Deutsche Bank 24th Annual Leveraged Finance Conference
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Transcript of Deutsche Bank 24th Annual Leveraged Finance Conference
Leveraged Finance ConferenceSeptember 27, 2016
Forward Looking Information
Both these slides and the accompanying oral presentations contain certain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the United States Private Securities LitigationReform Act of 1995 and forward-looking information within the meaning of the Securities Act (Ontario). Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks,uncertainties and other factors which may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of Teck to be materially different from any future results, performance orachievements expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements include statements relating to the long-life of our assets andestimated resource life, estimated profit and estimated EBITDA and the sensitivity of estimated profit and estimated EBITDA to foreign exchange and commodity prices, 2016production guidance and cost guidance, sensitivities of profit and EBITDA to foreign exchange and commodity price movements, our expectation regarding market supply anddemand in the commodities we produce, expectation that we will achieve further unit cost reductions in 2016, 2016 cost guidance and forecasts, coal EBITDA and cash flowpotential, statements regarding the availability of our credit facilities, 2016 capital expenditure guidance, future options for growth projects, steelmaking coal 5-year planningobjectives, the effect of US dollar oil price changes on our Canadian dollar cost savings, our goal to maintain the core of our business at least free cash flow neutral, ourexpectation that we will end 2016 with at least $700 million in cash, expectation that we will not draw on our US$3B facility in 2016, our statements regarding the Fort Hillscapital expenditures and our ability to fund those, our level of liquidity, statements regarding our credit rating, the availability of or credit facilities and other sources of liquidity,statements regarding our coal growth potential, the conceptual future production profile for coal, the potential benefits of LNG use in haul trucks, all projections forNuevaUnión and statements made on the “NuevaUnión Summary” slide, the statement that Teck is poised to capitalize on improving zinc fundamentals, statements regardingthe production and economic expectations for the Fort Hills project, including but not limited to operating and sustaining cost projections, sustaining capital projection, freecash flow projections, netback assumptions and calculations, operating margin, Alberta oil royalty, net margin, Teck’s share of go-forward capex, mine life, capital costprojections, all statements made on the “Fort Hills Key Numbers” and “Fort Hills Project Economics Are Robust” slides, transportation capacity and our ability to securetransport for our Fort Hills production, and management’s expectations with respect to production, demand and outlook in the markets for coal, copper, zinc and energy.
These forward-looking statements involve numerous assumptions, risks and uncertainties and actual results may vary materially, which are described in Teck’s public filingsavailable on SEDAR (www.sedar.com) and EDGAR (www.sec.gov). In addition, the forward-looking statements in these slides and accompanying oral presentation are alsobased on assumptions, including, but not limited to, regarding general business and economic conditions, the supply and demand for, deliveries of, and the level and volatilityof prices of, zinc, copper and coal and other primary metals and minerals as well as oil, and related products, the timing of the receipt of regulatory and governmentalapprovals for our development projects and other operations, our costs of production and production and productivity levels, as well as those of our competitors, power prices,continuing availability of water and power resources for our operations, market competition, the accuracy of our reserve estimates (including with respect to size, grade andrecoverability) and the geological, operational and price assumptions on which these are based, conditions in financial markets, the future financial performance of thecompany, our ability to attract and retain skilled staff, our ability to procure equipment and operating supplies, positive results from the studies on our expansion projects, ourcoal and other product inventories, our ability to secure adequate transportation for our products, our ability to obtain permits for our operations and expansions, our ongoingrelations with our employees and business partners and joint venturers. Reserve and resource life estimates assume the mine life of longest lived resource in the relevantcommodity is achieved, assumes production at planned rates and in some cases development of as yet undeveloped projects. Management’s expectations of mine life arebased on the current planned production rates and assume that all resources described in this presentation are developed. Certain forward-looking statements are based onassumptions regarding the price for Fort Hills product and the expenses for the project, as disclosed in the slides. Our estimated profit and EBITDA sensitivity estimates arebased on the commodity price and currency exchange assumptions stated on the relevant slide. Our estimated year-end cash balance assumes current commodity pricesand exchange rates, our 2016 guidance for production, costs and capital expenditures, existing US$ debt levels and no unusual transactions. Cost statements are based onassumptions noted in the relevant slide. Coal EBITDA and cash flow potential assumptions are noted in the slide titled “Coal EBITDA & Cash Flow Potential”. Assumptionsregarding liquidity are based on the assumption that Teck’s current credit facilities remain fully available. Assumptions regarding Fort Hills also include the assumption thatproject development and funding proceed as planned, as well as assumptions noted on the relevant slides discussing Fort Hills. Assumptions regarding our potential reserveand resource life assume that all resources are upgraded to reserves and that all reserves and resources could be mined. The foregoing list of assumptions is notexhaustive. Assumptions regarding NuevaUnión include that the project is built and operated in accordance with the conceptual preliminary design from a preliminaryeconomic assessment.
2
Forward Looking Information
Factors that may cause actual results to vary materially include, but are not limited to, changes in commodity and power prices, changes in market demand for our products,changes in interest and currency exchange rates, acts of foreign governments and the outcome of legal proceedings, inaccurate geological and metallurgical assumptions(including with respect to the size, grade and recoverability of mineral reserves and resources), unanticipated operational difficulties (including failure of plant, equipment orprocesses to operate in accordance with specifications or expectations, cost escalation, unavailability of materials and equipment, government action or delays in the receiptof government approvals, industrial disturbances or other job action, adverse weather conditions and unanticipated events related to health, safety and environmentalmatters), union labour disputes, political risk, social unrest, failure of customers or counterparties to perform their contractual obligations, changes in our credit ratings,unanticipated increases in costs to construct our development projects, difficulty in obtaining permits, inability to address concerns regarding permits of environmental impactassessments, and changes or further deterioration in general economic conditions. We will not achieve the maximum mine lives of our projects, or be able to mine allreserves at our projects, if we do not obtain relevant permits for our operations. Our Fort Hills project is not controlled by us and construction and production schedules maybe adjusted by our partners. NuevaUnión is jointly owned. The effect of the price of oil on operating costs will be affected by the exchange rate between Canadian and U.S.dollars.
Statements concerning future production costs or volumes are based on numerous assumptions of management regarding operating matters and on assumptions thatdemand for products develops as anticipated, that customers and other counterparties perform their contractual obligations, that operating and capital plans will not bedisrupted by issues such as mechanical failure, unavailability of parts and supplies, labour disturbances, interruption in transportation or utilities, adverse weather conditions,and that there are no material unanticipated variations in the cost of energy or supplies.
We assume no obligation to update forward-looking statements except as required under securities laws. Further information concerning assumptions, risks and uncertaintiesassociated with these forward-looking statements and our business can be found in our most recent Annual Information Form, as well as subsequent filings of ourmanagement’s discussion and analysis of quarterly results, all filed under our profile on SEDAR (www.sedar.com) and on EDGAR (www.sec.gov).
3
Agenda
Teck Overview & Strategy
Commodity Market Observations
Teck Update
4
• Americas-centered strategy focused on long-life assets in stable jurisdictions− Canada, U.S., Peru and Chile are
favorable regions in which to operate with well-known mining codes
• High-quality assets: All business units are cash flow positive
• Sustainability: Key to managing risks and developing opportunities
Strong Resource Position1
With Sustainable Long-Life Assets
Coal Resources ~100 years
Copper Resources ~30 years
Zinc Resources ~15 years
Energy Resources ~50 years
Attractive Portfolio of Long-Life Assets in Low Risk Jurisdictions
1. Reserve and resource life estimates refer to the mine life of the longest lived resource in the relevant commodity assuming production at planned rates and in some cases development of as yet undeveloped projects. See the reserve and resource disclosure in our most recent Annual Information Form, available on SEDAR and EDGAR, for additional detail regarding underlying assumptions.
5
Diversified business model
Attractive portfolio of long life assets
Low half of the cost curve
Appropriate scale
Low risk jurisdictions
Consistent Long-Term Strategy
6
Financial Results Overview
2015 Q2 2016
Revenue $8.3 billion $1.7 billion
Assets $34.7 billionAs of December 31
$33.9 billionAs of June 30
Gross profitbefore depreciation & amortization*
$2.6 billion $536 million
Profit (loss)attributable to shareholders
($2.5 billion) $15 million
Adjusted EBITDA* $2.0 billion $468 million
Adjusted profitattributable to shareholders*
$188 million$0.33/share
$3 million$0.01/share
*Non-GAAP financial measure. See ‘Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures’ in Teck’s quarterly results news releases for additional information.7
We have leverage to stronger steelmaking coal and zinc markets, and we benefit from the weaker Canadian dollar
The Value of Our Diversified Business Model
Cash Operating Profit 20151,2
Production Guidance3
Unit of Change
Effect on Estimated
Profit4
Effect on EstimatedEBITDA2,4
$C/$US C$0.01 C$22M /$.01∆ C$35M /$.01∆
Coal 26.5 Mt US$1/tonne5 C$20M /$1∆ C$31M /$1∆
Copper 315 kt US$0.01/lb C$5M /$.01∆ C$8M /$.01∆
Zinc 950 kt US$0.01/lb C$9M /$.01∆ C$13M /$.01∆
2016 Leverage to Commodities & FX
1. Reflects gross profit before depreciation and amortization.2. Non-GAAP financial measure. See ‘Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures’ in our quarterly results news releases for additional information.3. Assumes the midpoint of updated 2016 guidance ranges. Zinc includes 655 kt of zinc in concentrate and 295 kt of refined zinc.4. Based on commodity prices as of July 27, 2016 and C$/US$ exchange rate of $1.30. The effect on our profit and EBITDA will vary with movements in commodity prices, exchange rates and sales
volumes. 5. Based on a US$1/tonne change in benchmark premium steelmaking coal price.
