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The Game Plan<br />

<strong>Enerplus</strong> Corporation – Investor Update<br />

April 2011


<strong>Enerplus</strong> Overview<br />

• High-yielding North American energy producer<br />

• Focused on providing both growth and income to<br />

investors<br />

• Diversified asset base of high quality, low decline oil<br />

and gas assets complemented by growth assets in<br />

resource plays with superior economics - Bakken<br />

crude oil and Marcellus shale gas<br />

• Cash flow from operations and strong financial position<br />

support capital reinvestment and monthly dividend<br />

Monthly<br />

dividend<br />

plus growth<br />

potential<br />

• Strong internal technical and commercial expertise<br />

• Converted from income trust to dividend paying<br />

corporation on Jan 1, 2011<br />

1


Corporate Profile<br />

• Trading Symbol (TSX/NYSE) ERF<br />

• Market Capitalization (1) $5.2 billion<br />

• Enterprise Value (2) $5.9 billion<br />

• Average Daily Trading Value (Q1 2011) $45 million<br />

• 2011E Average Daily Production 78,000 – 80,000 BOE/day<br />

• 2011E Exit Production 80,000 – 84,000 BOE/day<br />

– Oil and Liquids Weighting 47%<br />

• 2011E Development Capital Spending $650 million<br />

• Long-Term Debt /Trailing 12-Month Cash Flow Ratio (3) 1.0x<br />

• Current Monthly Cash Dividend $0.18/share<br />

• Current Annualized Yield (at April 19, 2011) 7.3%<br />

1.Market Cap. at April 19, 2011 – based upon shares outstanding at December 31, 2010<br />

2.Market Cap. at April 19, 2011 plus outstanding debt (net of cash) at December 31, 2010<br />

3.Using outstanding debt and Cash Flow from Operations at December 31, 2010<br />

2


Dividend Philosophy<br />

• Imposes capital discipline and appropriate pace of<br />

development<br />

• Demand for yield supported by demographics,<br />

<strong>Enerplus</strong>’ current investor base and low interest<br />

rate environment<br />

• Excess cash flow in future years expected to be<br />

disproportionately allocated to reinvestment in<br />

assets<br />

We will<br />

continue to<br />

share our cash<br />

flow with<br />

investors<br />

• Current ~7% yield<br />

3


Significant Portfolio Repositioning<br />

Added over<br />

500,000 net new<br />

acres of<br />

undeveloped<br />

land<br />

Non-core<br />

dispositions have<br />

funded new<br />

growth<br />

acquisitions<br />

• Our goal was to improve the focus and profitability<br />

of our portfolio<br />

• Build core growth areas that would have scope and<br />

scale:<br />

• Bakken Crude Oil:<br />

• ~230,000 net acres in ND and SK<br />

• Marcellus Shale Gas:<br />

• ~200,000 net acres in PA, WV and MD<br />

• Deep Basin:<br />

• 80,000 net acres in AB & BC<br />

• Complement the foundation assets that generate<br />

free cash<br />

• Sale of non-core assets has helped to improve<br />

operating performance and fund acquisitions of new<br />

growth assets<br />

4


Our Assets<br />

Tight Gas/Shallow Gas<br />

• Capital Spending:<br />

• $60 MM tight gas<br />

• $10 MM shallow gas<br />

• 39% of production<br />

• 19% of NOI<br />

• 542 Bcfe 2P reserves<br />

2010 Divestments<br />

• Sold 10,400 BOE/day non-core assets<br />

• $870 MM in proceeds<br />

• 115 properties<br />

• Average netback $28/BOE<br />

• Op cost $14/BOE<br />

• 2P reserves – 34 MMBOE (69% oil)<br />

Crude Oil Waterfloods<br />

• $110 MM capital spending<br />

• 18% of production<br />

• 28% of NOI<br />

• 84 MMBOE 2P Reserves<br />

• 60 MMBOE Best Estimate<br />

Contingent Resource<br />

Bakken/Tight Oil<br />

• $300 MM capital spending<br />

• 20% of production<br />

• 36% of NOI<br />

• 58 MMBOE 2P Reserves<br />

• 60 MMBOE Best Estimate<br />

Contingent Resource<br />

Marcellus Shale Gas<br />

• $160 MM capital spending<br />

• 5% of production<br />

• 3% of NOI<br />

• 117 Bcfe 2P Reserves<br />

• 3.9 Tcfe Best Estimate Contingent<br />

Resource<br />

Based on 2011 outlook. Remaining percentages attributed to other conventional oil and gas properties<br />

5


2010 Year-End Reserves Summary<br />

P+P Reserves<br />

Oil<br />

Properties<br />

(MMBOE)<br />

Gas<br />

Properties<br />

(Bcfe)<br />

Total<br />

(MMBOE)<br />

Opening<br />

Balance 171.8 1,039 344.9<br />

Production (12.7) (105.4) (30.3)<br />

Divestments (23.4) (63.9) (34.0)<br />

Acquisitions 11 4.8 11.8<br />

Additions 16.8 107.3 34.7<br />

Revisions (2.6) (108.5) (20.7)<br />

Closing<br />

Balance 161.4 8<strong>68.</strong>9 306.2<br />

• Majority of decline in 2010 due to<br />

dispositions<br />

• Development capital delivering<br />

results<br />

• All-in $17.46/BOE F&D before<br />

revisions<br />

• $10.74/BOE F&D at Ft Berthold<br />

• $1.64/Mcfe F&D at Marcellus<br />

• Revisions primarily in shallow gas<br />

properties<br />

• 40% of revisions due to price<br />

decline<br />

• Performance revisions at<br />

Shackleton ~ $100 MM PV10%<br />

- 2% of year-end NPV<br />

6


Current Reserves Breakdown<br />

53% Oil and NGL’s<br />

• Over 50% of reserves are<br />

from key resource plays<br />

MMBOE<br />

350<br />

300<br />

250<br />

200<br />

150<br />

100<br />

50<br />

0<br />

306.2 MMBOE<br />

P+P Reserves<br />

19%<br />

27%<br />

6%<br />

18%<br />

12%<br />

18%<br />

2010<br />

Bakken<br />

Waterfloods<br />

Marcellus<br />

Tight Gas<br />

Shallow Gas<br />

Other Oil & Gas<br />

• Oil weighting is now 53% of<br />

total reserves<br />

• PDP reserves - 62%<br />

• Proved reserves - 72%<br />

• Conservative booked future<br />

locations - 313 net locations<br />

across portfolio<br />

• Bakken reserves have<br />

increased by 42% in last two<br />

years<br />

• Shallow gas reserves now<br />

have significantly lower<br />

corporate weighting<br />

7


Added Meaningful Upside Potential<br />

Crude<br />

Oil<br />

Natural<br />

Gas<br />

P+P<br />

Reserves<br />

0.9 Tcf<br />

P+P<br />

Reserves<br />

161<br />

MMBOE<br />

* See disclaimer for disclosure on Contingent Resources.<br />

Company Interest reserves as at December 31, 2010.<br />

Best Estimate<br />

Contingent<br />

Resources*<br />

120 MMBOE<br />

Best Estimate<br />

Contingent Resources*<br />

3.9 Tcf<br />

• Marcellus, North Dakota Bakken<br />

and waterflood contingent<br />

resource is 3.5x current P+P<br />

reserves<br />

• Significant future opportunity<br />

captured in best estimates of<br />

contingent resources:<br />

• ND Bakken: 60 MMBOE,<br />

90 future drilling locations<br />

• Waterflood: 60 MMBOE<br />

• Marcellus: 3.9 Tcf, 926<br />

future drilling locations<br />

• We also believe there is further<br />

potential in our Bakken,<br />

Waterflood and Deep Basin<br />

lands<br />

8


We Can Deliver Growth<br />

• Portfolio has mature, stable cash generating assets<br />

complemented by key growth opportunities<br />

• $1.3 billion in capital spending over next 2 years<br />

• Production growth of 10 - 15%<br />

• 5% debt-adjusted growth in 2012<br />

• Cash flow growth of 15% by end of 2012<br />

• Capital increases by 20% to $650 million in 2011<br />

• 2011 capital spending focused on oil projects<br />

Production<br />

growth of<br />

10 – 15% over<br />

next two-year<br />

period<br />

• 85% of spending on Bakken, Waterfloods and Marcellus<br />

• Similar level of spending in 2012<br />

• Beyond 2012, expect 5% debt-adjusted growth per year<br />

9


2011 Capital Focus<br />

Resource Play<br />

Capital<br />

($MM)<br />

#<br />

of Net<br />

Wells<br />

2010 Exit<br />

Production<br />

(MBOE/day)<br />

2011E<br />

Exit Production<br />

(MBOE/day)<br />

Change<br />

Exit to Exit IRR** BESC**<br />

Bakken/Tight Oil 300 48 13.3 18 – 21 35 – 55% >40% $40 – 55/bbl<br />

Waterfloods 110 26 13.8 13 – 15 0 – 10% >30% $60/bbl<br />

Marcellus Shale Gas 160 27 2.9 7 – 8 140 – 170% 10 – 30% $3.50 – 4.50/Mcf<br />

Sub-Total $570 101 30 38.5 – 44 30 – 45%<br />

Company Total* $650 113 77.2 80 – 84 5 – 10%<br />

Over 90% of drilling is horizontal wells<br />

* Includes spending on Shallow Gas ($10 MM), Tight Gas ($60 MM) and Other Conventional Oil & Gas ($10 MM)<br />

