Enbridge Inc. (ENB) shares dipped Friday after the pipeline giant announced a final investment decision on its Mainline Optimization Phase 1 project, a $1.4 billion initiative designed to squeeze more capacity out of its existing infrastructure.
Following Customer Demand
The project targets two key systems: the Mainline network will gain 150,000 barrels per day of capacity, while the Flanagan South Pipeline picks up an additional 100,000 barrels per day. Both expansions are expected to come online in 2027, just in time to meet rising demand from U.S. refineries hungry for Canadian heavy crude.
Enbridge is taking a smart approach here—expanding capacity through upstream optimizations, terminal upgrades, and additional pump stations rather than building entirely new pipelines. The company will also tap into existing Seaway Pipeline capacity to complete the route from Alberta to Texas.
Contracts Lock in Returns
The Flanagan South expansion comes with long-term take-or-pay contracts covering full-path service from Edmonton, Alberta, to Houston, Texas. That's the kind of revenue certainty investors like to see before capital gets deployed.
Colin Gruending, Enbridge's executive vice president and president of Liquids Pipelines, framed it as leveraging competitive advantages: "This project demonstrates the competitive advantage of leveraging existing networks to meet growing customer demand, supporting long-term energy security and affordability across North America."
Recent Performance
Last week, Enbridge reported third-quarter adjusted earnings of 33 cents per share, missing the 39-cent estimate. Revenue came in at $10.633 billion, short of the $10.860 billion consensus.
Price Action: ENB shares were down 2.54% at $47.04 at last check Friday.