Base Metals~65%
Copper ~35%
Zinc~30%
Coal~35%
BaseMetals~65%
8
Agenda
Teck Overview & Strategy
Commodity Market Observations
Teck Update
9
Improved outlook for steelmaking coal
Small surplus in copper could shift into deficit
Growing deficit and shrinking inventories in zinc
Oil market to rebalance
Change in Direction in Key Commodity Markets
10
Positive Developments in Steelmaking Coal
Coal Price Assessments
Strong recovery in metallurgical coal spot prices
China Steel and Coal Production• China July YTD steel production flat
year over year• China coking coal imports Mar-July
annualized ~60 Mt• China coking coal production declining
due to operating days restrictions
Global Steel and Coal Production• Curtailments continue • US exports declining• India steel production increasing
Source: Argus Plotted to September 9, 2016
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
200
$ / to
nne
Quarterly Contract Settlement Argus FOB Australia
11
-1,400
-1,200
-1,000
-800
-600
-400
-200
02006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
2016YTD
Thou
sand
tonn
es
1. Relative to initial expectations
8.1%
Disruptions to Concentrate Production Averaged 6.3% in 2007-20151
4.5%
• Currently a marginal oversupply in a ~20 Mt market
• Additional ~3% disruption could balance market
• Supply exceeding expectations elsewhere
• Post-2017, new supply minimal
• Exchange stocks represent <2 weeks of supply
Copper Surplus Could Shift Into Deficit
Source: Wood Mackenzie
12
Concentrate Supply Shrinking
Chinese Zinc Metal Imports
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
Jan-13 Jul-13 Jan-14 Jul-14 Jan-15 Jul-15 Jan-16 Jul-1
kt
Mine production Concs imports Annualized Monthly Avg. Supply
Spot and Benchmark TCs Tighten
• Domestic production plus imports ~550 kt/mth in 2013− Currently ~440 kt/mth
• Concentrate imports averaged ~95 kt/mth 2013 to 2015 − 2016 averaging 70 kt/mth
• Reduction in supply forcing metal production cuts
• Metal imports increased to supplement declining feedstocks
• Continued tightness is evidenced by the falling TCs
Source: NBS/CNIA, Customs
$0
$50
$100
$150
$200
$250
$300
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Spot Annual
Down ~40%
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
Jan-13 Jul-13 Jan-14 Jul-14 Jan-15 Jul-15 Jan-16 Jul-1
kt
211 kt
Up ~65% 351 kt
Chinese Zinc Concentrate Supply Declining
Source: NBS/CNIA, Customs
Source: NBS/CNIA, Customs
Plotted to July 2016
Plotted to July 2016
Plotted to July 2016
13
Source: Consensus Economics, August 2016
Fort Hills first production may coincide with forecasted supply deficit
Oil Market to Rebalance
Global Crude Oil Supply and Demand Balances
14
Agenda
Teck Overview & Strategy
Commodity Market Observations
Teck Update
15
Continued Focus on Cost Management and Operating Execution
• Continuing to deliver on cost management
• Lowered unit cost guidance in Coal and Copper
• Increased production guidance in Coal, Copper, and Zinc
• Extended near-term debt maturities and credit lines
• Increased year-end cash balance target to >$700M
• Recognized again for corporate citizenship & social responsibility
16
0.00
0.50
1.00
1.50
2.00
2.50
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016F*
Before by-product creditsAfter by-product credits
US$
/lb
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016F*
Operating Capitalized Stripping
C$/
t
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
2012 2013 2014 2015
US$
per t
onne
of p
rodu
ctio
n
Track Record of Lowering Cash Costs
Copper Cash Costs3
Achieved significant unit cost reductions, and expect further reductions in 2016
Steelmaking Coal Total Site Costs1
2
1. Total site costs are site costs, inventory write-downs and capitalized stripping, excluding depreciation. 2. Operating costs include site costs and inventory write-downs.3. By-product credits reduced cash costs by US$0.19/lb in 2015. Assumes US$0.19/lb in 2016.4. Red Dog zinc/lead site costs are Red Dog site costs per tonne of combined zinc and lead production.* 2016F based on mid-point of updated guidance range.
Red Dog Zinc/Lead Site Costs4
17
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
3,500
100 105 110 115 120 125 130 135 140 145 150
C$
Milli
on
HCC Coal Price US$/t
Expanding Coal Earnings Potential
Coal EBITDA & Cash Flow Potential*
Cost reductions and price increases contribute to expanding earnings potential
* Non-GAAP financial measures. See ‘Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures’ in our quarterly results news releases for additional information. Annualized EBITDA and free cash flow generating capacity of the coal business unit in two scenarios. The “mid-point” scenario assumes the mid-points of 2016 production and cost guidance, and realized coal prices equal to 92% of benchmark. The “Upside” scenario assumes production at the high end of our 2016 guidance range, operating costs at the low end of the range, and realized coal prices equal to 96% of the benchmark. “Cash flow” refers to free cash flowafter capitalized stripping and sustaining capital. Outputs are based on an assumed C$/US$ exchange rate of 1.30:1, 2016 plan fuel costs, and numerous other assumptions. These assumptions are subject to various risks and uncertainties that may cause results to vary materially from those depicted above. Please see the Cautionary Note on Forward-Looking Information for more information.
2016 Guidance Mid-Point UpsideCoal production (Mt) 26.5 27Unit Cost of Sales (C$/t):
Site 44 42Transportation 34 33Unit Cost of Sales (C$/t) 78 75
Capitalized Stripping (C$M) 290 290Sustaining Capital (C$M) 50 50
18
Largest Global Net Zinc Mining Companies
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
Thou
sand
tonn
es
Source: Wood Mackenzie, 2016E
Teck is the Largest Net MinerProvides Increased Exposure to Zinc Price
Public Company
Private CompanyTeck
19
$0
$500
$1,000
$1,500
$2,000
$2,500
$3,000
US$
M
Existing Notes New Notes
20
Extended Near-Term MaturitiesNo Substantial Bond Maturities for Five Years
1. In connection with the extension, certain of our subsidiaries provided guarantees for the extended facility and the facility was amended to include certain covenants. See Note 5(c) to our Q2 2016 financial statements for further details.
• Extended the maturity of US$1.0 billion of our US$1.2 billion credit facility by two years from June 2017 to June 20191
• Issued US$1.25 billion of five-year and eight-year senior unsecured notes• Purchased US$1.25 billion of notes maturing from 2017 to 2019
Debt Maturity Profile
Positioned to Emerge Stronger from this Cycle
• Production growth from Fort Hills
• No operating assets sold
• No equity dilution
• Maintaining strong liquidity
• Reducing debt, managing maturities
21
Result is higher production per share
Additional Information
22
TCK B Stock Price vs. C$/US$ Exchange Rate (2000-present)
Canadian Dollar Impacts Stock Price
Plotted to August 17, 2016
C$/
US$
Exc
hang
e R
ate
C$/
shar
e
Canadian dollar exchange rate is highly correlated with commodity prices
Source: Bloomberg
$0
$10
$20
$30
$40
$50
$60
$70
0.8
0.9
1.0
1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
1.5
1.6
1.7
"C$ vs US$ Exchange Rate (left axis)' Teck (right axis)
23
Teck Stock Price vs. Bloomberg Commodity Price Index (2000-present)
Commodity Price Correlation With Stock Price
Plotted to August 17, 2016Source: Bloomberg
$0
$10
$20
$30
$40
$50
$60
$70
50
70
90
110
130
150
170
190
210
230
250
03/0
1/20
0003
/07/
2000
03/0
1/20
0103
/07/
2001
03/0
1/20
0203
/07/
2002
03/0
1/20
0303
/07/
2003
03/0
1/20
0403
/07/
2004
03/0
1/20
0503
/07/
2005
03/0
1/20
0603
/07/
2006
03/0
1/20
0703
/07/
2007
03/0
1/20
0803
/07/
2008
03/0
1/20
0903
/07/
2009
03/0
1/20
1003
/07/
2010
03/0
1/20
1103
/07/
2011
03/0
1/20
1203
/07/
2012
03/0
1/20
1303
/07/
2013
03/0
1/20
1403
/07/
2014
03/0
1/20
1503
/07/
2015
03/0
1/20
1603
/07/
2016
Bloomberg Commodity Price Index (Left Axis) Teck (Right Axis)
C$/
shar
e
Bloo
mbe
rg C
omm
odity
Pric
e In
dex
24
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
Steelmaking Coal Copper Zinc
Gross Profit Before Depreciation and Amortization
Diversified Business Mix
Zinc generated almost half of profit in the past, and could do so again
*Non-GAAP financial measure. See ‘Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures’ in our quarterly results news releases for additional information.25
NorthAmerica
~23%Europe~14%
LatinAmerica
~2%
China~22%
Asia excl. China~40%
Diversified Global Customer BaseExposure to Recovery in Developed Markets as well as Growing Emerging Markets
* Based on 2015 revenue.
