Legislature(2007 - 2008)BARNES 124

02/28/2007 02:00 PM House RESOURCES


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02:07:00 PM Start
02:07:14 PM Presentation by Harold Heinze, Alaska Natural Gas Development Authority
03:21:51 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
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+ Presentation by Harold Heinze, Alaska TELECONFERENCED
Natural Gas Development Authority
                    ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE                                                                                  
               HOUSE RESOURCES STANDING COMMITTEE                                                                             
                       February 28, 2007                                                                                        
                           2:07 p.m.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Carl Gatto, Co-Chair                                                                                             
Representative Craig Johnson, Co-Chair                                                                                          
Representative Vic Kohring                                                                                                      
Representative Bob Roses                                                                                                        
Representative Paul Seaton                                                                                                      
Representative Peggy Wilson                                                                                                     
Representative Bryce Edgmon                                                                                                     
Representative Scott Kawasaki                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative David Guttenberg                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
COMMITTEE CALENDAR                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
PRESENTATION  BY HAROLD  HEINZE, ALASKA  NATURAL GAS  DEVELOPMENT                                                               
AUTHORITY                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
No previous action to report                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
WITNESS REGISTER                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
HAROLD HEINZE, Chief Executive Officer                                                                                          
Alaska Natural Gas Development Authority (ANGDA)                                                                                
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:   Presented  a conceptual  gas line  project                                                               
proposal for bringing North Slope gas to market.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
ACTION NARRATIVE                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  CARL   GATTO  called   the  House   Resources  Standing                                                             
Committee  meeting  to  order at  2:07:00  PM.    Representatives                                                             
Gatto, Johnson, Kohring, Wilson,  Seaton, and Edgmon were present                                                               
at  the  call  to  order.   Representatives  Roses  and  Kawasaki                                                               
arrived as the meeting was in progress.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
^PRESENTATION BY  HAROLD HEINZE,  ALASKA NATURAL  GAS DEVELOPMENT                                                             
AUTHORITY                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:07:14 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR GATTO  announced that the  only order of  business would                                                               
be the presentation  of a conceptual gas line  proposal by Harold                                                               
Heinze.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:07:31 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
HAROLD  HEINZE,  Chief  Executive  Officer,  Alaska  Natural  Gas                                                               
Development Authority (ANGDA),  began his PowerPoint presentation                                                               
by noting  that ANGDA  is a  public corporation  of the  State of                                                               
Alaska.   At the  committee's request,  he outlined  his personal                                                               
background before commencing  with his presentation:   He came to                                                               
Alaska  in  1969  as  a  petroleum  engineer  with  the  Atlantic                                                               
Richfield  Company, eventually  becoming  an  executive with  the                                                               
company  and running  the Alaska  operations.   He was  appointed                                                               
commissioner of  the Department of  Natural Resources  during the                                                               
Hickel Administration.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE explained  that ANGDA was formed  by public initiative                                                               
and that the statutes under which  ANGDA exists are very broad as                                                               
to the grant  of power and direction.   He said that  in the last                                                               
few  years, ANGDA  has focused  on two  things:   1) a  liquefied                                                               
natural  gas (LNG)  project out  of  Valdez, as  required by  the                                                               
initiative, and   2) getting  gas to southcentral  Alaska because                                                               
this is a significant emerging issue.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR.  HEINZE  reported  that  he  met with  the  new  governor  on                                                               
December  5, 2006,  and  that Governor  Palin  challenged him  to                                                               
remember  why ANGDA  was established  and  asked whether  ANGDA's                                                               
role  was being  fulfilled.    Thus, he  decided  that ANGDA  had                                                               
better come forward  with something called the  Alaska Gas Market                                                               
System (AGMS) because it seems  to fulfill the responsibility and                                                               
challenge that ANGDA was given by the people of Alaska.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:09:37 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE WILSON inquired  as to how this  is different from                                                               
the last  time that Mr. Heinze  was before the legislature.   Has                                                               