** Using February 14, 2011 forward prices. Marcellus economics are based on 4, 5 and 6 Bcf type wells assuming a $4.50/MMBtu gas price<br />

BESC – Breakeven supply cost providing a 12% rate of return<br />

10


Production Outlook<br />

MMBOE/day<br />

100<br />

90<br />

80<br />

70<br />

Bakken<br />

60<br />

Marcellus<br />

50<br />

Waterfloods<br />

40<br />

30<br />

20<br />

Rest of Portfolio<br />

10<br />

0<br />

Exit 2010 Exit 2011 Exit 2012<br />

43% Liquids 47% Liquids 49% Liquids<br />

Growing Oil<br />

• Increase in oil weighting results<br />

in approaching an even split<br />

between gas and liquids<br />

• Oil production is +80%<br />

weighted to light/medium<br />

grades<br />

Decline Profile<br />

• Higher decline in growth plays<br />

increases corporate decline<br />

over next several years before<br />

stabilizing<br />

• 2010 exit corporate decline at<br />

19%<br />

• increasing 2% - 4% per<br />

year<br />

11


Financial Outlook<br />

900<br />

800<br />

Oil<br />

Gas<br />

Adjusted Payout Ratio<br />

Cash Flow Estimates<br />

180%<br />

160%<br />

• 2011 and 2012 cash flow is<br />

approximately 70%<br />

weighted to liquids, up from<br />

approximately 65% in 2010<br />

700<br />

600<br />

140%<br />

120%<br />

• Balance sheet supports<br />

growth plans through 2012<br />

$ Millions<br />

500<br />

400<br />

300<br />

200<br />

100<br />

0<br />

2010 2011 2012<br />

100%<br />

80%<br />

60%<br />

40%<br />

20%<br />

0%<br />

• Payout ratios decline as<br />

production from growth<br />

plays increases<br />

• Non-cash flow generating<br />

asset sales expected to<br />

help maintain financial<br />

flexibility<br />

Adjusted Payout Ratio = (Capex+Dividends)/Cash Flow<br />

Based upon the forward commodity prices (WTI US$98/bbl, AECO $3.85/Mcf, NYMEX Gas US$4.50/MMBtu) and<br />

forecast costs as of February 14, 2011 including the impact of hedging<br />

12


Managing the Balance Sheet<br />

Debt to Cash Flow Ratio<br />

2.5x<br />

2.0x<br />

1.5x<br />

1.0x<br />

0.5x<br />

0.0x<br />

1.0x<br />

2.0x<br />

Exit 2010 2012<br />

Potential Funding Sources<br />

• Equity portfolio interests with<br />

book value of ~$150 million<br />

• Laricina – 4.3 million shares<br />

• Non-core conventional and oil<br />

sands acreage<br />

• YTD sold non-cash generating<br />

interests for ~$60 million<br />

• Marcellus<br />

• Possibly reduce a portion of<br />

our interests<br />

13


Crude<br />

Oil


U.S. Bakken<br />

Regional Overview<br />

<strong>Enerplus</strong>: Sleeping Giant<br />

<strong>Enerplus</strong>: Ft Berthold<br />

Source: RSEG, Oct. 2010<br />

15


Bakken & Three Forks Geology<br />

Middle Bakken<br />

Upper Three Forks<br />

Geological Age Mississippian Devonian<br />

Depth 10,500 – 11,000 ft 10,600 – 11,000 ft<br />

Thickness 35 – 45 ft 30 – 45 ft<br />

Porosity 5 - 6% 6 - 10%<br />

Overpressure 0.6 – 0.8 psi/ft 0.6 – 0.8 psi/ft<br />

OOIP/640 acres 4 - 6 MMbbls 4 - 5 MMbbls<br />

• Believe all our acreage is prospective for<br />

dual development<br />

• Industry testing Three Forks proximal to<br />

our leasehold:<br />

• Helis Oil and Gas Dodge well offsetting<br />

our acreage to the west - produced 90<br />

Mbbls in 4 months<br />

Source: Tudor Pickering Holt & Co.<br />

• Kodiak well offsetting our acreage to the<br />

east - 24 hour IP rate of 1,042 BOE/day;<br />

30 day average of 603 BOE/day - only 6<br />

of 22 stages currently completed<br />

16


Fort Berthold Reserves vs. Contingent Resource<br />

MMBOE<br />

70<br />

60<br />

50<br />

40<br />

30<br />

20<br />

10<br />

22.4<br />

Almost 3x P+P<br />

reserve upside<br />

60<br />

• 22.4 MMBOE P+P reserves<br />

• 24 booked drilling locations<br />

• Less than 1 year’s drilling<br />

locations<br />

• 60 MMBOE of “best estimate”<br />

contingent resource from the<br />

Bakken only<br />

• 90 future drilling locations<br />

• 65% long laterals<br />

• 85% land utilization<br />

• ~15% recovery factor<br />

0<br />

P+P Reserves<br />

Contingent Resource<br />

Best Estimate<br />

• Incremental upside from the<br />

Three Forks and downspacing<br />

17


Fort Berthold, North Dakota<br />

Key Facts<br />

Net Acreage<br />

Current Production<br />

P+P Reserves (Dec. 31, 2010)<br />

Contingent Resource Est. (Best)<br />

74,500 (116 sections)<br />

~4,000 BOE/day<br />

22.4 million BOE<br />

60 million BOE<br />

• Bakken & Three Forks potential<br />

• Long lease tenure, concentrated<br />

acreage position<br />

• 42° API, light sweet crude oil<br />

• High netback production ~$50/bbl<br />

• Production growth to over 20,000<br />

BOE/day over next 4 years<br />

>90% operated & ~90% working interest<br />

18


Fort Berthold Bakken Results to Date<br />

Long Laterals<br />

(9,000 ft. 24 frac stages)<br />

Type<br />

Curve<br />

Actual<br />

4 Well avg<br />

Short Laterals<br />

(4,500 ft. 12 frac stages)<br />

Type<br />

Curve<br />

Actual<br />

5 Well avg<br />

Average 30 day initial production (bbls/day) 1,100 – 1,200 1,250 550 – 650 730<br />

Expected Ultimate Recovery (Mbbls) 600 – 800 300 – 400<br />

Cost/Well ($/MM) $8.5 $8.5 $6.0 $6.0<br />

120 day Cumulative Production (bbls) 81,000 100,000 40,000 59,000<br />

Expected Net Present Value (12%, $MM)* $11.2 - $18.0 $3.9 – $7.4<br />

Expected Netback* ($/bbl) ~$50 ~$50<br />

Expected Payout Period (years) 1.3 – 0.8 2.2 – 1.3<br />

Expected F&D ($/BOE) $13.00 - $9.75 $18.50 - $13.50<br />

*Based on February 14, 2011 forward price<br />

Royalties average 20%, plus state production tax of 11.5%, op costs of $4/bbl, Differential assumption of $10 - $12/bbl<br />

19


Fort Berthold Results<br />

Long laterals are 35% ahead of the average type well prediction<br />

Short laterals are 45% ahead of the average type well prediction<br />

160,000<br />

Barrels<br />

140,000<br />

120,000<br />

100,000<br />

Actual Short Bakken Laterals (5 Wells)<br />

Actual Long Bakken Laterals (4 Wells)<br />

Cumulative Short Type Well<br />

Cumulative Long Type Well<br />

80,000<br />

60,000<br />

40,000<br />

20,000<br />

-<br />

0 30 60 90 120 150 180<br />

Days Producing<br />

20


2011 Fort Berthold Bakken Plans<br />

• 2011 capital program - $230 million<br />

• 32 net operated wells, 75% long horizontals<br />

• Targeting Bakken primarily; 3 to 8 Three Forks wells<br />

planned<br />

• 3 to 4 rigs working in the play<br />

• Recently entered into agreements to secure frac<br />

services, proppant and a rig to help ensure timely<br />

execution of plans<br />

• Expect to have midstream service agreements in place in<br />

mid-2011 to capture associated gas and liquids<br />

Production<br />

grows from<br />

4,000 bbls/day to<br />

+20,000 BOE/day<br />

over next 4 years<br />

21


Significant Future Production Growth from Fort Berthold<br />

Manageable growth, self-funding in 1 – 2 years<br />

30,000<br />

25,000<br />

20,000<br />

Production assuming 4 rigs<br />

Incremental production - 4 to 6 rigs<br />

Capital required - 4 rigs<br />

Incremental capital required - 4 to 6 rigs<br />

Free Cash Flow (NOI - Capex) - 4 rigs<br />

Free Cash Flow (NOI - Capex) - 4 to 6 rigs<br />

$600<br />

$500<br />

$400<br />

• Growth potential of<br />

20,000 – 25,000 BOE/day<br />

by 2014<br />

• Over $1 billion of capital<br />

over next 4 years<br />

BOE/day<br />

15,000<br />

10,000<br />

$300<br />

$200<br />

$ Millions<br />

• Net operating income<br />

approaches ~$500 million<br />

by 2014<br />

5,000<br />

0<br />

2011 2012 2013 2014<br />

$100<br />

$0<br />

• Expected F&D cost of<br />

$11 - $16/BOE<br />

-5,000<br />

-$100<br />

Assumes February 14, 2011 strip pricing<br />

22


U.S. Bakken Infrastructure Capacity<br />

Barrels<br />

800,000<br />

700,000<br />

600,000<br />

500,000<br />

400,000<br />

300,000<br />

200,000<br />

100,000<br />

Pipe<br />

Capacity<br />

Shortfall<br />

Plains Bakken Proposal<br />

Keystone XL Market Link<br />

Belle Fourche Proposal<br />

Enbridge Bakken<br />

125k<br />

80k<br />

Enbridge North Dakota<br />

Butte Pipeline<br />

50k<br />

100k<br />

60k<br />

93k<br />

186k<br />

150k<br />

• Current U.S. Bakken<br />

production is ~400<br />

MBOE/day<br />

• 500 MBOE/day in 2011<br />

• Pipeline capacity shortfall:<br />

• 80 MBOE/day in 2010<br />

• could increase to 125<br />

MBOE/day in 2011<br />

• Rail and trucking covers<br />

capacity shortfall<br />

Mandan Refinery<br />

55k<br />

0<br />

2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025<br />

Source: Internal company data and industry analysis<br />

• Numerous new pipelines and expansions of over 300 MBOE/day are proposed to<br />