Revenue Contribution from Diverse Markets*
26
46 35
31
1512
35
28
2014 20152014 2015
Significant Cost Reductions in 2015Unit Costs Reduced at all of our Operations in 2015, Preserving Margins in a Volatile Commodity Environment
1. Steelmaking coal unit cost of sales include site costs, inventory adjustments and transport costs. Total cash costs are unit cost of sales plus capitalized stripping. 2. Copper C1 unit costs are net of by-product margins. Total cash costs are C1 unit costs plus capitalized stripping. See Appendix for definition.3. Non-GAAP financial measure. See ‘Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures’ in our quarterly results news releases for additional information.
23%
Total Cash Unit Costs (US$/tonne)1,3
76
99
Site
Transport
Inventory
Total Cash Unit Costs (US$/lb)2,3
xx%
14%Copper2
C1 Unit Costsdown US$0.20/lb
Total Cash Unit Costs3
down US$0.27/lb
Total
Capitalized Stripping
Site
Total
Capitalized Stripping
1.661.93
2014 2015
24%
Unit Cost of Sales (US$/tonne)1
64
84
C1 Unit Costs (US$/lb)2
xx%
12%
1.45
1.65
Steelmaking Coal1
Unit Cost of Salesdown US$20/t
Total Cash Unit Costs3
down US$23/t
1.65 1.45
0.28 0.21
2014 2015
27
- $50 $100 $150 $200 $250
Other ($1M)
Productivity - Utilization (e.g Op Delays)…
Components (life/cost) ($7M)
Freight savings ($7M)
Over time reduction ($12M)
Productivity - Enablers, multiple levers ($16M)
Plan optimization ($21M)
Pricing Improvements ($20M)
Equipment Rental Savings ($20M)
Mining Productivity - Availability ($23M)
Admin savings ($55M)
Idling & Energy Savings ($64M)
Consumables ($64M)
Employee Cost Reduction ($134M)
Contractors/Consultants Reduction ($160M)
Mining Productivity - Throughput ($215M)
2013 Initiatives 2014 Initiatives 2015 Initiatives
CAD$ millions(all USD savings translated using CAD/USD rate of 1.384)
~C$820M of Annualized Savings in 2015, from Major Cost Reduction Initiatives in 2013-2015
Annualized 2015 Savings from Major Cost Reduction Program Initiatives (C$M)
Targeting an additional C$300M in operating cost reductions in 2016; A total of >C$1B of annualized savings identified and included in 2016 plan
Meaningful Savings and Capital Spending Reductions Achieved
$0
$500
$1,000
$1,500
$2,000
$2,500
$3,000
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016Guidance
New Mine Development Major Enhancements
Sustaining Capital Capitalized Stripping
C$M
Total Capital Expenditures 2012-2016F
Productivity – Utilizat. (e.g. Op Delays) ($5M)
28
2015 Results Updated 2016 Guidance
Steelmaking CoalProduction 25.3 Mt 26-27 MtSite costs $45/t $42-46/tCapitalized stripping $16/t $11/t1
Transportation costs $36/t $33-35/t
Total cash unit costs2,3 $99/tUS$76/t3
$86-92/tUS$66-71/t3
CopperProduction 358 kt 310-320 ktC1 unit costs4 US$1.45/lb US$1.40-1.50/lbCapitalized stripping US$0.21/lb US$0.21/lb1
Total cash unit costs3,5 US$1.66/lb US$1.61-1.71/lbZinc
Metal in concentrate production6 658 kt 645-665 ktRefined production 307 kt 290-300 kt
Updated 2016 Production & Cost Guidance
1. Approximate, based on capitalized stripping guidance and mid-point of production guidance range.2. Steelmaking coal unit cost of sales include site costs, inventory adjustments and transport costs. Total cash unit costs are unit cost of sales plus capitalized stripping. Assumes as US to Canadian
dollar exchange rate of 1.30.3. Non-GAAP financial measure. See ‘Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures’ in our quarterly results news releases for additional information.4. Net of by-product credits.5. Copper total cash unit costs Include cash C1 unit costs (after by-product margins) and capitalized stripping. 6. Including co-product zinc production from our copper business unit.
29
($M) SustainingMajor
EnhancementNew Mine
Development Sub-totalCapitalized
Stripping Total
Coal $50 $40 $ - $90 $290 $380
Copper 120 5 80 205 190 395
Zinc 130 10 - 140 60 200Energy 5 - 1,000 1,005 - 1,005
TOTAL $305 $55 $1,080 $1,440 $540 $1,980
Total capex of ~$1.4B, plus capitalized stripping
2015A $397 $64 $1,120 $1,581 $663 $2,244
2016 Capital Expenditures Guidance
30
Operation Expiry DatesElkview In Negotiations - October 31, 2015Fording River In Negotiations - April 30, 2016Highland Valley Copper September 30, 2016Trail May 31, 2017Cardinal River June 30, 2017
Quebrada BlancaOctober 30, 2017
November 30, 2017December 31, 2017
Quintette April 30, 2018Antamina July 31, 2018Coal Mountain December 31, 2018Line Creek May 31, 2019
Carmen de Andacollo September 30, 2019December 31, 2019
Collective Agreements
31
CoalWell established with capital efficient growth options
Strong platform combined with diverse portfolio of options allows us to be selective in terms of commodity and timing
Completed In Construction Pre-Sanction
CopperStrong platform with substantial growth options
ZincWorld-class resource combined with integrated assets
EnergyBuilding a new business through partnership
Trail #1 Acid Plant
HVC Mill Optimization
Pend Oreille Restart
Fort Hills
Elk Valley Brownfield (4 Mpta)
Staged Growth/Value Pipeline
Red Dog Satellite Deposit – Anarraaq
San Nicolas (Cu-Zn)
Elk Valley Brownfield (Replacement 4Mpta) Quintette/Mt. Duke
Frontier
Lease 421
QB Phase 2
NuevaUnión
Mesaba
ZafranalHVC Brownfield
Galore/Schaft Creek
Cirque
Future Options
Trail #2 Acid Plant
Medium-term Growth Options
Elk Valley Brownfield
Antamina Brownfield
Red Dog Satellite Deposits
Neptune Terminals to 18Mtpa
32
Strong Financial Position; Including >C$5.4 in Liquidity1
Amount ($M) Commitment Maturity Letters of Credit Limit ($M)
Letters of Credit Issued ($M)
Total Available ($M)
US$3,000 Committed July 2020 US$1,000 Undrawn US$3,000
US$1,0003 Committed June 20193 US$1,0003 US$8062 US$1943
Expect to keep available for letter of credit requirements
~C$1,650 Uncommitted n/a n/a ~C$1,500 ~C$150
− Only financial covenant is debt to debt-plus-equity ratio4 of <50%• Debt to debt-plus equity of 35%2
− Availability not affected by commodity price changes or credit rating actions− Available for general corporate purposes
1. As at July 27, 2016. Liquidity includes cash balance of ~C$1.4 billion and undrawn US$3 billion credit facility, assuming a 1.30 CAD/USD exchange rate.2. As of June 30, 2016.3. We extended the maturity of US$1.0 billion of our US$1.2 billion credit facility by two years from June 2017 to June 2019.4. Non-GAAP financial measure. See ‘Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures’ in our quarterly results news releases for additional information.5. Assumes current commodity prices and exchange rates, our 2016 guidance for production, costs and capital expenditures, existing US$ debt levels and no unusual transactions
• Cash balance of ~C$1.4B1
• Substantial credit facilities2:
Expect year-end cash balance >C$700M5
33
Credit Ratings
S&P Moody’s Fitch DBRS
BBB- Baa3 BBB- BBB (low)
BB+ Ba1 BB+ BB (high)negative
BB Ba2 BB BB
BB- Ba3 BB- BB (low)
B+stable B1 B+
negative B (high)
B B2 B B
B- B3negative B- B (low)
Investment Grade
Non-Investment Grade
Supported by:• Diversified business model• Low risk jurisdictions• Low cost assets• Conservative financial policies• Significant cost reductions• Capital discipline• Achieving production guidance• Production curtailments in coal• Dividend cut• Streaming transactions
Constrained by:• Debt-to-EBITDA*, due to weak prices
Ratings reflect the current economic environment
As at September 7, 2016.* EBITDA is a non-GAAP financial measure. See ‘Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures’ in our quarterly results news releases for additional information.
