Alaska Lawmakers Race to Decide: Billions in Subsidies for Massive Gas Pipeline?
Alaska Governor Mike Dunleavy pushes lawmakers hard. He wants a $7.2 billion tax cut over 36 years to fund the trans-Alaska natural gas pipeline. Without it, he warns, the project dies.
“This isn’t some small lemonade stand,” Dunleavy declares. “It’s the world’s biggest natural gas venture.”
Skeptics in the legislature balk at the price tag. House and Senate offer slimmer alternatives. Some argue the pipeline needs no help at all.
Four paths emerge as the session winds down. Lawmakers scramble. A special session looms if they stall.
No deals yet with cities, boroughs, North Slope producers, or unions. Investors eye the first phase: a line from North Slope to Cook Inlet for local use. Phase two adds plants for global exports.
Revenue economist Dan Stickel tells lawmakers success slashes costs. “Full build means cheaper gas for Alaskans than Cook Inlet supplies now,” he says.
The Subsidy Showdown: Risks and Rewards
Debate boils over subsidies. Bigger cuts lure investors, say backers. They promise low-cost gas and jobs.
Developer Adam Prestidge of Glenfarne Alaska agrees. “We aim for the cheapest gas with project certainty,” he states.
Critics highlight dangers. Rep. Zack Fields, D-Anchorage, warns of locked-in high prices if exports flop. Department estimates peg Anchorage at $27 per thousand cubic feet by 2033—double today’s rates.
Legislators lack key data. Glenfarne holds its cost estimate close. Gas prices from producers? Buyer bids? All secret until investment decisions hit months from now.
Sen. Bill Wielechowski, D-Anchorage, demands facts. “We need real numbers to size the relief right,” he insists.
Rep. Julie Coulombe, R-Anchorage, flags overruns. “A 40% jump kills global competitiveness,” she notes.
Public costs hover at $46 billion. Insiders whisper $57 billion or more.
Project Phases: Local Gas First, Exports Later
Phase one pipes North Slope gas south for homes and power. Alaskans gain reliable supply amid Cook Inlet declines.
Phase two builds plants. Exports surge to Asia, funding the rest.
History haunts the push. Alaska chased this dream for decades. Oil riches funded studies, but prices crashed. Glenfarne bought 75% last year, reviving hopes.
Gov. Dunleavy hires ex-Sen. Mark Begich as advisor—$100,000 contract. Begich lost to him in 2018 but now touts tax cuts.
“Lower taxes put dollars in struggling family pockets,” Begich argues. “No extra profits for developers—just savings passed to you.”
Wielechowski crunches numbers. Families save $55 yearly. But each Alaskan loses $500 annually in state revenue. “Trade Permanent Fund dividends for that? No deal,” he counters.
Competing Proposals: House, Senate, and Standoff
Options clash.
Senate plan flips the script. State gains $42.1 billion through 2062—up from $27.9 billion. Prestidge calls it “prohibitively burdensome.” It forces project redesign.
House Resources Committee eyes under $5.9 billion cut. Smaller than Dunleavy’s, but aligned. They tweak amendments Tuesday, grilling Prestidge and Begich.
Both bills crawl early. Resources committees first, then finance panels, floors, and cross-chamber votes.
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Four Pipeline Paths Ahead:
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Gov’s full $7.2B tax cut: Maximizes build odds, lowest gas prices.
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House < $5.9B version: Balanced subsidy, investor-friendly.
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Senate revenue boost: State profits big, risks killing project.
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Do nothing: Pipeline stands alone, uncertain fate.
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Key Unanswered Questions:
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True cost: $46B public, $57B+ rumored.
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Gas prices: Producers’ sell rate unknown.
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Exports: Global buyers’ bids pending.
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Overruns: 40% could doom viability.
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Stakeholder Status:
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Cities/boroughs: No agreements.
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North Slope producers: Silent on terms.
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Unions: No public pacts.
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Glenfarne: Holds cost data tight.
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Alaska’s Energy Crunch: Why It Matters Now
Cook Inlet gas dwindles. Prices spike for Southcentral homes—20% of state population. Blackouts threaten. Pipeline promises stability.
Full project creates 10,000+ jobs, pumps billions into economy. Exports tap Asia’s hunger.
Opponents fear stranded assets. If exports fail, Alaskans foot the bill.
Dunleavy frames it existential. “Act now or lose forever,” he urges.
Roadblocks and Realities
Time ticks. Session ends soon. Special session? Possible.
Data gaps frustrate. Future gas markets? Unpredictable. Regulators await final filings.
Begich pushes consumer focus. “Every saved dollar fights inflation,” he says.
Wielechowski eyes trade-offs. “Subsidies sap funds for schools, dividends,” he warns.
Prestidge pleads flexibility. Senate taxes “require redrawing the blueprint.”
House moves methodically. Amendments refine viability.
What’s Next: High Stakes in Final Weeks
Committees grind. Finance hurdles loom. Bipartisan buy-in? Elusive.
Alaskans watch. Gas bills rise. Pipeline could reshape the state—or fizzle.
Success hinges on compromise. Investors wait. Clock runs.
