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Keystone Is Doable Even With New Route, TransCanada CEO Says

Keystone Is Doable Even With New Route, TransCanada CEO Says

(Bloomberg) -- Keystone XL is feasible, though a touch more costly, even after Nebraska regulators imposed an alternative route.

That’s the message from TransCanada Corp.’s CEO in the latest hint the company is leaning toward building the pipeline that will ship more crude from the oil sands to refineries in the Gulf of Mexico. It doesn’t mean the Calgary-based pipeline giant has made a decision. TransCanada’s evaluation after the ruling to allow the alternate route was mostly about its legality, he said.

“We’re comfortable that they came to a decision that was within their jurisdiction and within the law,” Chief Executive Officer Russ Girling said in response to questions during a presentation at a Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce conference in Whistler, British Columbia. “That was what our primary concern was.”

The alternate route doesn’t present major issues for construction, Girling said. The additional cost will be about C$100 million to C$200 million ($80 million-$160 million), and it will add five to 10 miles of pipe, he said. That’s a small addition to an $8 billion, 1,200-mile project.

“The actual routing, construction and costs, those aren’t major issues,” he said.

TransCanada will now focus on acquiring land along the new path and obtaining the other permits it needs, he said. The company still hasn’t made an official decision on whether to build the project, he added.

The shares pared losses after his comment, closing 2.6 percent lower at C$57.72 in Toronto on Thursday, after slumping as much as 2.8 percent.

To contact the reporter on this story: Kevin Orland in Calgary at korland@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Reg Gale at rgale5@bloomberg.net, Carlos Caminada, Joe Carroll

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