Issuer Credit Ratings
34
0
50
100
150
200
250Ja
n-05
Jan-
06
Jan-
07
Jan-
08
Jan-
09
Jan-
10
Jan-
11
Jan-
12
Jan-
13
Jan-
14
Jan-
15
Jan-
16
Moody's S&P Fitch Bloomberg Commodity Price Index (Right Axis)
BBB/Baa2
BBB-/Baa3
BB+/Ba1
BB/Ba2
BB-/Ba3
BBB+/Baa1
B+/B1
B/B2
B-/B3
A+/A1
A/A2
A-/A3
Inve
stm
ent G
rade
Non
-Inve
stm
ent G
rade
Teck Credit Ratings vs. Bloomberg Commodity Price Index
Credit Ratings Reflect Commodity Prices
Plotted to August 18, 2016
35
Significant Tax Pools in Canada1
~$6B in Available Tax Pools, Including:• >$4B in loss carryforwards• $1.77B in Canadian Development Expenses
Applies To:• Cash income taxes in Canada
Does Not Apply To:• Resource taxes in Canada• Cash taxes in foreign jurisdictions
Multiples should reflect tax efficiency of earnings
1. As of December 31, 2015.. 36
• Six focus areas• Community • Biodiversity• Our People• Water• Air• Energy and Climate Change
• Achieved all 2015 goals• Set new short-term 2020
goals • Working towards long-term
2030 goals
Our Sustainability Strategy
37
Our External Recognition
Best 50 Corporate Citizens in Canada 2016
On the Dow Jones Sustainability World Index seven years in a row
One of top 100 most sustainable companies in the world and one of Canada’s most sustainable companies
Top 50 Socially Responsible Corporations in Canada
Listed on FTSE4Good Index in 2015
38
Steelmaking CoalBusiness Unit & Markets
Steelmaking Coal Market is Rebalancing
• US exports declining but still >1.5 times above historical average levels• Analysts forecast reduced imports into China, although some evidence of
improved demand • Stronger fundamentals ex-China
Tighter Market ex-ChinaUS Steelmaking Coal Exports (ex. Canada)
Decline in China offset by growth in other Asian countries and Latin America
Source: GTIS Source: Average of Wood Mackenzie & CRU
38 Mt35Mt
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
A*
Mt
2000-2009average at 23Mt
2010-2014average at 55Mt
2016A*: January-June Annualized 2016
-15
-10
-5
0
5
10
15
China JKT Brazil Europe IndiaS
eabo
rne
met
. coa
l im
ports
cha
nge,
20
20 v
s. 2
016,
Mt
40
• Total capacity of 1,200 Mt, including 400 Mt of surplus capacity• 177 Mt committed to closure by provinces and centrally-owned steel companies
within five years− 68 Mt of closure targets for 2016− Further reductions may be announced
Reductions in Chinese Steel Capacity
68
44
25
40
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
2016 2017-18 2019-20 Within 3-5 Years(No DetailsAnnounced)
Mt
Surplus Capacity
Committed to Close 177 Mt
Additional Surplus Capacity223 Mt
Production800 Mt
Timing of Capacity Reduction Targets Announced*China’s Steel Capacity
*As of August 23, 2016.
Exceeds government target of 100-150 Mt capacity in the next 5 years41
45 55 65 75
China
0
3
6
9
12
15
Jan-
10A
pr-1
0Ju
l-10
Oct
-10
Jan-
11A
pr-1
1Ju
l-11
Oct
-11
Jan-
12A
pr-1
2Ju
l-12
Oct
-12
Jan-
13A
pr-1
3Ju
l-13
Oct
-13
Jan-
14A
pr-1
4Ju
l-14
Oct
-14
Jan-
15A
pr-1
5Ju
l-15
Oct
-15
Jan-
16A
pr-1
6Ju
l-16
Traditional Steel Markets
• China stable
• JKT rebounding
• EU stable
Rest of the World
• India good growth
• Brazil stable
• US slowing
Monthly Hot Metal Production
Source: WSA, based on data reported by countries monthly; NBS
Mt
Plotted to July 2016
Global Hot Metal Production
JKT
India
Europe
USA
Brazil
42
Facilitates access to seaborne raw materials
Source: NBS, CISA
Status of Relocation of Chinese Steel Industry To the Coast
Xinjiang
Tibet
Qinghai
Sichuan
InnerMongolia
Henan
Shanxi
Guangxi Guangdong
Fujian
Zhejiang
Jiangsu
Shandong
Liaoning
Jilin
Heilongjiang
GuizhouHunan
Hubei
Jiangxi
Anhui
ShaanxiGansu
Ningxia
Qinghai
Sichuan
Yunnan
Beijing
Hebei
WISCO Fangchenggang Project• Planned capacity: hot metal 8.5 Mt, crude
steel 9.2Mt, steel products 8.6 Mt• Cold roll line (2.1 Mt) commissioned in Jun
2015• No timeline for BFs yet
Baosteel Zhanjiang Project• Capacity: hot metal 8.2 Mt, crude steel 8.7
Mt, steel products 8.2 Mt, coke 3.2 Mt • BF #1 commissioned in September 2015• BF #2 commissioned in July 2016
Ningde Steel Base• Proposed but no progress yet
Ansteel Bayuquan Project• Phase 1 (~ 5.4 Mt pig iron, 5.2 Mt crude
steel and 5 Mt steel products) in 2013• Phase 2 (5.4 Mt BF) planned but no
progress yet
Shougang Jingtang Plant• Phase 1 (~10 Mt) completed in 2010.• Phase 2, planned with the investment of
~US$7 billion, kicked off in Aug 2015 and scheduled to be completed by 2018 Capacity: hot metal 8.9 Mt, crude steel 9.4 Mt, steel products 9.0 Mt
Shandong Steel Rizhao Project• Capacity: hot metal 8.1 Mt (2 BFs), crude
steel 8.5 Mt, steel products 7.9 Mt • BF #1 started construction in Sep 2015;
scheduled to be completed by the end of 2016
43
Shougang’s JingTang Steel Plant Expansion
• One of the largest integrated steel mills in China; located in Hebei province
• Current crude steel capacity of 9.7 Mtpa
• Phase 2 expansion: − Capacity growth to 19.1 Mtpa− First 5,500m3 blast furnace currently under construction will add 4.5 Mtpa;
commissioning March 2018
Image Source: Beijing Shougang International Engineering Technology Co., Ltd.44
Source: NBS, CISA
Growing Share of Chinese Steel Industry Production on the Coast
50%
52%
54%
56%
58%
60%
62%
64%
66%
68%
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 2015
Non-coastal (Mt, lhs) Coastal (Mt, lhs) Coastal share (%, rhs)
Chinese Steel Industry Production
45
0
200
400
600
800
1000
2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 2035
Crude Steel and Hot Metal Production
Source: WSA, China Association of Metalscrap Utilization, Wood Mackenzie
Crude Steel
China Scrap Use to Increase Slowly
China’s Scrap Ratio Low vs. Other Countries
73%54%
33%
88%
28%
50%
11%
36%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
UnitedStates
Europe Japan Turkey Russia Korea China WorldAverage China
Steel Use By Sector(2000-15)
Electric Arc Furnace
Hot Metal
Hot metal / crude steel ratio to remain >90% and EAF share of crude steel production <10% until ~2028
Source: Wood Mackenzie
Source: China Metallurgy Industry Planning and Research Institute
Construction55-60%
Others15-20%
Machinery15-20%
Auto5-10%
46
An Integrated Long Life Coal Business
47
Prince Rupert
Ridley Terminal
Vancouver
Prince George Edmonton
Calgary
Westshore Terminal
Quintette
Cardinal River
Elk Valley
Kamloops
British Columbia
Alberta
Seattle
Elkford
Sparwood
Hosmer
Fernie
Fording River
Greenhills
Line Creek
Elkview
Coal Mountain
ElcoElk Valley
1,150 km
• >1 billion tonnes of reserves support 26-27 Mt of production for many years• Geographically concentrated in the Elk Valley• Established infrastructure and capacity with mines, railways and terminals• Only steelmaking coal mines still operating in Canada; competitive globally
Neptune Terminal
47
Coal MountainPhase 2
47
We Are a Leading Steelmaking Coal Supplier To Steel Producers Worldwide
North America~5%
Europe2015: ~20%2013: ~15%
China 2015: ~20%2013: ~30%
High quality, consistent, reliable, long-term supply
Asia excl. China2015: ~50%2013: ~45% Latin America
~5%
Proactively realigning sales with changing market48
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
Q1
2010
Q2
2010
Q3
2010
Q4
2010
Q1
2011
Q2
2011
Q3
2011
Q4
2011
Q1
2012
Q2
2012
Q3
2012
Q4
2012
Q1
2013
Q2
2013
Q3
2013
Q4
2013
Q1
2014
Q2
2014
Q3
2014
Q4
2014
Q1
2015
Q2
2015
Q3
2015
Q4
2015
Q1
2016
Q2
2016
US$
/ to
nne
Teck Realized Price (US$) Benchmark Price
Average realized price discount: ~8-9%
Discount to the benchmark price is a function of:
1. Product mix: >90% hard coking coal
2. Direction of quarterly benchmark prices and spot prices- Second consecutive increase in the
benchmark for premium products in Q3 2016, to US$92.50/t
Historical Average Realized Prices
Average Realized Price in Steelmaking Coal
Average realized % of benchmark: 91-92% (range: 88%-96%);Q2 2016 realized price ~99% of benchmark due to high spot prices
96%
88%
93%
94%
92%91%
96%
49
4635 34
3
1
35
28 26
15
128.50
2014 2015 2016
Total cash unit costs down 31% from 2014 to 2016F2,3
Total Cash Unit Costs2,3 US$/t 2014 2015 20164 Change
Site $46 $35 $34 -26%
Inventory Adjustments $3 $1 $0 -100%
Transportation $35 $28 $26 -25%
Unit Cost of Sales (IFRS) $84 $64 $60 -29%
Capitalized Stripping $15 $12 $8.505 -44%
Total Cash Unit Costs2,3 $99 $76 $68.50 -31%
Sustaining Capital $6 $2 $1.505 -75%
All In Sustaining Costs2,3 $105 $78 $70 -33%
1. In US dollars per tonne. Assumes a Canadian dollar to US dollar exchange rate of 1.10 in 2014, 1.28 in 2015 and 1.30 in 2016.2. Steelmaking coal unit cost of sales include site costs, inventory adjustments and transport costs. Total cash costs are unit cost of sales plus capitalized stripping. All in sustaining costs are total cash
costs plus sustaining capital. 3. Non-GAAP financial measure. See “Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures” section of our quarterly press releases for further information.4. Based on the mid-point of updated guidance ranges.5. Approximate, based on capital expenditures guidance and mid-point of updated production guidance ranges.