ANGDA changed direction, she asked.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR.  HEINZE explained  that the  intent is  to present  an entire                                                               
system  that links  the North  Slope  to gas  markets in  Alaska.                                                               
This is a  bigger project in scope than what  ANGDA has worked on                                                               
before.   However, it is  a very  small project in  comparison to                                                               
the other projects  that are being proposed.  He  said that ANGDA                                                               
is trying  to walk the line  between being big enough  for Alaska                                                               
and yet  small enough to  be very doable.   It is both  a project                                                               
and a  process that will  play out over the  next one to  one and                                                               
one-half years.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE  noted that ANGDA  is a small  organization consisting                                                               
of himself and an administrative  officer, Connie Young, and that                                                               
ANGDA  basically operates  through the  use of  consultants.   He                                                               
said that Shaw  Alaska, Inc., compiled a lot of  the project work                                                               
behind his presentation of today.   He explained that the concept                                                               
of  AGMS started  first with  the  needs within  Alaska which  is                                                               
about 250  million cubic feet (mcf)  per day for power  and heat.                                                               
This does  not provide  for the current  industrial uses  in Cook                                                               
Inlet, he said, but this may  happen if those companies decide to                                                               
join into this process.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:12:25 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE stated that when  ANGDA first looked at bringing North                                                               
Slope gas to  the Cook Inlet area, it was  found that the project                                                               
would probably  result in higher  costs than homeowners  would be                                                               
willing to pay.   Therefore, ANGDA looked at ways  to lower those                                                               
costs.  One  way is to run  additional gas down the  700 miles to                                                               
Glennallen in  order to provide  one billion cubic feet  (bcf) of                                                               
gas a  day to  Valdez for  LNG.   This significantly  lowered the                                                               
transportation  cost  to  Cook  Inlet  and  elsewhere  along  the                                                               
pipeline.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE  referred to the map  of the AGMS concept  proposal in                                                               
his PowerPoint  presentation.  He  explained that a 24  inch pipe                                                               
will run from  the North Slope to Glennallen, with  a capacity of                                                               
slightly over 1.25 billion standard  cubic feet per day (bscf/d).                                                               
There will be no excess pipe  capacity within this portion of the                                                               
pipeline.   However, he said,  if someone comes forward  with the                                                               
inclination  and commitment  to want  more gas,  the pipe  can be                                                               
made bigger and other things can be done.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR.  HEINZE continued  reviewing  the map  and  information.   He                                                               
noted that the  16-inch pipeline coming into the  Cook Inlet area                                                               
is ample  for 0.25 bscf/d  and can  carry the current  Cook Inlet                                                               
usage  which is  about 500  million standard  cubic feet  per day                                                               
(mscf/d).    He said  that  the  Valdez pipeline  component  will                                                               
transport 1 bscf/d  and that the 20-inch pipe  is sized according                                                               
to feedback  from major  world LNG players  who indicated  that a                                                               
volume of 7  million tons of LNG per annum  would easily fit into                                                               
the  worldwide  LNG   trade.    He  noted  that   a  North  Slope                                                               
[conditioning] facility will be  constructed to remove the carbon                                                               
dioxide and re-blend the natural gas liquids (NGLs).                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:15:07 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE  pointed out  the importance  of remembering  that the                                                               
current  gas in  Alaska -  Cook Inlet  gas -  is almost  entirely                                                               
methane which is very dry.   However, he said, North Slope gas is                                                               
very  rich and  contains large  volumes of  ethane, propane,  and                                                               
butane.   Ethane is the  basis of the petrochemical  industry and                                                               
propane is an excellent fuel for  transport to the more rural and                                                               
less densely [populated] areas of Alaska.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE  explained that  the pipeline  coming into  Cook Inlet                                                               
would terminate  in one or two  storage fields.  This  is because                                                               
there is a tremendous variation in  the use of gas between summer                                                               
and winter in the Cook Inlet area.   This is not the way to run a                                                               
pipeline, he  noted, so running  the gas into storage  allows for                                                               
levelized  flows  and  a  levelized  tariff  that  is  much  more                                                               
favorable economically.  Finally,  there will be various take-off                                                               
