currently under construction and is expected to be in service by 2024, a timeline which had been considered to provide LNG projects with power by the time they are operational.
BC Hydro’s letter to the BCUC refers to media and financial industry reports that indicate global LNG markets will require more supply by 2023.
“While there remains significant uncertainty, global LNG demand will continue to grow and there is opportunity for B.C. LNG,” the report notes.
Financial Post
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Bloomberg is fighting back against the startup that wants to steal its lucrative Wall Street business

Bloomberg is fighting back against the startup that wants to steal its lucrative Wall Street business

bloomberg terminalBloomberg terminals are ubiquitous on Wall Street. Margin Call
Bloomberg, the financial data giant, is offering customers of its signature terminal a way to use its chat function as a stand-alone feature for just $10 a month. 
The offering, first reported by the Financial Times, undercuts Symphony, a chat and data startup once touted as a "Bloomberg killer" because of its low-cost offering and backing from Wall Street's biggest firms.
Offering customers a standalone chat feature internal communications is a change of tactic for Bloomberg, which typically offers its news, data and trading functions in one bundle — for more than $20,000 a year. 
Bloomberg's chat function, though, is ubiquitous on Wall Street as a tool that allows traders to exchange information. Unbundling it from the rest of the terminal is a way to keep business from employees who don't need the full package, and could be particularly appealing for folks away from the trading floor in support functions in the middle and back office.
"This is a standalone product that services the internal communications needs of our clients," a Bloomberg spokesperson told Business Insider. 
That new feature presents a direct threat to Symphony, which charges $20 per month for its services, according to Spencer Mindlin of Aite Group, a research company. 
"It is a competitive threat because it offers a lot of the value proposition that Symphony offers," Mindlin said.
Many of Symphony's backers, including Goldman Sachs, got behind the company to put pressure on the monopoly of Bloomberg. Hence, the nickname "Bloomberg killer." 
The company's CEO, however, has tried to present the company as a tool for any business — comparing it to Slack, and Microsoft's O365, chat apps. 
Symphony has partnered with a whole host of data and news providers, including Dow Jones, IHS Markit and Thomson Reuters. Deutsche Bank on Wednesday said it would "put over 150,000 lines of code from its award-winning electronic platform Autobahn into the public domain," and integrate the code into Symphony. 
In May, Symphony said it raised $63 million funds, which brought the total amount the company has raised to $234 million. It counts Google, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan, and a number of other Wall Street firms as its backers. The company is valued at more than $1 billion. 
More: Symphony

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