address the takeaway shortfall<br />

• We control some pipeline capacity and also sell to intermediaries who hold capacity on<br />

existing pipelines or who have access to trucking/railing facilities<br />

23


Waterfloods<br />

Key Facts<br />

OOIP<br />

P+P Reserves (Dec 31, 2010)<br />

Best Est. Contingent Resources<br />

~1.3 billion BOE<br />

83.7 MMBOE<br />

(booked to 27%)<br />

60.5 MMBOE<br />

Recovery to date 21%<br />

Average Oil Quality<br />

2011E Annual Production<br />

30° API<br />

13.5 – 15.0 MBOE/day<br />

18% of company total<br />

Low decline, predictable base production<br />

• Free cash flow supports dividend and growth<br />

strategy<br />

• ~50% of operating income reinvested into<br />

waterflood assets<br />

• Production expected to decline at ~10% before<br />

capital additions in 2011<br />

• 2010 additions of 3.5 MMBOE (plus 0.6 MMBOE<br />

positive revisions)<br />

24


Waterflood Reserves vs. Contingent Resource Upside<br />

90<br />

80<br />

70<br />

60<br />

Over 70% upside to P+P reserves<br />

60.5<br />

• 83.7 MMBOE P+P reserves<br />

• 45 booked drilling locations<br />

• No reserves booked associated<br />

with EOR pilots<br />

MMBOE<br />

50<br />

40<br />

83.7<br />

EOR<br />

34.3<br />

• 60.5 MMBOE of “best estimate”<br />

contingent resource assessed on a<br />

portion of our waterflood properties<br />

30<br />

20<br />

10<br />

0<br />

P+P Reserves<br />

Dec 31, 2010<br />

IOR<br />

26.2<br />

"Best Estimate"<br />

Contingent Resource<br />

• EOR contingent resource included<br />

only at 2 properties where projects<br />

underway<br />

• Further upside potential exists under<br />

both IOR and EOR scenarios<br />

25


Waterflood Development Plans<br />

• 2011 Plans - $110 million<br />

• Drilling 26 wells, advancing polymer<br />

pilots<br />

• Reviewing all major waterflood<br />

properties for enhanced recoveries<br />

using new drilling technologies and<br />

EOR opportunities<br />

• Mature fields require facilities<br />

upgrades to support future production<br />

• ~$50 million on facilities in 2010<br />

• ~$40 million budgeted for 2011<br />

• Over 30% IRR on 2011 capital<br />

program<br />

• 2011E op costs of $14.50/BOE with<br />

NOI of over $40.00/BOE based on<br />

current commodity prices<br />

Invest to maintain production while<br />

setting up future opportunity<br />

Key Properties<br />

2011<br />

Capital<br />

Budget<br />

($MM)<br />

Play<br />

Medicine Hat Glauc C, AB $24 Glauconitic<br />

Freda Ratcliffe, SK $18 Ratcliffe<br />

Virden/Daly, MB $13 Lodgepole<br />

Giltedge, AB $9 Lloydminster<br />

Gleneath, AB $9 Viking<br />

Pembina 5-Way, AB $4 Cardium<br />

Joarcam, AB $3 Viking<br />

Other $30 Various<br />

26


Natural<br />

Gas


Marcellus Shale Gas Overview<br />

• Current land position of<br />

~ 200,000 net acres<br />

• 70,000 net operated acres with an<br />

average working interest of 90%<br />

• Long lease tenure at attractive<br />

entry price in area that has<br />

good thickness & maturity<br />

• Average 24% non-operated working<br />

interest in ~467,000 gross acres<br />

(~114,000 net) primarily in<br />

Pennsylvania and West Virginia with<br />

Chief Oil & Gas<br />

• Average 19% non-operated working<br />

interest in ~103,000 gross acres<br />

(~20,000 net) in NE Pennsylvania<br />

with EXCO Resources<br />

28


Marcellus Potential<br />

Planned<br />

production<br />

growth of over<br />

150 MMcf/day<br />

over next 4<br />

years<br />

Contingent Resource Est. 2009 2010<br />

Operated - 1.2 Tcfe<br />

Non-Operated 2.1 Tcfe 2.7 Tcfe<br />

Total 2.1 Tcfe 3.9 Tcfe<br />

# of Net Locations 639 926<br />

Land Utilization 55% 65%<br />

Average EUR/Well 3.4 Bcfe average 4.2 Bcfe average<br />

Well Costs $4 – $5 million $4.5 – $6.8 million<br />

Density 4-8 wells/640 acres 4-8 wells/640 acres<br />

2P Reserves 24 Bcfe 117 Bcfe<br />

3.9 Tcfe of<br />

best estimate<br />

contingent<br />

resource<br />

• Majority of reserve bookings are in Lycoming, Susquehanna<br />

and Marshall counties - represents about 1 year’s drilling<br />

• Best estimate of contingent resource is nearly 5x booked<br />

corporate 2P natural gas reserves<br />

• Attractive finding and development costs of $1.64/Mcfe in 2010<br />

and over life<br />

29


Marcellus Performance – Cumulative Production<br />

Type curve estimates have been increased as well<br />

results have either met or exceeded our expectations<br />

25% of wells are above 6 Bcfe type curve<br />

1,400,000<br />

6.0 Bcfe Type Curve<br />

1,200,000<br />

3.5 Bcfe Type Curve<br />

Cumulative Production (Mcfe)<br />

1,000,000<br />

800,000<br />

600,000<br />

400,000<br />

Top 5 wells with 180 days of production<br />

Average Actual Production<br />

200,000<br />

0<br />

0 30 60 90 120 150 180 210 240 270 300 330 360<br />

Days Producing<br />

30


Marcellus Well Economics<br />

80%<br />

NYMEX<br />

$/MMbtu<br />

IRR<br />

4.0 Bcf Well 5.0 Bcf Well 6.0 Bcf Well<br />

Payout<br />

(Years)<br />

NPV 12%<br />

($MM)<br />

IRR<br />

Payout<br />

(Years)<br />

NPV 12%<br />

($MM)<br />

IRR<br />

Payout<br />

(Years)<br />

NPV 12%<br />

($MM)<br />

* Assumes long-run<br />

well cost of $6.0 MM<br />

$6.00 27% 3.4 $2.51 41% 2.5 $4.57 57% 2.0 $6.62<br />

60%<br />

$5.00 16% 4.9 $0.75 26% 3.4 $2.37 37% 2.6 $3.99<br />

$4.00 7% 8.6 ($1.02) 13% 5.7 $0.17 20% 4.2 $1.35<br />

BTAX IRR<br />

40%<br />

• Wells in the liquids rich gas window of the Marcellus<br />

that have higher liquids content show a ~20%<br />

improvement in netbacks versus dry gas wells<br />

6.0 Bcf Type Curve<br />

20%<br />

3.5 Bcf Type Curve<br />

0%<br />

$3 $4 $5 $6<br />

NYMEX Gas ($US/MMBtu)<br />

31


Marcellus Drilling Activity To Date*<br />

Gross Wells Drilled (at Mar 3, 2011) Horizontal Vertical Total<br />

Producing 42 9 51<br />

Partially Drilled** 4 1 5<br />

Waiting on Completion 33 5 38<br />

Waiting on Pipeline 11 6 17<br />

Total Gross Wells 90 21 111<br />

* Includes operated and non-op wells drilled by Chief & Exco<br />

**Vertical portion of well drilled, awaiting horizontal extension<br />

• Current plans show drilling activity in 12 counties in PA, as well as Marshall and<br />

Preston counties in West Virginia<br />

• Majority of producing wells in Bradford, Lycoming and Susquehanna Counties in NE<br />