points  at various  locations along  the pipeline  such as  Yukon                                                               
River, Fairbanks,  North Pole, and the  military installations at                                                               
Delta Junction.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE stated that the cost  of all the pipelines as shown on                                                               
the chart will be about $4  billion.  The conditioning plant will                                                               
be  about $1  billion and  a Valdez  LNG plant  will be  about $3                                                               
billion.  He said that ANGDA  does not visualize building the LNG                                                               
plant as  part of the  system because  ANGDA believes it  will be                                                               
built by people in the LNG  business.  If these businesses do not                                                               
come  forward, he  said, then  there will  not be  a pipeline  to                                                               
Valdez.   He  reported  that there  are two  or  three major  LNG                                                               
companies in the world, all  of whom have expressed some interest                                                               
in having  access to Alaska gas.   The reason for  their interest                                                               
is because  their other choices  in the  world are not  good ones                                                               
and Alaska offers a lot of advantages.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:17:38 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE  predicted a tariff of  anywhere from 50 cents  to one                                                               
dollar  for transporting  the gas  to  Cook Inlet  as opposed  to                                                               
Chicago.   He  said that  this will  result in  a somewhat  lower                                                               
price.   However, the  advantage of bringing  North Slope  gas to                                                               
Cook Inlet  is not  that it  is cheaper,  but that  it is  a very                                                               
plentiful supply  which will provide  stability of price.   Given                                                               
the impact  of 30-40  percent price increases  over the  past few                                                               
years,  he stressed,  having stability  may  be one  of the  best                                                               
assets that Alaska can achieve.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE  directed attention to  the tariff numbers  for Valdez                                                               
shown in his PowerPoint presentation  and advised that the people                                                               
in  the  LNG business  will  decide  whether  this project  is  a                                                               
commercial  activity  and whether  they  are  prepared to  invest                                                               
based  on these  numbers.   Preliminary  feedback indicates  that                                                               
they continue to be interested, he said.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:18:54 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE declared  that one of the unique  characteristics of a                                                               
smaller system  like this  one is  that it  does not  require the                                                               
huge reserve base that the committee  is used to thinking of.  He                                                               
related  that  the  large project  carrying  4.5  bscf/d  through                                                               
Canada  will require  a reserve  base of  50 trillion  cubic feet                                                               
(tcf).  He said that 25 tcf is  what is known to exist in Prudhoe                                                               
Bay.   There is another 10  tcf that has been  identified but not                                                               
developed  on  the North  Slope.    Additionally, the  assumption                                                               
being used  on the large project  is that another 15  tcf will be                                                               
found.   Mr. Heinze  emphasized that  the ANGDA  project is  on a                                                               
whole different scale.   He stated that 10 tcf  will provide 1.25                                                               
bscf/d for over  20 years.  That reserve basis,  he said, is more                                                               
than enough to finance and undertake this kind of a project.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE  referred to the  "Reserves & Financing" chart  in his                                                               
PowerPoint  presentation regarding  ways to  get to  the 10  tcf.                                                               
One way,  he said,  is to  use the  3 tcf  from the  state's one-                                                               
eighth  ownership in  Prudhoe Bay  and  add it  to the  7 tcf  of                                                               
production  from  one of  the  three  producers at  Prudhoe  Bay.                                                               
Another way is to take the state's  3 tcf and add it to the Point                                                               
Thomson production.   A third  way is to  take the state's  3 tcf                                                               
and add it to new discoveries in the Brooks Range.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:20:29 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE  clarified that in  terms of financing, the  LNG plant                                                               
will  be  built,  owned,  and  operated  by  people  in  the  LNG                                                               
business.   He related that they  already have a fleet  of ships,                                                               
that they  want to  be able  to call on  the plant  with whatever                                                               
ships they  want, and  that they  want to be  able to  sail those                                                               
ships to  whatever markets they already  have.  It will  not be a                                                               
dedicated trade under these kind of circumstances, he advised.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR.  HEINZE  next  described  the "process"  as  opposed  to  his                                                               
previous description of the "project".   He stated that ANGDA has                                                               
no illusions of grandeur, it is  not going to build this project.                                                               
