Garth Johnson Vice President, Pipeline & Strategic Development

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NORTHWEST GAS ASSOCIATION & PACIFIC NORTHWEST UTILITIES CONFERENCE COMMITTEE Pipeline Briefing April 11, 014 Garth Johnson Vice President, Pipeline & Strategic Development

SafeHarbor Statement Some of the statements in this document concerning future company performance will be forward looking within the meanings of the securities laws. Actual results may materially differ from those discussed in these forward looking statements, and you should refer to the additional information contained in Spectra Energy s Form 10 K and other filings made with the SEC concerning factors that could cause those results to be different than contemplated in today's discussion. Reg G Disclosure In addition, today s discussion includes certain non GAAP financial measures as defined under SEC Regulation G. A reconciliation of those measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures is available on our website. Moving Ahead, Gaining Momentum Spectra Energy Corp

Agenda Pipeline Overview Gas Supply 013 014014 Winter Review Q&A Moving Ahead, Gaining Momentum Spectra Energy Corp 3

Pipeline Overview

Pipeline Division Length:,900 kilometres (1,800 miles) of transmission pipeline Transportation capacity:.9 Bcf/d Compression horsepower: 0 mainline compressor stations totaling over 65,000 HP Pipeline has zones: T North: Gathers residue gas from gas processing plants for delivery to T South, NGTL, or Alliance T South: Mainline transmission to British Columbia interior and lower mainland markets as well as the I5 corridor in the Pacific Northwest Moving Ahead, Gaining Momentum Spectra Energy Corp 5

Our Role as Pipeline Operator Huntingdon/ Sumas 44% B.C. 7% Washington Spectra Energy Gas Production Area Alberta 9% 013 average daily deliveries by major market: Eastern markets: 9% of system flows (585 MMcfd) B.C. markets: 7% of system flows (554 MMcfd) U.S. Pacific Northwest markets: 44% of system flows (894 MMcfd) Oregon Nevada Idaho Williams Northwest Volume flows to Huntingdon/Sumas hub on T South in 013 averaged 170 MMcfd or 63% of total deliveries on Spectra Energy pipeline system 57 year history of delivering gas to Canadian and U.S. markets Moving Ahead, Gaining Momentum Spectra Energy Corp 6

T North Mainline Capacity: Contracting Status (November 014) T-North CS T-South Huntingdon Transmission North System Fort Nelson Mainline S = 1,839 C = 1,816 A = 3 Fort Nelson Gas Plant Aitken Creek Storage MMcfd (as of November 014) S = System Capacity C = Contracted dcapacity A = Available Capacity Gordondale to McMahon Fort St. John NGTL Gas Plant Mainline S = 385 S = 688 C = 385 C = 688 A = 0 A = 0 Gordondale T-South Station Pine River Gas Plant Sunset to NGTL S = 518 C = 488 A = 30 Moving Ahead, Gaining Momentum Spectra Energy Corp 7

T South Mainline Capacity: Contracting Status (April 014) T-South Huntingdon Transmission South System T-North MMcfd (as of April 014) Fort Nelson CS Mainline S = System Design Capacity Fort St. John C = Contracted Capacity Station Mainline A = Available Capacity Pine River Mainline PNG Summit Lake Delivery Capacity to Station S = 110 (MMcfd) C = 5 A = 85 Fort Nelson Mainline 1,839 Fort St. John Mainline 688 Interior Pine River Mainline 400 S = 4 Receipt Total DeliveryCapacity,97 C = 167 Kingsvale S = 105 A = 57 S = 1,70 C = 105 Takeaway Capacity C = 1,163 A = 0 from Station 1,930 A = 539 Canada Huntingdon/Sumas US Williams Northwest Pipeline Huntingdon Export Pipelines (3) Abundant capacity available to serve incremental demand off T South in B.C. and the Pacific Northwest Moving Ahead, Gaining Momentum Spectra Energy Corp 8