IFRS
Steelmaking Coal Unit Costs1
$99
$76
IFRS IFRS
$68.50
Site
Inventory
Transport
Capitalized Stripping
50
Maintaining Stripping Levels in Coal
Total Material Moved & Coal Production
-
1,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
5,000
6,000
7,000
8,000
-
10,000
20,000
30,000
40,000
50,000
60,000
70,000
80,000
90,000
Q1/
11Q
2/11
Q3/
11Q
4/11
Q1/
12Q
2/12
Q3/
12Q
4/12
Q1/
13Q
2/13
Q3/
13Q
4/13
Q1/
14Q
2/14
Q3/
14Q
4/14
Q1/
15Q
2/15
Q3/
15Q
4/15
Q1/
16Q
2/16
Total Material Moved Clean Coal Production
Prod
uctio
n(0
00
t)
Mat
eria
lMov
ed (0
00 B
CM
s)
• Maintaining material moved relative to production
• Q3 2015 reflects production curtailments
• Maintaining stripping levels per long term mine plans
Lower capitalized stripping costs reflect cost reduction program
51
Steelmaking Coal: 5 Year Planning Objectives 2016
• Evaluating options to maintain annual production levels− Despite the closure of CMO and
CRO in the 5 year horizon− Exploring lowest cost options at
remaining 4 Elk Valley operations− Utilize assets available from
closed operations
• Maintain all operations cash positive throughout the plan− Embed continuous cost
improvement in each year− Ensure plans meet short term
goals without sacrificing the long term viability of the operations
• Future growth options remain available but dependent on stronger coal prices -
5
10
15
20
25
30
2017F 2018F 2019F 2020F 2021F
Prod
uctio
n (m
illion
s to
nnes
)
Conceptual Future Production Profile
FRO GHO (80%) EVO LCO CRO CMO Added Elk Valley52
>75 Mt of West Coast Port Capacity PlannedOur Portion is 40 Mt
• Exclusive to Teck • Recently expanded to 12.5 Mt • Planned growth to 18.5 Mt
Westshore Terminals
Neptune Coal Terminal
Ridley Terminals
West Coast Port Capacity
• Current capacity: 18 Mt• Expandable to 25 Mt• Teck contracted at 3 Mt
• Teck is largest customer at 19 Mt• Large stockpile area• Recently expanded to 33 Mt• Planned growth to 36 Mt • Contract expires March 2021
Milli
on T
onne
s (N
omin
al)
Our share of capacity exceeds current production plans, including Quintette
12.518
336
7
3
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
Neptune CoalTerminal
RidleyTerminals
WestshoreTerminals
Current Capacity Planned Growth
53
LNG Haul Trucks - Status Update
54
• Six pilot trucks have been converted to “dual-fuel” - LNG and diesel (four 830E’s, two 930E’s); first in Canada
• Current substitution rates achieved: 25 – 40% (target >35%)• Pilot objective is to confirm the business case (cost and sustainability) for a
company-wide application; focus is on safety, sustainability and operability− Establishing reliability of the LNG systems − Optimizing LNG substitution rates and monitoring GHG emissions
54
Our Market - Seaborne Hard Coking Coal2: ~200 million tonnes
1. Source: International Energy Agency 2014 data2. Source: CRU
Global Coal Production1: 7.9 billion tonnesSteelmaking Coal Production2: ~1,185 million tonnes
Export Steelmaking Coal2: ~325 million tonnesSeaborne Steelmaking Coal2: ~290 million tonnes
High Grade Hard Coking Coal Is A Niche Market
55
• Around the world, and especially in China, blast furnaces are getting larger and increasing PCI rates
• Coke requirements for stable blast furnace operation are becoming increasingly higher
• Teck coals with high hot and cold strength are ideally suited to ensure stable blast furnace operation
• Produce some of the highest hot strengths in the world
50 60 70 80 90 100
South Africa
Japan (Sorachl)
Japan(Yubarl)
U.S.A.Canada OtherTeck HCCAustraliaJapanSouth Africa
Australia(hard coking)and Canada
U.S.A.
Australia(soft coking)
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
Drum Strength Dl 30 (%)
CSR
Teck HCC
Coking Coal Strength
High Quality Hard Coking Coal
Source: Yasuschi, Masashi et al, 1983
56
Copper Business Unit & Markets
Copper Metal Prices & StocksU
S¢/lb
thou
sand
tonn
es
Plotted to August. 26, 2016
Daily Copper Prices & Stocks
Source: LME, ICSG, ILZSG
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
1,400
0¢
50¢
100¢
150¢
200¢
250¢
300¢
350¢
400¢
450¢
500¢
2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016
LME Stocks Comex SHFE Price
58
Copper Mine Production Forecasts Continue to Decline
Losses in 2016 already 81% of 2015 levels
16,000
16,500
17,000
17,500
18,000
18,500
5% Disruption net of ProjectsMarket Adjustment2017 Adjusted
15,000
15,500
16,000
16,500
17,000
17,500
Feb-
13Ju
n-13
Oct
-13
Feb-
14Ju
n-14
Oct
-14
Feb-
15Ju
n-15
Oct
-15
Feb-
16Ju
n-16
2015 AdjustedMarket Adjustment5% Disruption
thou
sand
tonn
es c
onta
ined
cop
per
2015 2016
15,000
15,500
16,000
16,500
17,000
17,500
18,000
18,500
Apr
-14
Jul-1
4
Oct
-14
Jan-
15
Apr
-15
Jul-1
5
Oct
-15
Jan-
16
Apr
-16
Jul-1
6
5% Disruption & ProjectsMarket Adjustment2016 Adjusted
2017
thou
sand
tonn
es c
onta
ined
cop
per
thou
sand
tonn
es c
onta
ined
cop
per
• Down 518 kt from 2013 net estimates• Down 1.7 Mt from guidance
Source: Wood Mackenzie
• Down 1.2 Mt from 2014 estimates• Projects down by 92% • Net mine production growth in 2016 now
only 2.8%, less than 400 kt
• Down 1,078 kt from April 2015 estimates • Projects down by 73% or 640 kt
Source: Wood Mackenzie Source: Wood Mackenzie
59
-600-400-200
0200400600800
1000
2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021
Top 30 ROW Change
New Mine Production, Including Projects
Grasberg: +364Cerro Verde +262Trident +112Las Bambas +250
% of Increase 115%
Escondida: +190B. Canyon +140Trident + 75Las Bambas +100
% of Increase 57%
Majority of global mine production increases in 2016 and 2017 will come from only four mines
Top 30 Projects from 2015-2021 (Pre-Disruption)
60
CRU Sees Concentrate Surplus Short Lived
61
0¢
10¢
20¢
30¢
40¢
50¢
60¢
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Standard Spot High Grade Spot Realised TC/RC
Copper Concentrate TC/RCs
Copper Concentrate TC/RCs
Plotted to August 2016Source: Teck, CRU
62
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
6000
7000
8000
9000
10000
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
$/to
nne
Cumulative Production %2013 Cash Costs 2013 Total Costs 2014 Cash Costs 2014 Total Costs
Copper Costs Higher Than Understood
GFMS Net Cash and Total Cost Curves
2013 Price2014 Price
2015 Price
Current Price (8/18/2016)
Source: GFMS, Thomson Reuters
63
(5,000)
(4,000)
(3,000)
(2,000)
(1,000)
-
1,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
5,000
6,000
- 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000 8,000 9,000
Mar
gin
(US$
/tonn
e)
Cumulative Copper Production (kt)
At US$2.00 Copper At US$2.40 Copper
At US$2.40 6,239 kt
72nd Percentile
At US$2.004,270 kt
49th Percentile
Copper Margin Curve
Bernstein Estimated Margin After Sustaining Capex
Source: Bernstein Research
64
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Cathode Concs Scrap Blister/Semis
000’
s to
nnes
(con
tent
)
Net Copper Imports
Source: NBS Plotted to July 2016
Total copper unit imports continue to climb;Up ~5% in 2015 and 20% year-to-date
China Switching to Copper Concentrates
65
Significant Chinese Copper Demand Remains
…But Will Add Significantly in Additional Tonnage Terms
Annual Growth Rate of Chinese Copper Consumption to Slow Dramatically…
China expected to add almost as much to global demand in the next 15 years as the past 25 years
Source: Wood Mackenzie, Teck
-
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
1,400
1990 1994 1998 2002 2006 2010 2014 2018 2022 2026 20300%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
1990 1994 1998 2002 2006 2010 2014 2018 2022 2026 2030
Annual Avg. 11.9%
Annual Avg. 2.8%
Annual Avg. Growth356 Mt/yr Annual Avg. Growth
325 Mt/yr
Thou
sand
tonn
es
Source: Wood Mackenzie, Teck
66
-100
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
Feb-
13Ju
n-13
Oct
-13
Feb-
14Ju
n-14
Oct
-14
Feb-
15Ju
n-15
Oct
-15
Feb-
16Ju
n-16