PA (>80% of current production) and Marshall County in WV<br />

• Current net production is ~20 MMcfe/day<br />

32


2011 Marcellus Plans<br />

• 2011 capital program of $160 million<br />

• 150 gross wells planned (22.4 net)<br />

• Operated : 5 gross wells, 1 rig<br />

• Non-Operated: 145 gross wells, 8 - 10 rigs<br />

• Expect to complete ~121 gross wells with 94 new<br />

gross wells on stream by the end of the year<br />

• Capital:<br />

• 25% directed to liquids rich gas in SW PA and NW<br />

WV<br />

• 30% directed to delineation activity to preserve<br />

lease positions and identify future potential<br />

• 45% of capital directed to development drilling in<br />

areas with EUR’s of 4.5 to 5.5 Bcf<br />

• May see upward pressure on capital due to<br />

activity levels<br />

• Current average netback ~$2.50/Mcfe<br />

Production<br />

growth of<br />

150% in<br />

2011<br />

33


Future Production Growth in the Marcellus (unconstrained)<br />

Full scale development not planned. Sizeable resource capture provides<br />

opportunity for material development even with partial interest reduction<br />

MMcfe/day<br />

350<br />

300<br />

250<br />

200<br />

150<br />

100<br />

50<br />

0<br />

-50<br />

-100<br />

-150<br />

-200<br />

Production<br />

Capital<br />

Free Cash Flow (NOI - Capex)<br />

2011 2012 2013 2014<br />

$1,200<br />

$1,000<br />

$800<br />

$600<br />

$400<br />

$200<br />

$0<br />

-$200<br />

-$400<br />

-$600<br />

$ Millions<br />

• Under full scale development<br />

(unconstrained), production<br />

grows to 350 MMcfe/day by<br />

end of 2014<br />

• Over $2.4 billion of capital<br />

over next 4 years<br />

• Net operating income grows<br />

to over $500 million by 2014<br />

• Expected F&D cost of<br />

~$1.60/Mcf<br />

-250<br />

-$800<br />

Assumes February 14, 2011 strip pricing<br />

34


Marcellus Water Access & Handling<br />

• ERF and our JV partners have sufficient<br />

water source permits to execute<br />

development plans<br />

• ERF and our JV partners are permitting and<br />

constructing additional water impoundments<br />

• ERF developing centralized water<br />

infrastructure with gas gathering system<br />

(Centre County, PA)<br />

• Implemented closed loop system for drilling<br />

fluids management in 2010<br />

• Goal to recycle 100% of produced and flow<br />

back water by end of 2011<br />

• Chief building a centralized tank farm for<br />

storage and recycling<br />

• ERF reusing flow back fluid on location to<br />

reduce fresh water use<br />

• JV partners utilizing industrial water<br />

treatment plants and disposal wells for<br />

water disposal<br />

35


Long-Term Strategy for <strong>Enerplus</strong><br />

• Balanced portfolio of oil and gas assets<br />

• Focus on both mature properties and early stage<br />

growth plays to manage corporate decline rates and<br />

ensure disciplined capital investment<br />

• Build concentrated positions in core areas to deliver<br />

top quartile results and be the “best” operator<br />

• Continue to opportunistically pursue strategic<br />

acquisition - no plans to sell further cash generating<br />

assets at this time<br />

Provide<br />

sustained total<br />

return of<br />

10% – 15%<br />

per year to<br />

shareholders<br />

• Balance sheet can support our plans<br />

• Continue to unlock the value from our foundation<br />

assets<br />

36


Supplemental Information<br />

The Game Plan


2011 Guidance<br />

Summary of 2011 Expectations Target Comments<br />

Average annual production<br />

78,000 - 80,000 BOE/day<br />

Exit rate 2011 production 80,000 - 84,000 BOE/day Assumes $650 million development<br />

capital spending<br />

2011 production mix 53% gas, 47% liquids<br />

Average royalty rate 20% Percentage of gross sales (net of<br />

transportation costs)<br />

Operating costs<br />

$9.20/BOE<br />

G&A costs $3.30/BOE Includes non-cash charges of<br />

$0.30/BOE (stock option plan) and<br />

$0.20/BOE impact of the new IFRS<br />

rules<br />

Average interest and financing costs 6% Based on current fixed rate contracts<br />

and forward interest rates<br />

Development capital spending $650 million Within the context of current commodity<br />

prices<br />

Marcellus carry commitment spending $116 million Will be reported as a property<br />

acquisition<br />

38


2011 Annual Production Outlook<br />

BOE/day<br />

86,000<br />

84,000<br />

82,000<br />

80,000<br />

78,000<br />

76,000<br />

74,000<br />

72,000<br />

2011 Production Profile<br />

Range of production<br />

Capital Allocation:<br />

• 65% to growth plays<br />

• 35% to foundation assets<br />

• Capital spend evenly<br />

weighted throughout the year<br />

• Longer cycle times at Fort<br />

Berthold and Marcellus influencing<br />

production build throughout year<br />

70,000<br />

Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4<br />

39


Cash Flow Sensitivity<br />

The sensitivities below reflect all commodity contracts and forward markets as at February 14,<br />

2011. To the extent the market price of crude oil and natural gas change significantly from<br />

current levels, the sensitivities will no longer be relevant as the effect of our commodity<br />

contracts will change.<br />

Sensitivity Table<br />

Estimated Effect on 2011<br />

Cash Flow per Share (1)<br />

Change of $0.50 per Mcf in the price of AECO natural gas $0.18<br />

Change of US$5.00 per barrel in the price of WTI crude oil $0.09<br />

Change of 1,000 BOE/day in production $0.08<br />

Change of $0.01 in the US$/CDN$ exchange rate $0.06<br />

Change of 1% in interest rate $0.03<br />

(1)<br />

Assumes 178,939,000 shares outstanding.<br />

The impact of a change in one factor may be compounded or offset by changes in other factors. This table does not consider the<br />

impact of any inter-relationship among the factors.<br />

40


Hedging<br />

The following is a summary of the financial contracts in place at February 14, 2011<br />

expressed as a percentage of our forecasted net production volumes:<br />

Natural Gas<br />

(CDN$/Mcf)<br />

January 1, 2011<br />

– March 31, 2011<br />

January 1, 2011<br />

– December 31, 2011<br />

Crude Oil<br />

(US$/bbl)<br />

January 1, 2012<br />

– December 31, 2012<br />

Sold Puts (limiting downside protection) $4.15 $56.50 -<br />

% of forecasted 2011 net production 26% 11% -<br />

Swaps (fixed price) $6.39 $87.27 $94.60<br />

% of forecasted 2011 net production 33% 58% 20%<br />

Purchased Calls (repurchasing upside) $6.48 $ 101.17 -<br />

% of forecasted 2011 net production 26% 11% -<br />

41


Reserves and Contingent Resources<br />

Play Types<br />

Proved<br />

Proved plus<br />

Probable<br />

Reserves<br />

Proved plus<br />

Probable<br />

Booked<br />

Net Drilling<br />

Locations<br />

“Best<br />

Estimate”<br />

Contingent<br />

Resources<br />

Future<br />

Contingent<br />

Resource<br />

Drilling<br />

locations<br />

Bakken/Tight Oil (MMBOE) 38.0 57.5 39 60* 90<br />

Crude Oil Waterfloods (MMBOE) 65.2 83.7 45 60** n/a<br />

Other Conventional Oil (MMBOE) 20.8 27.7 23 - -<br />

Total Oil (MMBOE) 124.0 1<strong>68.</strong>9 107 120 90<br />

Marcellus Shale Gas (Bcfe) 52.4 117.2 13 3,904 926<br />

Tight Gas (Bcfe) 228.7 320.8 40 - -<br />

Shallow Gas (Bcfe) 164.8 220.5 152 - -<br />

Other Conventional Gas (Bcfe) 126.3 165.0 1 - -<br />

Total Gas (Bcfe) 572.1 823.5 206 3,904 926<br />

Total Company (MMBOE) 219.4 306.2 313 771 1,016<br />

* Bakken at Fort Berthold only – excludes Three Forks upside<br />

** Includes both IOR and EOR opportunities which could include future drilling locations only on a portion of our waterflood portfolio<br />

42


Portfolio Transition Activity<br />

Acquisitions<br />

Dispositions<br />

Net Acreage<br />

Production<br />

Cost<br />

($ Million)<br />

Marcellus Non-Operated Acreage 128,500 acres $448<br />

Marcellus Operated Acreage 70,200 acres $185<br />

North Dakota Bakken 74,500 acres $618<br />

Saskatchewan Bakken 140,000 acres $176<br />

Deep Basin 65,000 acres $40<br />

Total 478,200 acres $1,467<br />

Proceeds<br />

($ Million)<br />

Non-Core Conventional Assets ~10,600 BOE/day ~$600<br />

Kirby Oil Sands - $405<br />

Joslyn Oil Sands - $500<br />

Total Proceeds ~$1,505<br />

43


<strong>Enerplus</strong> Ownership<br />

Canadian<br />

US & Foreign<br />

Institutional<br />

Retail<br />

30%<br />

25%<br />

70%<br />

75%<br />

10-24<br />

STAGES<br />

6-10<br />

STAGES<br />

6-7<br />

STAGES<br />

As of February 2011<br />

Reported 13-F positions<br />

as of December 31, 2010<br />

44


$1 Billion Credit Facility<br />

Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce $145<br />

Royal Bank of Canada $120<br />

Bank of Montreal $120<br />

Bank of Nova Scotia $110<br />

Toronto Dominion Bank $100<br />

National Bank of Canada $85<br />

Alberta Treasury Branches $50<br />

Total Canadian<br />

$730 million<br />

HSBC Bank $85<br />

Citibank N.A. $85<br />

Union Bank of California $50<br />

Sumitomo Mitsui Bank $50<br />

Total Foreign<br />

$270 million<br />

45


Long-Term Debt<br />

($ thousands) December 31, 2010 December 31, 2009<br />

Current portion of long-term debt * $- $36,631<br />

Long-term:<br />

Bank credit facility 234,713 -<br />

Senior notes:<br />

CDN$40 million (Issued June 18, 2009) 40,000 40,000<br />

US$40 million (Issued June 18, 2009) 39,784 41,864<br />

US$225 million (Issued June 18, 2009) 223,785 235,485<br />

US$54 million (Issued October 1, 2003)* 53,709 56,516<br />

US$175 million (Issued June 19, 2002)* 140,414 148,411<br />

732,405 522,276<br />

Total debt $732,405 $558,907<br />

* Principal repayments due in 2011 under these notes have not been included in current liabilities as<br />