He  said that  he  is not  asking for  billions  of dollars,  but                                                               
rather a much  smaller sum of money that will  allow a process to                                                               
move forward  over the  next year  and a  half.   He acknowledged                                                               
that  the first  steps of  defining a  system like  this are  the                                                               
risky steps.   The  risk is  that not enough  is known  to decide                                                               
whether or not  the project is feasible.  Until  it is determined                                                               
that it  is feasible most  companies are going  to have a  lot of                                                               
trouble  committing tens  of millions  of dollars,  he said,  and                                                               
that is  what it takes  at some point  to advance the  project to                                                               
actual definition.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE explained  that this is a "Phase I"  type of approach,                                                               
and in this Phase I the  doors are thrown open to anybody wanting                                                               
to participate.  He outlined  the possible participants listed in                                                               
his  PowerPoint  presentation  under "Partners  We  Can  Expect".                                                               
These  participants  include  oil  and  gas  companies,  pipeline                                                               
companies,  LNG  plant  and ship  owners  and  operators,  energy                                                               
project investors,  local Alaska utilities, the  State of Alaska,                                                               
and the federal government.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:23:00 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE predicted interest from the  markets.  He said this is                                                               
because most  of the people  on the market  side want to  go back                                                               
upstream.   For instance,  he contended, there  is no  doubt that                                                               
the utilities  in Alaska receiving  the gas  may look at  the gas                                                               
transmission  system as  a viable  investment.   He  said that  a                                                               
large  number of  Alaskan entrepreneurs  will become  involved in                                                               
distributing the  propane.   He said  that he  will not  pick the                                                               
entrepreneurs and  does not  know who  they are,  but that  he is                                                               
absolutely confident  that people  will come  and they  will come                                                               
with all kinds of things to transport the propane in.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE related  that at least three  companies have expressed                                                               
interest in a Valdez LNG  plant, including "BG Group, Mitsubishi,                                                               
and  Sempra".   He  said  that each  company  serves a  different                                                               
market,  has its  own  large fleet  of LNG  ships,  and has  very                                                               
different re-gas facilities.   He noted that  a possibility might                                                               
be for the  three companies to build the LNG  plant together.  He                                                               
pointed out that  ANGDA is encouraging a  cooperative rather than                                                               
a  competitive  effort in  order  to  get the  strongest  project                                                               
possible.   If  the  companies say  that they  need  more than  1                                                               
bscf/d  of LNG  and  they  are prepared  to  make the  commitment                                                               
behind it, then making the project bigger should be looked at.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
2:25:08 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE reiterated that the  two industrial facilities in Cook                                                               
Inlet are  not part of this  system.  He stated  that neither the                                                               
Kenai LNG plant  nor the Agrium plant have  expressed interest at                                                               
this time.  However, he said  that he has every reason to believe                                                               
that  this  will  be  revisited  in the  future  as  things  move                                                               
forward.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR.  HEINZE noted  that because  of the  extreme richness  of the                                                               
[North  Slope]   gas,  petrochemical  companies   have  expressed                                                               
interest in  locating at the  pipeline's terminus.  He  said that                                                               
this is  because the  volume of ethane  that will  potentially be                                                               
available  is  twice   what  it  takes  to   have  a  world-scale                                                               
industrial complex and  that most of these companies  do not have                                                               
access in favorable settings to this volume of hydrocarbon.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:26:40 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE explained that because  the pipeline is small, it will                                                               
largely follow the Trans-Alaska  Pipeline System (TAPS) right-of-                                                               
way to Glennallen as this  offers some regulatory advantages.  He                                                               
said that  ANGDA believes the  pipeline can be delivering  gas to                                                               
Cook Inlet in six years, based  on three years of "front end" and                                                               
three years of  construction.  During the  construction phase the                                                               
pipeline will require two crews of  about 500 workers and this is                                                               
well  within  Alaska's capability  in  terms  of the  skills  and                                                               