Since April 2014• Despite a 725 kt drop in demand
• The surplus is down 650 kt
thou
sand
tonn
es c
onta
ined
cop
per
2015 2016
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
Apr
-14
Jul-1
4
Oct
-14
Jan-
15
Apr
-15
Jul-1
5
Oct
-15
Jan-
16
Apr
-16
Jul-1
6
2017
thou
sand
tonn
es c
onta
ined
cop
per
thou
sand
tonn
es c
onta
ined
cop
per
Global Copper Cathode BalancesWood Mackenzie’s Outlook is Trending Down
Since December 2014• Despite a drop of 660 kt to Wood Mackenzie’s
demand estimates
• Their surplus is down 700 kt
Since April 2015• Down from a 510 kt surplus
• Despite a 510 kt drop in demand
Source: Wood Mackenzie Source: Wood Mackenzie Source: Wood Mackenzie
Forecast surplus now below 150 kt or 0.5%67
(2,000)
(1,500)
(1,000)
(500)
0
500
2012 2015 2018 2021
Thou
sand
tonn
es
• At 1.8% global demand growth, 470 kt of new supply needed annually
• Structural deficits start in 2018-2019
• Projects delayed today will not be available to the market by 2019
• Market finely balanced through 2018
− Year-to-date disruptions below estimates
− Two of the largest projects are heavily weighted to H2 increases
Forecast Copper Refined Balance
Long-Term Copper Mine Production Still Needed
Source: ICSG, Wood Mackenzie, Teck
68
Ore Grade TrendsOngoing Decline will put Upward Pressure on Unit Costs
0.8
1.0
1.2
1.4
1.6
1.8
2.0
2.2
2.4
2.6
0.8
0.9
1.0
1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
1.5
1.6
1.7
1980 1984 1988 1992 1996 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 2020 2024
Cop
per G
rade
Cu
%
All Operations Primary Mines Co-By Product Mines - (RH axis)
Industry Head Grade Trends (Weighted by Paid Copper)
Source: Wood Mackenzie
69
Building Partnerships: NuevaUnión
Teck and Goldcorp have combined Relincho and El Morro projects and formed a 50/50 joint venture company called NuevaUnión
• Committed to building strong, mutually beneficial relationships with stakeholders and communities
Capital smart partnership • Shared capital, common infrastructure• Shared risk, shared rewards
Benefits of combining projects include:• Longer mine life• Lower cost, improved capital efficiency• Reduced environmental footprint• Enhanced community benefits• Greater returns over either standalone
project
70
NuevaUnión Summary
Initial Capital
$3.0 - $3.5billion
Copper Production1
190,000tonnes per year
Gold Production1
315,000ounces per year
Mine Life
32+years
Copper in Reserves2
16.6billion pounds
Gold in Reserves2
8.9million ounces
Note: Conceptual based on preliminary design from the PEA1. Average production rates are based on the first full ten years of operations2. Total copper and gold contained in mineral reserves as reported separately by Teck and Goldcorp.3. Capital estimate for Phase 1a based on preliminary design shown in 2015 dollars on an unescalated basis
71
NuevaUnión is one of the largest open pit copper development projects in the Americas on the basis of copper contained in Proven and Probable Reserves
Copper Development Projects in the Americas
-
5,000
10,000
15,000
20,000
25,000
Rad
omiro
Tom
ic
Cor
ridor
El A
rco
Que
brad
aB
lanc
a II
Que
llave
co
Agu
a R
ica
Rel
inch
o
El M
orro
Cas
ino
Sch
aft C
reek
Gal
ore
Cre
ek
Rio
Bla
nco
Cop
per E
quiv
alen
t in
Res
erve
s (M
lbs)
Copper-equivalent contained in Reserves (Mlbs)(North & South American Copper Projects)
Note: Copper equivalent reserves calculated using $3.25/lb Cu and $1,200/oz Au. Does not include copper resource projects that are currently in construction
Nue
vaU
nión
Source: SNL Metals & Mining, Thomson One Analytics, and company disclosures.
72
ZincBusiness Unit & Markets
Zinc Metal Prices & Stocks
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
1,400
1,600
1,800
0¢
50¢
100¢
150¢
200¢
250¢
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
LME Stocks SHFE Price
US¢
/lb
Plotted to August 24, 2016Source: LME/SHFE
Daily Zinc Prices & Stocks
74
0
1,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
5,000
6,000
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec2013 2014 2015 2016
Monthly Chinese Zinc Mine Production
LME Zinc Stocks
Zinc Mine ProductionUndersupplied, Even With Lower Growth
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
50¢60¢70¢80¢90¢
100¢110¢120¢
Jan-
13
Apr
-13
Jul-1
3
Oct
-13
Jan-
14
Apr
-14
Jul-1
4
Oct
-14
Jan-
15
Apr
-15
Jul-1
5
Oct
-15
Jan-
16
Apr
-16
Jul-1
6
Stocks Price
• Metal market in deficit
• LME stocks down >780 kt over 44 months, and are below 500 kt for the first time since 2010
• Market working through ‘off-market’ inventory
• Large periodic increases indicate significant off-market inventories flowing through LME to consumers
• Chinese zinc mine production down over the last 44 months
US
¢/lb
thou
sand
tonn
es
Source: LME, NBS, CNIA
Source: LME, NBS, CNIA
75
• Down 1,020 kt from January 2015 estimates
• Down 1,624 kt from January 2015 estimates
Zinc Mine Production Wood Mackenzie’s Outlook is Trending Down
thou
sand
tonn
es c
onta
ined
zin
c
2015 2016 2017
• Down 756 kt from April 2015 estimates
thou
sand
tonn
es c
onta
ined
zin
c
thou
sand
tonn
es c
onta
ined
zin
c
12,000
12,500
13,000
13,500
14,000
14,500
15,000
Feb-
13M
ay-1
3A
ug-1
3N
ov-1
3Fe
b-14
May
-14
Aug
-14
Nov
-14
Feb-
15M
ay-1
5A
ug-1
5N
ov-1
5Fe
b-16
May
-16
12,000
12,500
13,000
13,500
14,000
14,500
15,000
May
-14
Jul-1
4S
ep-1
4N
ov-1
4Ja
n-15
Mar
-15
May
-15
Jul-1
5S
ep-1
5N
ov-1
5Ja
n-16
Mar
-16
May
-16
Jul-1
6
12,000
12,500
13,000
13,500
14,000
14,500
15,000
Source: Wood Mackenzie Source: Wood Mackenzie Source: Wood Mackenzie
76
2014-2020 2014-2020
Significant Zinc Mine ReductionsLarge Short-Term Losses, More Long Term
-500
-400
-300
-200
-100
0
Cen
tury
Lish
een
Skor
pion
Red
Dog
Brac
emac
-McL
eod
Rap
ura
Aguc
ha
Pom
orza
ny-O
lkus
z (in
cl B
ulk)
Jagu
ar
Mid
-Ten
ness
ee
Mae
Sod
Ende
avor
0
100
200
300
400
500
Gam
sber
gAn
tam
ina
Dug
ald
Riv
erM
cArth
ur R
iver
Bish
aG
ansu
Jin
hui
Kyzy
l-Tas
htyg
skoe
Shal
kiya
Res
tart
Sind
esar
Khu
rdAg
uas
Teni
das
Cha
ngba
Zaw
ar M
ines
El B
roca
lSa
ngui
kou
Car
ibou
…Sa
n C
risto
bal
Pena
squi
to
Source: ICSG, Wood Mackenzie Teck, Company Reports Source: ICSG, Wood Mackenzie Teck, Company Reports
77
LME Zinc Stocks – Since Dec 2012LME Zinc Stocks - 11 Years
Zinc Inventories Declining
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
50¢
60¢
70¢
80¢
90¢
100¢
110¢
120¢
Dec
-12
Mar
-13
Jun-
13
Sep
-13
Dec
-13
Mar
-14
Jun-
14
Sep
-14
Dec
-14
Mar
-15
Jun-
15
Sep
-15
Dec
-15
Mar
-16
Jun-
16
Stocks Price
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
1,400
0¢
50¢
100¢
150¢
200¢
250¢
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
Stocks Price
US
¢/lb
thou
sand
tonn
esPlotted to August 24, 2016
US
¢/lb
thou
sand
tonn
es
• LME stocks down ~810 kt over 24 months• Large inventory position still to work down but we are under 500 kt for the first time
since early 2010, now nearing 400kt.• Large, sudden increases indicate there are also significant off-market inventories
flowing through the LME to consumers
Source: LME Source: LME Plotted to August 24, 2016
78
Zinc Concentrate Stocks at Chinese Ports Declining
Plotted to August, 2016
Monthly Stocks of Zinc Concentrate
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
450
500
Jan-11 Jul-11 Jan-12 Jul-12 Jan-13 Jul-13 Jan-14 Jul-14 Jan-15 Jul-15 Jan-16 Jul-16
Huangpu port:Zhanjiang port:Beihai port:Yunyuejiang portFangcheng port:Nanjing port:Qinzhou port:Dalian port:BaYuQuan port:QHD port:Jinzhou port:Yantai Port:LYG port:
79
• Down 15 kt from December 2014 estimates, taking the market from deficit of 96 kt to a deficit of 111 kt
• Down 385 kt from December 2014 estimates, taking the market further into deficit of 624 kt
thou
sand
tonn
es c
onta
ined
zin
c
2015 2016 2017
• Up 379 kt from April 2015 estimates • Wood Mackenzie expects over 1 Mt of
projects and expansions will come online in 2017 due to higher prices
