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Canada's Caisse pension fund reveals stake in Kinder Morgan

Helmets line a shelf in a control room at Kinder Morgan's Westridge Terminal on Burrard Inlet in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada November 17, 2017. Picture taken November 17, 2017. REUTERS/Chris Helgren

TORONTO (Reuters) - Canada's second biggest public pension fund, Caisse de depot, held a 7.8 percent stake in Kinder Morgan Canada Ltd at the end of last year, according to its annual report, making it the largest independent shareholder of the pipeline company at the center of a contentious expansion project. Caisse de depot et placement du Quebec [CDPDA.UL], which discloses its shareholdings in Canadian companies once a year, said it acquired the stake in the period following Kinder Morgan Canada's initial public offering last May and before it announced plans to reduce its carbon footprint by 25 percent per dollar invested last October. Kinder Morgan, a unit of Kinder Morgan Inc , is at the center of an escalating crisis over a planned C$7.4 billion ($5.9 billion) Trans Mountain oil pipeline that will almost triple the capacity of its line from Alberta to the Pacific province of British Columbia. The company has threatened to pull out of the project unless all hurdles are cleared by May 31. In a post earnings call on Wednesday, Kinder Morgan said recent events confirmed an investment in the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion may be "untenable." It added that Ottawa's pledge of financial support did not resolve political risk related to British Columbia's opposition.. The project, which has the support of Canada's federal government, is opposed by the province of British Columbia. Caisse spokesman Maxime Chagnon declined to say what the fund's current shareholding in Kinder Morgan is, or whether it planned to keep a stake in light of its carbon footprint commitment. "The Kinder Morgan investment was before we adopted our new strategy regarding climate change," he said. "We're looking at the portfolio and all of our assets on an overall basis to see how we can reach our objective." (Reporting by Matt Scuffham; Editing by Tom Brown)