<strong>Enerplus</strong> intends to refinance the amounts with our long-term bank credit facility.<br />

46


Supplemental<br />

Bakken<br />

Information


Fort Berthold Development Plans<br />

B<br />

1280 acres<br />

TF B TF<br />

1320’ 1320’ 1320’<br />

• Maximize long horizontals<br />

• Develop from pads: 2 Bakken/2 Three Forks<br />

• Tie in as soon as possible<br />

• Test inter-well spacing<br />

• Work with other operators to time development<br />

• Reduce cycle time to 45 days from rig release<br />

of final well on pad to production<br />

• Implement salt water disposal solution<br />

• Understand and successfully implement<br />

simultaneous operations<br />

TF B B TF<br />

1280 acres<br />

• Drilling and completion of additional wells<br />

on producing pads<br />

48


Fort Berthold Well Timeline<br />

10 – 12 months<br />

Well application / permit<br />

approval<br />

Site Build<br />

Drilling<br />

Waiting on Frac<br />

Crews<br />

Fracing<br />

4-6 months<br />

1 month<br />

1 month /well<br />

2 months<br />

1-2 weeks<br />

• Environmental assessment<br />

required on all federal lands<br />

• Have 11 permits in hand or very<br />

late stage approval<br />

• Completing EA process on<br />

additional 30 permits - expect<br />

approval between April and June<br />

• 50 permits are underway for<br />

submittal between now and<br />

August<br />

• Expect 40 additional permits<br />

submitted by year-end<br />

• Cannot<br />

begin<br />

building site<br />

until permit<br />

in hand<br />

• Multi-well<br />

pads<br />

• “walking<br />

rig” will help<br />

reduce<br />

drilling time<br />

• Shortage<br />

of basinwide<br />

fleets<br />

relative to<br />

drilling<br />

activity<br />

49


Fort Berthold Well Costs<br />

Long Laterals<br />

Short Laterals<br />

Drilling<br />

$2.8 MM<br />

Completion<br />

$5.7 MM<br />

Drilling<br />

$2.4 MM<br />

Completion<br />

$3.3 MM<br />

Total Cost $8.5 MM<br />

Total Cost $5.7 MM<br />

Completions - 125,000 lbs of proppant/stage, $1.3 - $1.5 MM for ceramic proppant<br />

- Water: 2,500 – 3,000 bbls/stage, $3 - 6/bbl for trucking & disposal fees<br />

Tie-in - Additional $500,000<br />

Expect pad drilling will materially decrease tie-in costs<br />

50


Fort Berthold Execution Capability<br />

• 4 rigs under contract<br />

• 2 active at present; 2 moving in<br />

March / April, conditions permitting<br />

• Upgrading process<br />

• 2 “walkers” focused on pad drilling<br />

• Expect to sign at least one<br />

incremental rig by September<br />

• Frac services:<br />

• Multi-year frac services agreement<br />

signed – should keep pace with 3 –<br />

4 rig program<br />

• Plan to drill 40 – 50 wells/year from<br />

2012 – 2016 to fully develop acreage<br />

(Bakken and Three Forks)<br />

51


Fort Berthold Production - Gathering<br />

• <strong>Enerplus</strong> has committed to a field gathering system at the Fort Berthold<br />

Reservation which will:<br />

• Aggregate production at a central collection point off the Reservation that will<br />

provide flexible options for marketing the barrels<br />

• Gather and monetize both gas and liquids at market prices<br />

• Reduce the potential for shut in production due to varying weather, road<br />

conditions, and availability of trucking contractors<br />

• Provide some ability to better manage and dispose of produced water<br />

• Reduce the number of trucks moving on the Reservation which will reduce<br />

dust and road wear, and increase safety for the residents<br />

52


Fort Berthold Production – <strong>Enerplus</strong> Regional Transportation<br />

Current Transportation / Sales Arrangements in Place for<br />

Fort Berthold Development<br />

'000 ‘000 bbls bbls/day / day<br />

25<br />

25<br />

20<br />

20<br />

15<br />

10<br />

10<br />

5<br />

5<br />

0<br />

0<br />

2011 2012 2013 2014<br />

2011 2012 2013 2014<br />

Middle Pace (6 Rigs)<br />

Basic 4 Rig Program<br />

3rd Party Sales / Transport<br />

Enbridge Bakken Expansion<br />

Belle Fourche Reversal<br />

Four Bears Pipeline<br />

Historic Enbridge Capacity<br />

<strong>Enerplus</strong> has the flexibility to use its Enbridge North Dakota Pipeline capacity for its<br />