crafts that  are needed.  He  said that a 24-inch,  high pressure                                                               
pipeline like this one is  very suitable for welding machines and                                                               
other techniques  that lessen the requirement  for highly skilled                                                               
people because it is more of a craft type of setup.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE stated  that ANGDA believes there is  a scenario where                                                               
gas can be  flowing into Cook Inlet ahead of  finishing the North                                                               
Slope conditioning  facility and the  finishing of the  LNG plant                                                               
in Valdez.  He noted that  this is very important when looking at                                                               
the potential  energy problems facing  Cook Inlet where  even two                                                               
years might be significant.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:28:13 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  GATTO  estimated a  cost  of  $5000  per home  for  the                                                               
Glennallen to Cook  Inlet portion of the pipeline  to provide gas                                                               
to the  Matanuska-Susitna, Kenai, and  Anchorage areas.   He said                                                               
that it will  cost more than $5000 per home  to switch to heating                                                               
oil, so having  the ability to continue heating  with natural gas                                                               
would be a  great advantage.  Additionally, this  figure does not                                                               
include Agrium or  the LNG plant.  This section  of the pipe will                                                               
be paid  for completely and there  will be no tariff  because the                                                               
consumers will all own it, so this is very valuable.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR.  HEINZE agreed  with Co-Chair  Gatto.   He asserted  that the                                                               
pipeline is  clearly a utility  because it is servicing  a number                                                               
of households.  The 20-30 year  supply of gas to these households                                                               
is  an   incredibly  important  thing,  he   said.    Alternative                                                               
investments for providing the same  level of energy, coupled with                                                               
energy  security over  time, are  much  more than  a few  hundred                                                               
million dollars.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE remarked that in  addition to the spur line, continued                                                               
exploration in Cook  Inlet remains vital.  However,  he said, the                                                               
cost of Cook Inlet gas will  present major problems in the longer                                                               
term  when one  considers  that the  rule of  thumb  is about  $1                                                               
billion for 1  tcf.  He noted  that LNG could be  brought in, but                                                               
that there are  pricing and security issues  associated with LNG.                                                               
He  said  that  he  would be  very  uncomfortable  with  Alaska's                                                               
communities having to rely on a tenuous foreign supply of LNG.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
2:31:32 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE  directed attention  to the  schedule outlined  in his                                                               
presentation  and noted  that the  intention  is to  allow for  a                                                               
negotiated open season early in  the timeline.  He explained that                                                               
during  the  open  season  people  must  come  forward  and  make                                                               
commitments and  that this  is when  you find out  if you  have a                                                               
project, how big  the project will be, and what  the economics of                                                               
the project  really are.   He predicted  that the answers  to the                                                               
questions will be found quickly  because this particular pipeline                                                               
is a simple system.   However, since this is a  "Phase I" type of                                                               
work  level,  the  trick  is  to  get there  in  a  way  that  is                                                               
comfortable information-wise  to the potential participants.   He                                                               
noted that on the schedule, the  trigger for this is pretty quick                                                               
and  that this  is not  inconsistent with  the other  things that                                                               
need to happen  to get gas to  Cook Inlet in a timely  way.  Even                                                               
though  the open  season begins  early in  the timeline,  it will                                                               
remain  open for  one  year  which is  longer  than the  standard                                                               
timeline of six months.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:33:15 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE  explained that  the joint-work  process shown  in his                                                               
PowerPoint presentation  will be  a voluntary coming  together of                                                               
ANGDA,  state resources,  and individual  company resources  on a                                                               
contributed, in-kind basis.  It  will be totally non-exclusive as                                                               
well  as  voluntary.     He  said  that  if   someone  elects  to                                                               
participate, it will  not prevent them from  also proceeding with                                                               
their own efforts  or other groupings of efforts.   He noted that                                                               
many of the issues are issues  that are common to any project and                                                               
any set of participants and that  this will provide a vehicle for                                                               
people to participate  at a lower risk and,  most importantly, to                                                               