thou
sand
tonn
es c
onta
ined
zin
c
thou
sand
tonn
es c
onta
ined
zin
c
(300)
(200)
(100)
0
100
200
300
400
Feb-
13M
ay-1
3A
ug-1
3N
ov-1
3Fe
b-14
May
-14
Aug
-14
Nov
-14
Feb-
15M
ay-1
5A
ug-1
5N
ov-1
5Fe
b-16
4249
1
(1,000)
(800)
(600)
(400)
(200)
0
200
400
May
-14
Aug
-14
Nov
-14
Feb-
15
May
-15
Aug
-15
Nov
-15
Feb-
16
May
-16
(500)
(400)
(300)
(200)
(100)
0
100
200
300
400
Zinc Concentrate BalancesWood Mackenzie’s Outlook Trending Down
Source: Wood Mackenzie Source: Wood Mackenzie Source: Wood Mackenzie
80
• Deficit is being decreased by 106 kt from December 2014 estimates, to 89 kt
• Deficit increased by 250 kt from December 2014 estimates, to 439 kt
• Increase due to production cuts, resulting in insufficient concentrate available to smelters and less refined production in 2016
thou
sand
tonn
es
2015 2016 2017
• Deficit increased by 250 kt from April 2015 estimates, to 475 kt
thou
sand
tonn
es
thou
sand
tonn
es c
onta
ined
zin
c
Refined Zinc BalancesWood Mackenzie’s Outlook Trending Down
(500)
(450)
(400)
(350)
(300)
(250)
(200)
(150)
(100)
(50)
0
Feb-
13Ju
n-13
Oct
-13
Feb-
14Ju
n-14
Oct
-14
Feb-
15Ju
n-15
Oct
-15
Feb-
16Ju
n-16
(600)
(500)
(400)
(300)
(200)
(100)
0
May
-14
Aug
-14
Nov
-14
Feb-
15
May
-15
Aug
-15
Nov
-15
Feb-
16
May
-16
Source: Wood Mackenzie Source: Wood Mackenzie Source: Wood Mackenzie
(500)
(450)
(400)
(350)
(300)
(250)
(200)
(150)
(100)
(50)
0
Apr
-15
Jun-
15
Aug
-15
Oct
-15
Dec
-15
Feb-
16
Apr
-16
Jun-
16
81
Zinc Metal Market Mostly in Deficit Since 2013
-800
-600
-400
-200
0
200
400
600
2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018
WoodMac CRU
Market View – Wood Mackenzie & CRU
• Zinc metal deficit forecasted for 2016 and 2017
• Mine production increases of -3.4% and 9.2% respectively expected for 2016 and 2017
− Closure of Century and Lisheen, combined with production cuts, will decrease mine production in 2016
− Higher prices are expected to bring a large amount of Chinese mine production online, and to bring back Glencore’s production.
• Deficits of around 500kt/year in 2016 and 2017 will still result in large draw down of stocks
Zinc Metal Balance
Source: Wood Mackenzie, CRU
thou
sand
tonn
es c
onta
ined
zin
c
82
China5%
USA 20%
0%
2%
4%
6%
8%
10%
12%
14%
16%
18%
20%
00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15
Galvanized Steel as % Crude ProductionChina Zinc Demand
Construction15%
Transportation 20%
Other 5%
Consumer Goods30%
Infrastructure30%
Chinese Zinc Demand to Outpace Supply
Source: Teck
If China were to galvanize crude steel at half the rate of the US using the same rate of zinc/tonne, a further 2.1 Mt would be added to global zinc consumption
Source: Teck
83
Committed Zinc Supply Insufficient for Demand
Forecast Zinc Refined Balance
Source: Teck
• We expect insufficient mine supply to constrain refined production− From 2015-2020, refined metal supply
increase of only 354 kt − Over the same period, refined demand
increase of 2.2 Mt
• Market is projected to be in significant deficit in 2016 due to a lack of concentrate leading to smelter cuts
• Metal market moving into substantial deficits with further mine closures and depleting inventories
(1,200)
(1,000)
(800)
(600)
(400)
(200)
0
200
2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018
Thou
sand
tonn
es
84
• Red Dog has stable zinc production despite declining grade• Pend Oreille moving to a higher proportion of secondary mining,
which improves selectivity and ore availability• Increased refined zinc production at Trail with enhanced process
stability of a new acid plant 85
Poised to Capitalize on Improving Zinc Fundamentals
85
2cm
1.1 m @ 42.2% Zn, 14.7 % Pb, 558g/t Ag
2cm
1.9 m @ 24.6% Zn, 6.3 % Pb, 53g/t Ag
Red Dog: Anarraaq High Grade Intercepts Demonstrate Significant Resource Potential1
DDH171854.7m @ 15.7%Zn, 4.0% Pb, 106g/t AgIncl. 11.2m @ 34.2% Zn, 11.5% Pb, 382g/t Ag
DDH1714 42m @ 18.3% Zn, 4.5% Pb, 82g/t AgIncl. 23.4m @ 23.2% Zn, 5.2% Pb, 74g/t Ag86
Industry Average Zinc Grades Falling
High Grade Anarraaq Intercepts
Red Dog zinc grades are much higher than industry average
0
5
10
15
20
25
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
Gra
de %
Weighted Average Industry Grade
Red Dog
1. The scientific and technical information disclosed has been reviewed and approved by Rodrigo Marinho, P.Geo., Technical Director, Reserve Evaluation, Teck who is a Qualified Person under NI 43-101. For further information, please see Teck’s most recent Annual Information Form.
EnergyBusiness Unit & Markets
North American Rig Counts Down Sharply
Source: Baker Hughes, EIA, National Bank of Canada, HIS, US Department Of Energy
North American Rig Count & US Production
Plotted to August 25, 2016
5000
5500
6000
6500
7000
7500
8000
8500
9000
9500
10000
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
1,400
1,600
1,800
2,000
1/7/
11
1/7/
12
1/7/
13
1/7/
14
1/7/
15
1/7/
16
Thou
sand
bpd
Rig
cou
nt U
nits
US Rig Count CAD Rig Count US 4-week Production Avg.
88
Oil Liquids – Discovered Resources & Production (Billion bbl)
Oil Exploration Success Fell To a Post-1952 Low in 2015
Enough oil has been discovered to meet production in only four of the past 30 years
Source: Rystad Energy, Morgan Stanley
89
Wood Mackenzie Forecasted Global Oil Demand By Sector (2000-2035)
World Oil Demand Still Growing
Wood Mackenzie Global Macro Oils Long Term Outlook May 201690
Source: BMO Capital Markets, May 2016
Oil Sands Mining Costs Lower Than Understood
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
Cash Cost Royalty Cash Tax Sustaining Capex
$/bbl Phase 2: Stabilized Market
Where we are now
91
Sufficient Western Canadian Takeaway Capacity Expected
Western Canadian Supply and Takeaway Capacity
Source: CAPP, Teck, Lee & Doma Energy Group
Fort Hills’ First Oil
Sufficient takeaway capacity expected for forecast growth
• 2011–2014− Rapid production growth resulted in
takeaway capacity challenges− Industry added significant pipeline and
rail capacity during this time
• 2015–2030− Existing pipeline capacity, new pipelines
(TMX and Energy East) and existing rail capacity expected to provide sufficient takeaway capacity
0
1,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
5,000
6,000
7,000
kbpd
WCSB Supply (CAPP 2016) WCSB Supply (CAPP 2015)
Export Pipeline Capacity Total Capacity, Including Rail
TMX & Energy East
92
Building An Energy Business
Strategic diversification
Large truck & shovel mining projects
World-class resources
Long-life assets
Mining-friendly jurisdiction
Competitive margins
Minimizing execution risk
Tax effective
Mined bitumen is in Teck’s ‘sweet spot’93
• Significant value created over long term
• 60% of PV of cash flows beyond year 5
• IRR of 50-year project is only ~1% higher than a 20-year project
• Options for debottlenecking and expansion
50-year assets provide for superior returns operating through many price cycles
The Real Value of Long-Life Assets
Fort Hills Project Indicative Rolling NPV1
1. Indicative NPV assumes US$95 WTI, $1.05 Canadian/US dollar exchange rate, and costs as disclosed with the Fort Hills sanction decision (October 30, 2013).94
Teck’s Sanction Capital2
~$2.94billion
Teck’s Estimated 2016 Spend
$960million
Teck’s Share of Production
36,000bitumen barrels per day
Operating & Sustaining Costs1
$25-28per barrel of bitumen
Sustaining Capital1,3
$3-5per barrel of bitumen
Teck’s Share of Production
13,000,000bitumen barrels per year
1. All costs and capital are based on Suncor’s estimates at project sanction in October 2013. Suncor is currently reviewing cost estimates.2. Sanction capital is the go-forward amount from the date of the Fort Hills sanction decision (October 30, 2013), denominated in Canadian dollars and on a fully-escalated basis. Includes earn-in of
$240M. 3. Sustaining capital is included in operating & sustaining costs.
