Jaret Sprott
Analyst · TD Cowen
Aaron, it's Jaret. Thanks for the question, and I think it's a really good one. So like we said in our press release, we've got 3 projects on the go on the pipeline -- conventional pipeline side, our Fox Creek-to-Namao, which we talked about there a few quarters ago, our Birch-to-Taylor and then our Taylor-to-Gordondale kind of like, we'll call it Phase 1. All of this capital, 100% is being driven by really Canada unlocking our egress constraints. We have our oil constraints being alleviated, which is driving more demand for condensate. Our condensate import pipelines are fairly tapped, ours and third party. So that's going to drive a lot of condensate domestic growth. And then obviously, with that condensate comes natural gas and that egress constraint is also being lifted with LNG Canada being ramped up, Cedar coming online, other projects, et cetera. So that's really driving the need for condensate and NGLs. And I know you know that, but I think it's important to ground ourselves that a lot of that growth is coming from, obviously, the Montney, but specifically up in that neighborhood of, I'll call it, north of Taylor BC up into that north of Fort St. John, Fort Nelson geographic area, a lot of it is coming from there. That really drives to the Birch-to-Taylor project, if you think about it that way. So first off, I want to say that, that project, the collaboration and the consolidation of the industry, the indigenous communities and our partners, the BC government and the BC regulator, that was a tremendous outcome for us getting all of our hurdles in place and behind us collectively. That project really is allowing us, number one, it's going to grow our condensate and natural gas liquids, specifically C3+ capacity. It's really to meet their needs, the growth demand that I talked about for all those other reasons. I think also, Aaron, sanctioning that project now and bringing that online kind of the end of '27 into '28, it really -- it shows the -- we've been really good at project execution. We pride ourselves on our safety record. We pride ourselves on working with local communities and subcontractors, et cetera. And I think really getting focused on making this project a cost focus and a safety-focused project versus a schedule-driven project because we all know our customers can drill significantly faster than we can build long linear assets. So that's kind of Birch-to-Taylor. Now I'll get into actually your question. So like you said, February 10, we did receive our federal permit for Taylor-to-Gordondale. And I really think about Taylor-to-Gordondale as growth in the Montney in 2 other specific regions geographically. I'm going to call it the Dawson Creek area. So southeast of Taylor, we're seeing a lot of growth in the Montney in that neighborhood. And you're seeing -- it's the condensate and the C3+ once again. And then on the Alberta side of the border, you're seeing a lot of growth in the Montney in what some refer to as the Peace River Arch in and around that Gordondale and up to the western side of the Alberta border. Ultimately, that -- getting that permit was also a tremendous amount of work. We did have some, I would say, objectives, commercial objectives, but I think our team persevered and got that. We will need that project full stop one day. The condensate, and it's in the near future due to all the exact same demand. The condensate is growing in that area, the C3+ is growing in that area. But what I will say is one of the things about Pembina is not only our ability to build projects on time and on budget. We also our flexibility of our infrastructure and our people. Our people really took a step back and work collaboratively with operations, our engineering hydraulics teams, and they came up with a little bit more of a capital-light solution. All of this capital we required for the full build-out, but a capital-light solution, which really is a prudent deployment of capital, which Cam gives me a high five for all the time. And it still allows us to meet our customer needs and meet their egress demand, almost like as they grow, it's almost on demand, we can go out and build this. So hopefully, that provides you a little bit of color. We don't see this due to overall certain customers talking about production profiles and condensate is growing, natural gas is going to come with it. Pembina's ability to grow with our customers is, I think, better than anyone else in the basin.