Sleeping Giant (Elm Coulee) production as well.<br />

53


Supplemental<br />

Waterflood<br />

Information


The Stages of Oil Recovery<br />

Stage<br />

Waterflood<br />

• Injecting high pressure water<br />

Implications<br />

• Hold production steady, grow recovery<br />

• Facilities in place<br />

• Maintenance costs increasing with age<br />

Improved Oil Recovery (IOR)<br />

• Optimizing waterfloods through<br />

sweep, pattern or voidage<br />

improvements<br />

• Conducting lab work to screen for<br />

EOR potential<br />

Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR)<br />

• Reducing residual oil saturation<br />

and improving sweep efficiency<br />

• Grow production & recovery<br />

• Spending capital up front for future benefit<br />

• Expand facilities<br />

• Convert vertical producers to injection<br />

• Drill horizontal producers<br />

• Maintenance costs improved<br />

• Grow production and recovery<br />

• Spending capital up front for future benefit<br />

• Increasing op costs<br />

• Facilities for polymer injection<br />

• Polymer<br />

55


Polymer Flood<br />

• Polymer is chemical additive<br />

that increases viscosity of<br />

injected water<br />

• Reduces residual oil saturation<br />

• Improves sweep efficiency<br />

• Works best with heavier crudes<br />

in high permeability reservoirs<br />

with low waterflood recovery<br />

factors<br />

• The first identified projects are<br />

at Giltedge and Medicine Hat<br />

Glauc C<br />

• Typical expected recovery<br />

improvement is ~8 - 15% (rule<br />

of thumb is 30% of the projected<br />

waterflood recoverable oil)<br />

Source – Oil and Gas Journal<br />

56


Giltedge – Polymer EOR Project Area<br />

Key Facts<br />

Area of<br />

Polymer<br />

Project<br />

26<br />

36<br />

25<br />

22 23 24<br />

14 13<br />

Wildmere Unit (4.73% WI)<br />

Wildmere Unit<br />

E+ 4.7% WI<br />

OOIP<br />

Recovery Factor to Date ~13%<br />

Cumulative Production<br />

P+P Reserves (Dec 31, 2010)<br />

Best Est. Contingent Resource<br />

Oil Quality<br />

2011E Avg. Production<br />

126 MMBOE<br />

16.4 MMBOE<br />

10.4 MMBOE<br />

(booked to 21%)<br />

16.6 MMBOE<br />

14° - 20° API<br />

1,700 BOE/day<br />

oil, 97% water cut<br />

• Waterflood initiated in 1974, we acquired in<br />

1996<br />

11<br />

12 12<br />

• Lloydminster zone at a depth of 650 metres<br />

• Historical decline: ~13%<br />

100 % Working Interest<br />

• Expected 2011 netback: ~$45/BOE<br />

• IOR and EOR contingent resource potential of<br />

16.6 MMBOE, over 60% more than current 2P<br />

reserves<br />

• Polymer project underway in 2011<br />

57


Dec-14<br />

Dec-13<br />

Dec-12<br />

Dec-11<br />

Dec-10<br />

Giltedge Production History<br />

Production maintained for last decade<br />

3000<br />

2500<br />

2000<br />

1500<br />

1000<br />

58<br />

Total Pool Base and Incremental<br />

from Polymer project (BOE/day)<br />

500<br />

Pool Base Production (BOE/day)<br />

0<br />

Reconstruction<br />

Downtime<br />

Oil Production (BOE/day)<br />

Dec-94<br />

Dec-95<br />

Dec-96<br />

Dec-97<br />

Dec-98<br />

Dec-99<br />

Dec-00<br />

Dec-01<br />

Dec-02<br />

Dec-03<br />

Dec-04<br />

Dec-05<br />

Dec-06<br />

Dec-07<br />

Dec-08<br />

Dec-09


Giltedge – Anticipated Polymer Upside<br />

Polymer Project<br />

Area<br />

• Potential incremental<br />

reserve adds of 0.8 –<br />

1.5 MMBOE in project area<br />

• Production in project area<br />

could increase 2 - 3 times<br />

from current levels over<br />

next<br />

20 - 30 months<br />

• Full field internal best<br />

estimate contingent<br />

resource of 13 MMBOE<br />

(10% incremental RF)<br />

Polymer injection wells<br />

59


Giltedge – Polymer Project Costs and Economics<br />

Material value creation opportunity<br />

• Project timeline<br />

• Q2 2011 – first injection, production response in ~6 months<br />

• Polymer injection will continue for approximately four years<br />

• Decision to expand may be made sometime after 2013<br />

• Intent is to be at full field polymer flood by late 2017<br />

Project costs<br />

• Facilities - $7 million<br />

• Polymer - $10 million (over 4 years)<br />

• Operating Cost - $1 million/year<br />

• Indicative economic factors<br />

• NPV @ 10%: ~$20 million<br />

• IRR: 25 - 40%<br />

60


Medicine Hat Glauc C – Polymer Potential<br />

Key Facts<br />

OOIP<br />

217 MMBOE<br />

Recovery Factor to Date ~8%<br />

Cumulative Production 17 MMBOE<br />

P+P Reserves (Dec 31,<br />

2010)<br />

Best Estimate Contingent<br />

Resource<br />

Oil Quality<br />

2011E Avg. Production<br />

16.5 MMBOE (booked to 15%)<br />

IOR 6.5 MMBOE (+3% RF)<br />

EOR 21.7 MMBOE (+10% RF)<br />

11° to 18° API<br />

2,500 BOE/day, 91% water cut<br />

72% WI across ~14 sections<br />

• Discovered in 1984, acquired in 1998, unitized<br />

in 2001<br />

• Glauconitic ‘C’ zone at 825 metre depth<br />

• Initiated waterflood in 2001 with focused<br />

development from 2007<br />

• Currently 112 producing and 55 injection wells<br />

• Aggressive facilities optimization program over<br />

past 2 years has reduced op costs from<br />

$12.50/BOE to below $10.00/BOE<br />

61


Medicine Hat Glauc C – Production History<br />

3500<br />

Average Daily Production (BOE/day)<br />

3000<br />

2500<br />

2000<br />

Drilled 7 wells/5 injector<br />

conversions and expanded 2<br />

batteries<br />

1500<br />

1000<br />

62


Medicine Hat Glauc C – EOR Potential<br />

EOR could more than double<br />

remaining reserves<br />

• EOR design complete by mid 2011<br />

• First polymer project begins in Q2 2012 with a second project starting<br />

one year later<br />

• Estimated incremental recovery factor of 10%<br />

• 21.7 MMBOE of best estimate contingent resource under polymer flood<br />

63


2011 Development Capital Plans at Med Hat<br />

EOR Project $2 million:<br />

Facilities $10 million:<br />

Wells $12 million:<br />

Total Budget - $24 million:<br />

• Early costs including<br />

design, skids, etc.<br />

• Battery expansions<br />

and rebuilds – Q2<br />

2011 completion<br />

• Fluid handling<br />

optimization ongoing<br />

• Decrease HZ well<br />

spacing to 100<br />

metres<br />

• Drill source well<br />

west of river<br />

• Optimized production<br />

and injection<br />

• Increase EUR by 3%<br />

(6.5 MMBOE)<br />

• Anticipated full cycle<br />

F&D of ~ $20/BOE<br />

64


Freda/Skinner/Neptune, SK - Ratcliffe & Bakken<br />

• Approximately 115,000 net<br />

acres of Ratcliffe rights<br />

• Majority overlay Bakken rights<br />

• Oungre/Ratcliffe zones at a<br />

1,600 - 1,800 metre depth<br />

• Current Ratcliffe production<br />

~1,700 BOE/day<br />

• Internal best estimate<br />

contingent resource of 9.0<br />

MMBOE, 70% of our booked<br />

2P reserves<br />

<strong>Enerplus</strong> Ratcliffe<br />

Rights<br />

Average working interest > 98%<br />

Ranging from 70 –100%<br />

• Current reserves are booked to<br />

26%<br />

• Bakken results to date<br />

disappointing – further analysis<br />

required<br />

• Positive success in the Ratcliffe<br />

65


Freda Lake Ratcliffe Unit<br />

Freda Lake Ratcliffe Voluntary Unit #1<br />

99.86% WI<br />

Key Facts<br />

OOIP<br />

55 MMBOE<br />

Recovery Factor to Date ~14%<br />

Cumulative Production<br />

P+P Reserves (Dec. 31, 2010)<br />

8 MMBOE<br />

10.2 MMBOE<br />

(booked to 31%)<br />

Best Est. Contingent Resource 2.3 MMBOE (+4%<br />

RF)<br />

Oil Quality<br />

2011E Exit Production<br />

32° API<br />

1,900 BOE/day oil<br />

(+40% vs 2010)<br />

<strong>Enerplus</strong> Ratcliffe Rights<br />

2009/10 Development Locations<br />

2011 Development Locations<br />

2011 Injector Conversions<br />

Horizontal wells and waterflood optimization<br />

unlocked major resource<br />

• Discovered 1967 & developed on 80 acre vertical well<br />

spacing, acquired in 2003<br />

• Peripheral waterflood implemented mid 1980’s<br />

• New wells attract lower royalties<br />

• Historical decline ~ 4%, RLI ~40 years<br />

• Injection conversions increasing oil production from<br />

surrounding producers<br />

• Recent single and dual leg HZ wells producing at<br />

150-300 bbl/day with 37-65% water cuts vs a<br />

previous pool average of over 90%<br />

66


Freda Lake Ratcliffe Unit Production<br />

2,500<br />

2,000<br />

Up to 14 more HZ wells to drill in the unit<br />

Verticals & Horizontals - Oil<br />

Rate<br />

Vertical Wells Only - Oil Rate<br />

Expected Production<br />

Oil Production (BOE/day)<br />

1,500<br />

1,000<br />

Water Injector Conversions<br />

Increased Production<br />

~ 100 BOPD Before HZ<br />

7 HZ wells drilled increased<br />

production from ~500 BOE/day to<br />

over 1,300 BOE/day at year-end<br />

500<br />

4% Historical Decline<br />

0<br />

2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018<br />

67


Supplemental<br />

Marcellus<br />

Information


Marcellus Performance – NE Pennsylvania<br />

21 MARCELLUS<br />

HORIZONTAL PRODUCERS<br />

Daily Production (Mcf/day)<br />

14,000<br />

12,000<br />

10,000<br />

8,000<br />

6,000<br />

4,000<br />

Lycoming 1 Lycoming 2<br />

Lycoming 4 Lycoming 3<br />

Lycoming 10 Lycoming 11<br />

Lycoming 12 Lycoming 13<br />

Lycoming 14 Lycoming 5<br />

Lycoming 6 Lycoming 7<br />

Lycoming 8 Lycoming 9<br />

Susq. 1 Susq. 2<br />

Susq. 3 Lycoming 15<br />

Lycoming 16 Lycoming 17<br />

Lycoming 18<br />

Average Horizontal<br />

Type Curve (EUR 6 BCF)<br />

2,000<br />

0<br />

0 60 120 180 240 300 360 420 480 540 600 660 720 780 840<br />

Days on Production<br />

69


Marcellus Well Design<br />

• Drilling (Average 30 days)<br />

• Operated<br />

• Drilling primarily delineation wells – with vertical pilot, cores and logs<br />

• 5 single well pads in Centre County, PA (2 wells ) and Preston County, WV (3<br />

wells)<br />

• Lateral length of 4,000’ to 5,000’<br />

• Closed loop system with synthetic mud<br />

• Installing water infrastructure<br />

• Non – operated<br />

• Drilling primarily lease saving operations, rather than pad drilling<br />

• Vast majority single well pads with a few 2 to 4 well pads<br />

• Longer laterals 3,000’- 5,000’<br />

• Closed loop system with synthetic mud<br />

• Completions (2 to 4 weeks)<br />

• Operated<br />

• 10 – 12 frac stages, 300’ to 400’ per stage<br />

• 4 perf clusters per stage<br />

• Slickwater frac with multiple sweeps<br />

• Non-operated<br />

• Fewer frac stages and larger frac intervals 400’ – 450’<br />

• 6 – 9 perf clusters per stage<br />

• Still testing 1 month “resting” of wells<br />

• Reduced chemical loading<br />

Drilling costs<br />

range from<br />

$2.5 – $3.5<br />

million<br />

Completion<br />

costs range<br />

from $3.0 –<br />

$4.0 million<br />

70


Marcellus Well Timeline<br />

6 – 8 months<br />

Well application / permit<br />

approval<br />

Site Build<br />

Drilling<br />

Waiting on Frac<br />

Crews<br />

Fracing<br />

45 – 60 days in PA<br />

45 – 90 days<br />

25 – 35<br />

days/well<br />

30 - 60 days<br />

7 - 14 days<br />

• 30 – 45 days in WV<br />

• Assumes water sources<br />

permitted<br />

• Current regulations<br />

• Cannot begin<br />

building site<br />

until permit in<br />

hand<br />

• Depends on<br />

time of year<br />

• Multi-well<br />

pads<br />

• “self-skidding”<br />

rigs help<br />

reduce drilling<br />

time<br />

• Shortage of<br />

frac fleets<br />

relative to<br />

basin-wide<br />

drilling activity<br />

Note: Timeline excludes well “resting” and tie-in to gathering systems<br />

71


Gathering Gas in the Marcellus<br />

NE PA<br />

Susquehanna, Bradford,<br />

Sullivan, Lycoming<br />

Central PA<br />

Clearfield,<br />

Clinton, Centre<br />

Midstream Party Chief Midstream Caiman/ Chief<br />

Midstream<br />

South PA<br />

Cambria, Somerset,<br />

Fayette<br />

SW PA & WV<br />

Marshall,<br />

Green PA<br />

Caiman Caiman /<br />

MarkWest Plant<br />

Comments<br />

Most mature area of the<br />

field where Chief has<br />

been acquiring ROW<br />

and laying pipe to their<br />

own producing wells for<br />

the past 2 years<br />

New drills are<br />

just being<br />

evaluated and<br />

egress routes<br />

being<br />

investigated<br />

Pipeline activity<br />

wasn’t started until<br />

2010 as no wells<br />

were completed<br />

(assume 1 year<br />

behind Marshall<br />

County)<br />

Liquids rich gas<br />

area that is<br />

currently flowing<br />

wet into the sales<br />

pipe waiting on<br />

the MW Plant for<br />

liquids extraction<br />

Wells to be tied-in<br />

in 2011<br />

30 - 35 6 - 20 25 - 32 25 - 30<br />

72


Moving Natural Gas Out of the Marcellus<br />

• <strong>Enerplus</strong> has taken several steps to ensure we can move our growing<br />

