Lexpert Special Editions

Special Edition on Energy 2017

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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20 LEXPERT | 2017 | WWW.LEXPERT.CA Harrison, QC, Elizabeth J. Farris, Vaughan, Wills & Murphy LLP (604) 661-9367 eharrison@farris.com Mrs. Harrison has extensive experience in corporate, M&A and securities transactions in multiple industries, including energy. She represents corporations and investment dealers. Her experience includes M&A, take-overs and related- party transactions, and public and private financings. Harricks, Paul H. Gowling WLG (416) 369-7296 paul.harricks@gowlingwlg.com Mr. Harricks leads Gowling WLG's Energy Sector Group. His transactional practice embraces power generation (all types), transmission and distribution and finance. He acts for Canadian and international corporations, funds, governments and financial institutions. He is a director of the Association of Power Producers of Ontario and Chair of the Energy Committee of the Toronto Board of Trade. Harbell, James W. Stikeman Elliott LLP (416) 869-5690 jharbell@stikeman.com Mr. Harbell is a partner in the Toronto office and head of the Project Development & Finance Group, former head of the Real Estate and Energy Groups and a certified Specialist in Environmental Law. His practice focuses on electricity, infrastructure and real estate, M&A transactions, municipal and land use development, project finance and procurement for electricity, gas and government entities. Gropper, QC, Mitchell H. Farris, Vaughan, Wills & Murphy LLP (604) 661-9322 mgropper@farris.com Mr. Gropper's practice focuses on corporate finance, reorganizations, M&A and commercial real estate. He has advised boards of directors on take-over bids, going-private transactions and other corporate matters. Grenier, Pierre Dentons Canada LLP (514) 878-8856 pierre.grenier@dentons.com Mr. Grenier focuses on corporate & commercial matters and on the construction, energy & real estate sectors. His experience includes regulatory regimes in the energy sector, construction claims, contractual arrangements and manufacturer's liability. Green, Bram J. Goodmans LLP (416) 597-4153 bgreen@goodmans.ca Mr. Green's real estate practice extends to all aspects of domestic and international utility scale solar and wind power renewable energy generation projects. He has acted for Recurrent Energy in its development of utility-scale solar projects in Ontario. LEXPERT-RANKED LAWYERS of national interest. If the answer was yes, then there would be an additional two-year environmental and more technical review aer that. So, essentially, there's a recognition that because these are such huge invest- ments in these projects, there should be a more upfront loaded process." While regulatory delays, stakeholder challenges and national, federal and international governments (i.e., those in the US) can make it difficult to get a pipeline project approved, the bottom-line issue for developers to consider, says Nettleton, is economics. "When crude was $100 a barrel, the price was so high it was sensible to develop more [pipelines]," he says. "But the question now is, in a $40- to $50-a-barrel oil market, do the eco- nomics justify the type of expansion when crude was $100? I think the short answer to that is no. Today, [the industry] is more like a manufacturing operation than a conventional oil and gas system. e incredible investments required in oil sands developments means the only opportunity to even earn back marginal costs means you still must produce, and produce at a subpar or price-challenged level." e need for pipelines, however, has not, and likely will not, decrease. "Canada will need more pipelines built through to 2030 to transport an additional 1.3 "There is no doubt the evidence demonstrates that pipelines are a very safe mode of transportation, especially compared to trains or tanker trucks. … [Nevertheless] it's a field of landmines in terms of the various traps pipeline developers have to negotiate their way through to get projects off the ground." - Fred Erickson, Stikeman Elliott LLP PHOTO: SHUTTERSTOCK

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