Lexpert Special Editions

Special Edition on Energy -Nov 2015

The Lexpert Special Editions profiles selected Lexpert-ranked lawyers whose focus is in Corporate, Infrastructure, Energy and Litigation law and relevant practices. It also includes feature articles on legal aspects of Canadian business issues.

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Brennan, Patrick J. Bennett Jones LLP (403) 298-3433 brennanp@bennettjones.com Mr. Brennan acts in bank- ing and debt financing transactions, asset-based financing and leasing, per- sonal property security, debt restructuring, aircra acquisi- tion, disposition, leasing and financing,commercial trans- actions and aviation law. Buckingham, Janice Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP (403) 260-7006 jbuckingham@osler.com Ms. Buckingham's energy practice focuses on the development, acquisition and divestiture of complex projects and investments in Canada and in LNG projects exporting from Canada. She also advises on issues arising from industry standard agreements. Bursey, David W. Bennett Jones LLP (604) 891-5128 burseyd@bennettjones.com Mr. Bursey's regulatory practice focuses on energy project development and regulation, environmental assessment, water resource management and Aborig- inal law. He advises natural resource industry clients, First Nations and govern- ment agencies. Brown, Darryl J. Gowling Lafleur Henderson LLP (416) 369-4581 darryl.brown@gowlings.com Mr. Brown's practice fo- cuses on infrastructure, P3 and construction law. He dras and negotiates project agree- ments, construction contracts, operating agreements and other contracts, and regularly represents sponsors, operators and design builders. Burgess, Patrick W. Dentons Canada LLP (403) 268-7149 patrick.burgess@dentons.com Mr. Burgess's energy law prac- tice embraces international and domestic transactions relating to JVs and asset and corporate acquisitions. He maintains strong relation- ships with CAPP, EPAC, CAPL & CELF, and is active in AIPN & RMMLF. Buttigieg, Bryan J. Miller omson LLP (416) 595-8172 bbuttigieg@millerthomson. com Certified as a Specialist in Environmental Law by e Law Society of Upper Canada, Mr. Buttigieg has expertise in civil litigation, regulatory defence, due diligence, compliance, environmental approvals, brownfields development & contaminated land. Trouble is, oil and gas prices are in the dumps. And that makes it harder to sell companies or to assemble the funding to build companies. Making it harder still, Buckingham says, is the trend toward in- creasingly complex and expensive drilling and fracking technologies needed to extract previously inaccessible reserves. A decade ago, Ross says, a start-up company needed to raise about $25 million to drill perhaps two dozen conventional wells and work up enough oil and gas production to support further exploration. "Now," he says, "you're betting on far fewer wells for the same amount of money, so you need a much bigger capital pool" to drill more wells and reduce the risk of fail- ure. "Now you need $120 million for a five- year runway," and, he says, repeated private placements of $20 million to $30 million aren't realistic. All this is why private equity is becom- ing a larger factor in the Canadian energy sector, according to the lawyers who write the deals. "It's a very capital-intensive and trans- PRIVATE EQUITY | 9 action-intensive environment," says Dar- rell Peterson, with the Calgary head office of Bennett Jones LLP. He says it's a hot- house deal environment, in part, because the headquarters of the entire Canadian oil and gas sector are concentrated in a ten- square-block area of office towers and "you can literally just walk around" to meet with all the potential players. e resulting deal velocity, he says, is part of the attraction for private equities. "e demise of the income trust sector really was the kick-off for private equities," says John Mercury, co-head of Bennett Jones's PE practice. Osler's Ross says that, until the federal government killed energy income trusts in 2006, "the natural buyers of small- and mid- sized oil and gas companies were the trusts and when they disappeared they le a sig- nificant gap." Torys's Neville Jugnauth says income trusts were a "made-for-Calgary kind of model" that bought producing assets away from exploration companies. Trust inves- tors got quarterly cash distributions from the income trusts, while exploration com- panies got the money they needed to prove up more reserves. e trusts were succeeded by state- owned enterprises (SOEs), such as Petronas of Malaysia and several Chinese companies.

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