Marcellus gas production to market:<br />

• Entered into longer term (5 years +) firm “must take” contracts with creditworthy<br />

substantial end users of the natural gas who:<br />

• hold firm capacity on the various interstate pipelines (Transco, Tennessee)<br />

• have storage capacity and trading ability<br />

• These contracts have flexibility to increase delivered volumes as we bring<br />

production to pipe:<br />

MMBtu/d 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015<br />

Min Max Min Max Min Max Min Max Min Max<br />

Committed Sales into Transco Pipeline: 12 36 48 74 68 81 65 80 38 45<br />

Committed Sales in to Tennessee Gas Pipeline: 21 30 30 38 14 38 38 14 6 6<br />

• Participated in the Wyoming Pipeline Project that creates optionality for our<br />

production between the two key pipelines - Transco and Tennessee<br />

• Entered into a firm processing and marketing agreement with MarkWest for our<br />

liquids rich gas produced in Marshall County<br />

73


Supplemental<br />

Deep Basin<br />

Information


Deep Basin Opportunity<br />

Stacked Mannville<br />

Potential<br />

• 60,000 net acres of land<br />

(42,000 undeveloped)<br />

Deep Basin growth opportunities<br />

Existing <strong>Enerplus</strong> assets<br />

Montney Potential<br />

• 20,000 net acres of<br />

undeveloped land<br />

• Approximately 80,000 net<br />

acres of high working interest<br />

land throughout the region<br />

• Includes 100% working<br />

interest in approximately<br />

60,000 undeveloped acres<br />

• Multiple contiguous acreage<br />

blocks with liquids rich multizone<br />

potential<br />

• In 2011, focused on<br />

delineating the resource given<br />

price environment<br />

Large, long tenure, high working<br />

interest land holdings<br />

75


Stacked Mannville<br />

Key Facts<br />

Key properties<br />

Net Acreage (acres)<br />

Pine Creek to Hanlan<br />

~60,000 total (42,000 undeveloped)<br />

Future HZ Drilling Locations 100 - 200<br />

Expected EUR/Well*<br />

2.8 - 4.0 Bcfe<br />

• Acquiring and utilizing 3D seismic<br />

• Drilled/drilling 3 delineation wells, 3 others<br />

licensed and ready to execute in 2011<br />

• Liquids ratios of 15 – 40 bbls/MMcf<br />

• Additional de-risking ongoing by competitors<br />

and partners<br />

Contiguous land blocks in highly<br />

prospective regions<br />

<strong>Enerplus</strong> working interest lands<br />

* Expected EUR/well based on public data from offset wells. Number of future locations based on development of<br />

30% to 60% of <strong>Enerplus</strong> acreage<br />

76


Stacked Mannville Geology<br />

• Stacked cretaceous horizons<br />

provide vertical risk mitigation<br />

and multiple horizontal targets<br />

• Cardium<br />

• Notikewin<br />

• Wilrich<br />

• Bluesky<br />

• Gething<br />

• Cadomin<br />

* Indicative geologic section<br />

77


Stacked Mannville Type Curve Economics<br />

Target<br />

Raw gas<br />

recovered<br />

AECO<br />

($/Mcf)<br />

IRR%<br />

Cadomin + 1 up hole<br />

completion<br />

Bluesky or Wilrich<br />

2.8 Bcf Well 4.0 Bcf Well<br />

Payout<br />

(Years)<br />

NPV<br />

12%<br />

($MM)<br />

IRR%<br />

Payout<br />

(Years)<br />

NPV<br />

12%<br />

($MM)<br />

$6.00 30 2.6 $2.4 74 1.4 $6.2<br />

$5.00 19 3.4 $1.0 53 1.8 $4.6<br />

$4.00 8 5.3 ($0.5) 34 2.4 $2.6<br />

Capital $7.0 million $6.0 million<br />

30 Day IP 3,700 Mcf/day 3,900 Mcf/day<br />

Liquids 18 bbls/MMcf 15 bbls/MMcf<br />

Type curves are internal estimates based on local analogue/competitor information<br />

February 14, 2011 forward commodity price outlook<br />

78


Montney<br />

b-66-B well<br />

Pink Mountain<br />

Mntn Licenses<br />

Key Facts<br />

94-G-2<br />

Mntn Production<br />

ERF Well License<br />

Key Properties Cameron /<br />

Julienne Creek<br />

ERF 3D Seismic<br />

Net Acreage (acres) 17,000<br />

Future Hz Drilling Locations 50 – 150<br />

<strong>Enerplus</strong><br />

Expected EUR/Well<br />

3.5 – 5.5 Bcfe<br />

• 3D seismic purchased and<br />

reprocessed<br />

94-B-15<br />

• Existing well (b-66B) indicates over<br />

300 metres of Montney thickness<br />

• Rock analysis indicates good<br />

reservoir development<br />

• Liquids ratio is expected to be<br />

between 20 and 30 bbls/MMcf<br />

• <strong>Enerplus</strong> well licensed in Q1 2011<br />

although drill timing is uncertain<br />

100% working interest<br />

79


Montney Type Curve Economics<br />

AECO<br />

($/Mcf)<br />

IRR<br />

%<br />

3.5 Bcf Well 4.5 Bcf Well 5.5 Bcf Well<br />

Payout<br />

(Years)<br />

NPV<br />

12%<br />

($MM)<br />

IRR<br />

%<br />

Payout<br />

(Years)<br />

NPV<br />

12%<br />

($MM)<br />

IRR<br />

%<br />

Payout<br />

(Years)<br />

$6.00 27 2.7 2.1 45 1.8 3.9 64 1.4 5.7<br />

$5.00 18 3.9 0.8 30 2.4 2.4 44 1.8 4.0<br />

$4.00 10 6.5 -0.4 19 3.8 1.0 28 2.6 2.3<br />

NPV<br />

12%<br />

($MM)<br />

Capital $6.2 million $6.2 million $6.2 million<br />

30 Day IP 3,800 Mcf/day 4,000 Mcf/day 4,000 Mcf/day<br />

Liquids 20 bbls/MMcf 20 bbls/MMcf 20 bbls/MMcf<br />

BESC $4.30/Mcf $3.37/Mcf $2.80/Mcf<br />

• Type curves are based on Town Montney<br />

• Capital assumes pad drilling<br />

• February 14, 2011 forward commodity price outlook<br />

80


Deep Basin Development Plan<br />

• Pace of development heavily influenced by natural gas prices<br />

• High working interest and 3+ years of land tenure allow us to control the<br />

pace of play on our undeveloped land position<br />

• Shorter-term focus on delineation versus development with a view to<br />

future gas price recovery<br />

• Benefiting from competitor de-risking<br />

• 2011 Capital spending plans:<br />

• $38 million<br />

• Mix of operated and non-operated activity<br />

• 3D seismic<br />

81


Disclaimers<br />

Assumptions<br />

All economics contained have been calculated using forward prices and costs as of February 14, 2011. All amounts are stated in Canadian dollars unless<br />

otherwise specified.<br />

Barrels of Oil Equivalent and Cubic Feet of Gas Equivalent<br />

This presentation contains references to "BOE" (barrels of oil equivalent), "Mcfe" (thousand cubic feet of gas equivalent), "Bcfe" (billion cubic feet of gas<br />

equivalent) and "Tcfe" (trillion cubic feet of gas equivalent). <strong>Enerplus</strong> has adopted the standard of six thousand cubic feet of gas to one barrel of oil (6 Mcf: 1<br />

bbl) when converting natural gas to BOEs, and one barrel of oil to six thousand cubic feet of gas (1 bbl: 6 Mcf) when converting oil to Mcfes, Bcfes and Tcfes.<br />

BOEs, Mcfes, Bcfes and Tcfes may be misleading, particularly if used in isolation. The foregoing conversion ratios are based on an energy equivalency<br />

conversion method primarily applicable at the burner tip and do not represent a value equivalency at the wellhead. "MBOE" and "MMBOE" mean "thousand<br />

barrels of oil equivalent" and "million barrels of oil equivalent", respectively.<br />

Presentation of Production and Reserves Information<br />

In accordance with Canadian practice, production volumes and revenues are reported on a “Company interest” basis, before deduction of Crown and other<br />

royalties, plus <strong>Enerplus</strong>’ royalty interest. Unless otherwise specified, all reserves volumes in this presentation (and all information derived therefrom) are<br />

based on "company interest reserves" using forecast prices and costs. "Company interest reserves" consist of "gross reserves" (as defined in National<br />

Instrument 51-101 adopted by the Canadian securities regulators ("NI 51-101"), being <strong>Enerplus</strong>' working interest before deduction of any royalties, plus<br />

<strong>Enerplus</strong>' royalty interests in reserves. “Company interest reserves" are not a measure defined in NI 51-101 and do not have a standardized meaning under NI<br />