image cannot be displayed. Your computer may not have enough memory to open the image, or the image may have been corrupted. Restart your computer, and then open the file again. If the red x still appears, you may have to delete the image and then insert it again. Spectra Energy System Transportation Tolls* 014 Final (CDN$/Mcf) Yukon British Columbia NWT T North Station Pacific Northern Gas T South FortisBC Coastal The PNG Zone Inland Zone Huntingdon Zone TCPL/ Nova Alberta Gordondale FortisBC Interior Kingsvale Alliance Huntingdon/Sumas Williams NW Pipeline T North Postage stamp toll design. Transport anywhere on system attracts the same rate Final 014 tolls: $0.137 0.149 / Mcf T South Zone based toll design consisting of 3 Zones: PNG Zone Inland Zone Huntingdon Zone Final 014 tolls: Station PNG: $0.088 0.095 / Mcf Station Inland: $0.9 0.49 / Mcf Station Huntingdon: $0.389 0.41 / Mcf * Tolls shown indicate the range between capacity contracted for terms of 5 years and 1 year Moving Ahead, Gaining Momentum Spectra Energy Corp 9

The Path to Lower Tolls: T South Huntingdon Firm Capacity Contracting Versus IndicativeStation Transport Toll 1,800 55 Firm Capacit ty Contracte ed MMcfd 1,600 1,400 1,00 1,000 800 600 400 00 50 45 40 35 30 5 0 15 10 Firm Tran nsport Toll Ce ents/mcf 874 1,000 1,100 1,00 1,300 1,400 1,500 1,600 (013 Final) (Maximum available) 5 Firm Capacity Contracted MMcfd Firm Transport Toll Cents/Mcf Moving Ahead, Gaining Momentum Spectra Energy Corp 10

Gas Supply

Gas Supply Location, location, location Two new areas of supply: Montney: Liquid id rich, ihsweet gas in the Fort St. John area Liard, Horn River and Cordova: Dry, sour gas in the Fort Nelson area Similar il significance ifi as other shale hl resources in the U.S. (Marcellus, Eagle Ford, Permian) Moving Ahead, Gaining Momentum Spectra Energy Corp 1

NEB Forecast: B.C. & Alberta 18 013 NEB Forecast BC & Alberta Bcf/d, Marketable 16 14 1 10 8 6 British Columbia 4 Alberta 0 000 005 010 015 00 05 030 035 Moving Ahead, Gaining Momentum Spectra Energy Corp 13

Montney Fulfills the Production Forecast 7 NEB British Columbia Tight Gas Production Forecasts 6 5 4 3 Montney 011 Forecast 013 Forecast Marketable Gas, Bcf/d 1 0 01 013 014 015 016 017 018 019 00 01 0 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 030 031 03 033 034 035 Moving Ahead, Gaining Momentum Spectra Energy Corp 14

Horn River/LiardDevelopment Slows 5 NEB British Columbia Shale Gas Production Forecasts 4 3 1 011 Forecast 013 Forecast Marketable Gas, Bcf/d 0 01 013 014 015 016 017 018 019 00 01 0 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 030 031 03 033 034 035 Moving Ahead, Gaining Momentum Spectra Energy Corp 15

Gas Supply: Unconventional Reserves Driving Opportunities Marketable Reserves in British Columbia (Tcf) 430 Cordova 40 Liard 40 Horn River 80 160+ years of gas supply to support domestic and LNG export markets Montney 70 50 Unconventional Conventional Source: National Energy Board, BC Oil & Gas Commission Moving Ahead, Gaining Momentum Spectra Energy Corp 16

013 014014 Winter Review

T South Sumas/Huntingdon: Historical Monthly Average Flow 1800 Huntingdon Export and Domestic Deliveries (MMcf/d) 1700 1600 1500 1400 1300 100 1100 1000 900 800 700 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec 7 year Historical 013 014 Contractible Capacity Moving Ahead, Gaining Momentum Spectra Energy Corp 18

T South Sumas/Huntingdon: November 013 February 014 1,900 Daily Average Flow (MMcf/d) 1,800 1,700 1,600 1,500 1,400 1,300 1,00 1,100 1,000 Contractible Capacity Contracted Physical Moving Ahead, Gaining Momentum Spectra Energy Corp 19

T South Sumas/Huntingdon: December 1 0, 013,000 Huntingdon Hourly Flow (MMcf/d) (December 1 0, 013) 1,900 1,800 1,700 1,600 1,500 1,400 Contractible Capacity (1,70 mmcf/d) 1,300 1,00 1,100 1,000 13 13 13 13 13 1 Dec 4 Dec 7 Dec 11 Dec 14 Dec 18 Dec 13 Moving Ahead, Gaining Momentum Spectra Energy Corp 0

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