Liberals face heat as cost of Trans Mountain expansion hits $12.6 billion
OTTAWA — Expanding the Trans Mountain pipeline will now cost at least $12.6 billion — up from a three-year-old estimate of $7.4 billion on a project Finance Minister Bill Morneau insisted the Liberal government intends to sell back to the private sector and recoup taxpayers’ investment.
Speaking to reporters in Ottawa, Morneau said the cost was “in the range of the considerations” the government looked at when it purchased the project two summers ago to ensure it would be built.
“The project will deliver $1.5 billion of available cash flow once it’s finished, which means it remains commercially viable and, I think, very interesting for the eventual commercial buyers that we’re going to be seeking, because we don’t intend on keeping this in government hands,” he said Friday.
Trans Mountain Corp., the federally owned company managing the project, has spent $2.5 billion — of which $1.1 billion was from the previous, private owner — leaving an additional $8.4 billion needed to complete work, plus $1.7 billion of carrying costs.