51-101. Accordingly, our company interest reserves may not be comparable to reserves presented or disclosed by other issuers. Our oil and gas reserves<br />

statement for the year ended December 31, 2010, which will include complete disclosure of our oil and gas reserves and other oil and gas information in<br />

accordance with NI 51-101, will be contained within our Annual Information Form for the year ended December 31, 2010 ("our AIF") which is available on our<br />

website at www.enerplus.com and on our SEDAR profile at www.sedar.com. Additionally, our Annual Information Form is part of our Form 40-F that has been<br />

filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and will available on EDGAR at www.sec.gov. Readers are also urged to review the Management’s<br />

Discussion & Analysis and financial statements filed on SEDAR and EDGAR for more complete disclosure on our operations.<br />

Contingent Resource Estimates<br />

This presentation contain estimates of "contingent resources". "Contingent resources" are not, and should not be confused with, oil and gas reserves.<br />

"Contingent resources" are defined in the Canadian Oil and Gas Evaluation Handbook (the "COGE Handbook") as "those quantities of petroleum estimated,<br />

as of a given date, to be potentially recoverable from known accumulations using established technology or technology under development, but which are not<br />

currently considered to be commercially recoverable due to one or more contingencies. Contingencies may include factors such as economic, legal,<br />

environmental, political and regulatory matters or a lack of markets. It is also appropriate to classify as “contingent resources” the estimated discovered<br />

recoverable quantities associated with a project in the early evaluation stage." There is no certainty that we will produce any portion of the volumes currently<br />

classified as “contingent resources”. The “contingent resource” estimates contained herein are presented as the "best estimate" of the quantity that will actually<br />

be recovered, effective as of December 31, 2010. A "best estimate" of contingent resources means that it is equally likely that the actual remaining quantities<br />

recovered will be greater or less than the best estimate, and if probabilistic methods are used, there should be at least a 50% probability that the quantities<br />

actually recovered will equal or exceed the best estimate.<br />

82


Disclaimers<br />

For information regarding the primary contingencies which currently prevent the classification of our disclosed “contingent resources” associated with our Marcellus<br />

shale gas assets as reserves and the positive and negative factors relevant to the “contingent resource” estimate, see our Annual Information Form for the year<br />

ended December 31, 2009 (and corresponding Form 40-F) dated March 12, 2010, a copy of which is available on our SEDAR profile at www.sedar.com and a<br />

copy of the Form 40-F which is available on our EDGAR profile at www.sec.gov. With respect to the “contingent resource” estimate for our North Dakota Bakken<br />

properties, the primary contingencies which currently prevent the classification of our disclosed “contingent resources” associated with the properties as "reserves"<br />

consist of additional delineation drilling to establish economic productivity in the development areas and limitations to development based on adverse topography<br />

or other surface restrictions. Significant positive factors related to the estimate include; continued advancement of drilling and completion technology and early<br />

performance of producing wells that are above forecast. A significant negative factor related to the estimate is the limited performance history in the immediate<br />

area of the “contingent resource”. With respect to our Waterflood assets, the primary contingencies which currently prevent the classification of our disclosed<br />

“contingent resources” associated with the properties as "reserves" are due to the early stage of implementation to the specific patterns within the existing<br />

waterfloods and the early stage of the specific enhanced oil recovery projects to the existing waterfloods. Significant positive factors related to the estimate include<br />

established waterflood technology, the history of waterflood performance data and the estimates are based on incremental recovery from higher displacement<br />

efficiency only with no improved recovery from additional areal sweep. A significant negative factor relevant to this estimate is the geological complexity and its<br />

effect on injector producer connectivity. There are a number of inherent risks and contingencies associated with the development of our interests in these<br />

properties including commodity price fluctuations, project costs, our ability to make the necessary capital expenditures to develop the properties, reliance on our<br />

industry partners in project development, acquisitions, funding and provisions of services and those other risks and contingencies described above, and that apply<br />

generally to oil and gas operations as described above, and under "Risk Factors" in our Annual Information Form referred to above.<br />

F&D Costs<br />

F&D costs presented are calculated (i) in the case of F&D costs for proved reserves, by dividing the sum of exploration and development costs incurred in the year<br />

plus the change in estimated future development costs in the year, by the additions to proved reserves in the year, and (ii) in the case of F&D costs for proved plus<br />

probable reserves, by dividing the sum of exploration and development costs incurred in the year plus the change in estimated future development costs in the<br />

year, by the additions to proved plus probable reserves in the year. The aggregate of the exploration and development costs incurred in the most recent financial<br />

year and the change during that year in estimated future development costs generally will not reflect total finding and development costs related to its reserves<br />

additions for that year.<br />

Non-GAAP Measures<br />

In these presentations, we use the terms "payout ratio" and "adjusted payout ratio" to analyze operating performance, leverage and liquidity, and the term "F&D<br />

costs" as a measure of operating performance. We calculate "payout ratio" by dividing cash distributions to unitholders by cash flow from operating activities, both<br />

of which are measures prescribed by Canadian generally accepted accounting principles ("GAAP") and which appear on our consolidated statements of cash flow.<br />

"Adjusted payout ratio" is calculated as cash distributions to unitholders plus development capital and office expenditures, divided by cash flow from operating<br />

activities. We also use the term "netback", which is used to measure operating performance and is calculated by subtracting <strong>Enerplus</strong>’ expected royalties and<br />

operating costs from the anticipated revenues in respect of the relevant properties. <strong>Enerplus</strong> believes that, in addition to net earnings and other measures<br />

prescribed by GAAP, the terms "payout ratio", "adjusted payout ratio", "F&D costs" and "netback" are useful supplemental measures as they provide an indication<br />

of the results generated by <strong>Enerplus</strong>' principal business activities. However, these measures are not measures recognized by GAAP and do not have a<br />

standardized meaning prescribed by GAAP. Therefore, these measures, as defined by <strong>Enerplus</strong>, may not be comparable to similar measures presented by other<br />

issuers.<br />

83


Disclaimers<br />

NOTICE TO U.S. READERS<br />

The oil and natural gas reserves information contained herein has generally been prepared in accordance with Canadian disclosure standards, which are not<br />

comparable in all respects to United States or other foreign disclosure standards. Reserves categories such as "proved reserves" and "probable reserves"<br />

may be defined differently under Canadian requirements than the definitions contained in the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC")<br />

rules. In addition, under Canadian disclosure requirements and industry practice, reserves and production are reported using gross (or, as noted above,<br />

"company interest") volumes, which are volumes prior to deduction of royalty and similar payments. The practice in the United States is to report reserves and<br />

production using net volumes, after deduction of applicable royalties and similar payments. Canadian disclosure requirements require that forecasted<br />

commodity prices be used for reserves evaluations, while the SEC mandates the use of an average of first day of the month price for the 12 months prior to<br />

the end of the reporting period. Additionally, the SEC prohibits disclosure of oil and gas resources, whereas Canadian issuers may disclose oil and gas<br />

resources. Resources are different than, and should not construed as reserves. For a description of the definition of, and the risks and uncertainties<br />

surrounding the disclosure of, contingent resources, see “Information Regarding Reserves, Resources and Operational Information” above.<br />

FORWARD-LOOKING INFORMATION AND STATEMENTS<br />

This presentation contains certain forward-looking information and statements ("forward-looking information") within the meaning of applicable securities<br />

laws. The use of any of the words "expect", "anticipate", "continue", "estimate", “guidance”, "objective", "ongoing", "may", "will", "project", "should", "believe",<br />

"plans", "intends", “budget”, "strategy" and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking information. In particular, but without limiting the<br />

foregoing, these presentations contains forward-looking information pertaining to the following: <strong>Enerplus</strong>' strategy to deliver both income and growth to<br />

investors and <strong>Enerplus</strong>' related asset portfolio; future returns to shareholders from both dividends and from growth in per share production and reserves; future<br />

capital and development expenditures and the allocation thereof among our resource plays and assets; future development and drilling locations and plans;<br />

the performance of and future results from <strong>Enerplus</strong>' assets and operations, including anticipated production levels and decline rates; future growth prospects,<br />

acquisitions and dispositions; the volumes and estimated value of <strong>Enerplus</strong>' oil and gas reserves and contingent resource volumes and future commodity price<br />

and foreign exchange rate assumptions related thereto; the life of <strong>Enerplus</strong>' reserves; the volume and product mix of <strong>Enerplus</strong>' oil and gas production; securing<br />

necessary infrastructure and third party services; the amount of future asset retirement obligations; future cash flows and debt-to-cash flow levels; potential<br />

asset sales; returns on <strong>Enerplus</strong>' capital program; <strong>Enerplus</strong>' tax position; and future costs, expenses and royalty rates.<br />

The forward-looking information contained in this presentation reflects several material factors and expectations and assumptions of <strong>Enerplus</strong> including,<br />

without limitation: that <strong>Enerplus</strong> will conduct its operations and achieve results of operations as anticipated; that <strong>Enerplus</strong>' development plans will achieve the<br />

expected results; the general continuance of current or, where applicable, assumed industry conditions; the continuation of assumed tax, royalty and<br />

regulatory regimes; the accuracy of the estimates of <strong>Enerplus</strong>' reserve and resource volumes; commodity price and cost assumptions; the continued<br />

availability of adequate debt and/or equity financing and cash flow to fund <strong>Enerplus</strong>' capital and operating requirements as needed; and the extent of its<br />

liabilities. <strong>Enerplus</strong> believes the material factors, expectations and assumptions reflected in the forward-looking information are reasonable but no assurance<br />

can be given that these factors, expectations and assumptions will prove to be correct.<br />

84

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