By Tess Stynes 
 

Kinder Morgan Inc. (KMI) swung to a second-quarter profit as earnings surged at its Kinder Morgan Energy Partners LP (KMP) affiliate and El Paso Pipeline Partners LP's (EPB) bottom line increased by 35% .

Kinder Morgan Inc. last May acquired El Paso Corp. in a roughly $21 billion deal that created the largest natural-gas pipeline operator in North America.

Kinder Morgan Energy, which transports natural gas and coal, has benefited from strong production at U.S. alternative shale fields.

Kinder Morgan Inc. Chief Executive Richard D. Kinder said drivers of growth at Kinder Morgan Partners included asset drop downs associated with the El Paso acquisition, contributions its recent Copano Energy LLC acquisition, and strong oil production in its carbon-dioxide segment.

"We see exceptional growth opportunities across all of our business segments, as there is a need to build additional midstream infrastructure to move or store oil, gas and liquids from the prolific shale plays in the United States and the oilsands in Alberta, along with increasing demand for [carbon dioxide], which is used for enhanced oil recovery," Mr. Kinder added.

Kinder Morgan Inc. reported a profit of $277 million, or 27 cents a share, compared with a year-earlier loss of $126 million, or 15 cents a share. Revenue climbed 56% to $3.38 billion. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters most recently projected per-share earnings of 33 cents on revenue of $3.14 billion.

Kinder Morgan Energy reported a profit of $1 billion, up sharply from $132 million a year earlier. On a per-unit basis, which reflects general partner interests, adjusted earnings were $1.41, compared with a year earlier loss of 53 cents. Excluding fair-value impacts and other items, adjusted earnings were up at 47 cents from 37 cents a year earlier. Revenue surged 50% to $3.38 billion. Analysts recently expected per-share profit of 60 cents on revenue of $2.69 billion.

Kinder Morgan Energy's natural-gas pipeline business reported adjusted segment earnings more than doubled to $566 million. However, overall segment transport volumes fell 5% largely because of significantly lower power plant gas demand.

El Paso Pipeline Partners reported a profit of $136 million, up from $101 million. On a per-unit basis, which reflects the general partner interests, earnings fell to 40 cents from 44 cents. Excluding items such as asset dropdowns and write-downs, per-unit earnings were down 43 cents from 46 cents. Revenue dropped 2.2% to $359 million.

Analysts recently forecast per-share earnings of 47 cents on revenue of $390 million.

Operations and management expenses dropped 37%.

Kinder Morgan Inc.'s shares were flat at $39.58 in recent after-hours trading, while Kinder Morgan Energy's units were down 53 cents at $86.20 and El Paso Pipeline Partners' units increased 12 cents to $43.30.

Write to Tess Stynes at Tess.Stynes@dowjones.com

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