Mine life: 50 years
Fort Hills Key Numbers1
95
1. Estimates are based on exchange rates as shown, expected bitumen netbacks, and operating costs of C$25 per barrel (including sustaining capital of C$3-5 per barrel). 2. Per barrel of bitumen.3. Sanction capex is the go-forward amount from the date of the Fort Hills sanction decision (October 30, 2013), denominated in Canadian dollars and on a fully-escalated basis. 4. Pre-tax free cash flow yield during pre and post capital recovery periods.5. Post-payout estimated net margin includes C$1.50 export market premium.
The Fort Hills project is expected to have significant free cash flow yield across a range of WTI prices
Fort Hills Free Cash Flow Yield4
Sensitivity to WTI PricePotential Contribution
from Fort Hills US$60 WTI
& $1.30 USD/CAD
US$75 WTI & $1.20
USD/CAD
Pre-Payout Post-Payout
Teck’s share of annual production (36,000 bpd) 13 Mbpa 13 Mbpa
Estimated netback2 ~$40/bbl ~$55.50/bbl
Estimated operating margin2 ~$15/bbl ~$30.50/bbl
Alberta oil royalty2 ~$1.50/bbl ~$10/bbl
Estimated net margin2,5 ~$13.50/bbl ~$22/bbl
Annual pre-tax cash flow ~$180 M ~$290 M
Teck’s share of sanction capex3 ~$2,940 M ~$2,940 M
Free cash flow yield4 ~6% ~10%
Fort Hills Project Economics Are Robust1
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
$40 $50 $60 $70 $80 $90 $100 $110 $120
Free
Cas
h Fl
ow Y
ield
WTI $/bbl
Post-Payout @$1.20 USD/CAD
Pre-Payout@$1.30 USD/CAD
Source: Teck
96
$60 $58.75
$40
$13.50 $15
$-
$10
$20
$30
$40
$50
$60
$70
Royalties based on pre-capital payout. * WTI/WCS Differential based on Lee & Doma 2016-2020 forecast average.** Export Premium based on average premium pricing for USGC market via Keystone and Flanagan South Pipelines.1. Estimates are based on C$/US$ exchange rates as shown, expected bitumen netbacks, operating costs of C$25 per barrel (including sustaining capital of C$3-5 per barrel) and Phase 1 (pre-capital
payout) royalties.
Cash Margin1 Calculation Example: Prior to Capital Recovery
Fort Hills Bitumen Netback Calculation Model
$13.50$10
$14.75 $7-9$1.25
$22
$3 $1.50 $1-2
Source: Alberta Energy bitumen valuation methodology (http://www.energy.alberta.ca/OilSands/1542.asp)
97
Fort Hills Bitumen Netback Calculation Model
$22
$3 $10$1-2
Royalties based on pre-capital payout. * WTI/WCS Differential based on Lee & Doma 2021-2030 forecast average.** Export Premium based on average premium pricing for USGC market via Keystone and Flanagan South Pipelines.1. Estimates are based on C$/US$ exchange rates as shown, expected bitumen netbacks, operating costs of C$25 per barrel (including sustaining capital of C$3-5 per barrel) and post payout royalties.
$75 $74
$55.50
$20.50 $22
$-
$10
$20
$30
$40
$50
$60
$70
$80
Cash Margin1 Calculation Example: Post Capital Recovery
$12.35$13.25$10
$7-9$1.25
Source: Alberta Energy bitumen valuation methodology (http://www.energy.alberta.ca/OilSands/1542.asp)
98
Source: Shorecan, Net Energy, Lee & Doma
Western Canadian Select (WCS)
Average Monthly WTI-WCS DifferentialWestern Canadian Select (WCS) Is The Benchmark Price For Canadian Heavy Oil At Hardisty, Alberta
WCS differential to West Texas Intermediate (WTI) • Contract settled monthly as differential to Nymex WTI• Long term differential of Nymex WTI minus $10-20 US/bbl• Based on heavy/light differential, supply/demand, alternate
feedstock accessibility, refinery outages and export capability− Narrowed in 2014/2015 due to export capacity growth, rail
capacity increases, and short term production outages• Recently improved export capability to mitigate volatility− Further export capacity subject to rigorous regulatory review;
potential impact to WCS differentials.
WTI (US/bbl) $40 $50 $60 $70 $80 $90 $100WCS Differential to Nymex WTI (US/bbl) -$13.00 -$14.50 -$15.50 -$17.00 -$18.00 -$19.50 -$20.50
*Forecast Assumptions: Fort Hills Startup 2017/2018 with supply/demand model exiting Western Canada in a constrained pipe/excess rail transportation model, per Lee & Doma Energy Consulting.
FORECAST*
Plotted to August 2016
$-
$5
$10
$15
$20
$25
$30
$35
$40
$45
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
WCS Differential (US$/bbl)Long-term WCS Differential
$23.122012-2013
$15.692010-2011 $16.45
2014-2015 $13.71YTD 2016
99
Diluent (C5+) Pricing
Average Monthly WTI/Diluent (C5+) Differential
Diluent (C5+) at Edmonton, Alberta Is the benchmark contract for diluent supply for oil sands
Diluent differential to West Texas Intermediate (WTI)• Contract settled monthly as differential to Nymex WTI• Based on supply/demand, seasonal demand (high in winter, low
in summer), import outages• Long-term diluent (C5+) differential of Nymex WTI +/- $5 US/bbl
Diluent (“Pool” in Edmonton is a common stream of a variety of qualities• Diluent pool comprised of local and imported natural gas liquids
WTI (US/bbl) $40 $50 $60 $70 $80 $90 $100Diluent (C5+) Differentialto Nymex WTI (US/bbl) +$2.50 +$1.50 +$0.50 -$0.50 -$1.50 -$2.50 -$3.50
*Forecast Assumptions: Fort Hills Startup 2017/2018, using 2015 CAPP Western Canadian oil production forecast, Diluent (C5+) differentials per Lee &Doma Energy Consulting
FORECAST*
Source: Shorecan, Net Energy, Lee & Doma Plotted to August 2016
$(10.00)
$(5.00)
$-
$5.00
$10.00
$15.00
$20.00
Jan-
10M
ay-1
0S
ep-1
0Ja
n-11
May
-11
Sep
-11
Jan-
12M
ay-1
2S
ep-1
2Ja
n-13
May
-13
Sep
-13
Jan-
14M
ay-1
4S
ep-1
4Ja
n-15
May
-15
Sep
-15
Jan-
16M
ay-1
6WTI- C5+ DiffLong-term C5+ Diff
100
Progress in Implementing Our Diversified Marketing Strategy
Market Access Options for Teck’s 50 kbbls/day of Fort Hills Diluted Bitumen Blend
Cushing
Flanagan
Houston
Kitimat
Edmonton
US Gulf Coast
Europe
Asia
TransCanada Energy East (Proposed, Contract Carriage)Enbridge Northern Gateway (Proposed, Contract Carriage)
TransCanada Keystone/MarketLink (Existing, Contract Carriage)Enbridge Flanagan South (Existing, Contract Carriage)
Vancouver
TransMountain Pipeline Expansion (Proposed, Contract Carriage)
Asia
Agreements for pipelines to Hardisty in place
Agreement for Hardisty product storage in place
Monitoring production vs market access balance
Developing a portfolio of pipeline capacity opportunities, to enable access to diversified markets
Evaluating opportunities in the secondary market for pipeline capacity
Developing a diversified customer base
Hardisty
Chicago
Sarnia
Patoka
SuperiorGuernsey
MontrealSaint John
Enbridge Mainline System (Existing, Common Carriage)Spectra Express (Existing, Contract Carriage)
Teck can enter into long-term take or pay contracts
101
Intra Alberta Logistics On Schedule For Fort Hills Commissioning
RailLocal Market
Pipeline LegendBitumenBlendDiluentExistingNew
East Tank Farm Blending w/Condensate
Wood Buffalo Extension
Norlite Diluent Pipeline
Cheecham Terminal
Hardisty Terminal
Wood Buffalo Pipeline
Athabasca Pipeline
Edmonton Terminal
Fort HillsMine Terminal
Northern CourierHot Bitumen Pipeline
Teck
OptionsExport Pipeline
Kirby Athabasca Twin Pipeline
Pipeline/Terminal OperatorPipelineCapacity
(kbpd)
Teck Capacity
(kbpd)Project Construction Status
(% completion)
Northern Courier Hot Bitumen TransCanada 202 40.4 Pipeline and Facilities: Tank terminal:
East Tank Farm - Blending Suncor 292 58.4 Diluent terminaling and blending
Wood Buffalo Blend Pipeline Enbridge 550 65.3 In service
Wood Buffalo Extension Enbridge 550 65.3 Pipeline:Pump stations and facilities:
Norlite Diluent Pipeline Enbridge 130 18.0 Pipeline:Pumpstations and facilities:
Hardisty Blend Tankage Gibsons 425 kbbls 425 kbbls Tank completed
74%99%
100%
100%51%
51%
100%
30%
67%
102