know that it is happening.   Even though not every aspect of this                                                               
will be  public, he stated,  the actual monthly  progress reports                                                               
will be a very public thing so  that people can see what is going                                                               
on and whether  it is advancing.  There will  be an incentive for                                                               
the  participants  in  the  process   because  only  the  summary                                                               
information will be  made public.  Participating  day-to-day at a                                                               
technical level  in a  project like  this is a  way to  learn the                                                               
most.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR.  HEINZE stated  that  if  he is  given  encouragement by  the                                                               
legislature, he will take the month  of April to call on a number                                                               
of people  and offer them this  opportunity.  He said  that a few                                                               
will accept readily and the  others will then also accept because                                                               
one of the  rules of the game  is to never let  a competitor have                                                               
an advantage.  There is no  expense to these companies other than                                                               
the talent and the expertise that they contribute.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:36:07 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE WILSON asked where would  the State of Alaska gain                                                               
in this project  and will the project make it  cheaper for people                                                               
in Southeast Alaska.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR.  HEINZE replied  that the  answer to  the second  question is                                                               
yes.   He said  that it  is ANGDA's belief  that everybody  has a                                                               
stake in North  Slope gas.  While  it has not been  the thrust of                                                               
other sponsors,  it is ANGDA's  thrust that 99 percent  of Alaska                                                               
will participate  in the  actual molecules  coming off  the North                                                               
Slope.    That  plentiful  supply offers  an  opportunity  for  a                                                               
modestly priced energy,  he said, at a stable price  from a large                                                               
and secure  supply.  In  Southeast Alaska  there are a  number of                                                               
other  alternatives  that  are different  than  the  alternatives                                                               
available  in Cook  Inlet or  Fairbanks.   There will  be a  very                                                               
positive impact  on the energy  price by providing  certain types                                                               
of  energy service,  for example  cooking and  water heating  for                                                               
which propane and  gas are very efficient.  When  the gas becomes                                                               
present, Mr. Heinze said, it will  put pressure on other parts of                                                               
the energy system in a  competitive sense.  Once that competition                                                               
starts,  prices will  respond.   In  the long  run  it offers  an                                                               
opportunity  to the  legislature to  determine how  it wishes  to                                                               
value the resources in Alaska.   The 3 tscf/d that is the state's                                                               
one-eighth share of Prudhoe Bay  is enough to provide Alaska with                                                               
energy for 30 years.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:39:15 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  GATTO  offered  a further  response  to  Representative                                                               
Wilson's  question  by giving  an  example:    If a  person  uses                                                               
heating oil in  the free market, it puts pressure  on the heating                                                               
oil stocks  from which other  people are also purchasing;  but if                                                               
that person  does not  use heating  oil, then  there is  a bigger                                                               
supply in the same market.   Therefore, he explained, this is one                                                               
way that other locations in the  state are affected.  Another way                                                               
is  that the  state gets  a royalty  and this,  in turn,  affects                                                               
every  resident.   He  stated his  opinion  that if  Southcentral                                                               
Alaska prospers, it  does not take away from any  other area that                                                               
prospers with it.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
2:39:56 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  HEINZE  directed attention  to  the  map in  his  PowerPoint                                                               
presentation depicting the transportation  of propane with yellow                                                               
highlights.   He  predicted that  over  50,000 barrels  a day  of                                                               
propane will come off the North  Slope, but noted that the demand                                                               
for propane in Alaska is only  about 10,000 barrels per day.  The                                                               
trick, he said, is the  logistics of distributing the propane and                                                               
that is  why the map shows  the broad yellow arrows  going around                                                               
the coastal  areas.   He related that  there are  several studies                                                               
available for  review on  ANGDA's website  which show  that every                                                               
coastal  community in  Alaska  will gain  by  having a  plentiful                                                               
propane supply.   In  areas of  Alaska that  are served  by roads                                                               
there  is  already competition  between  propane  suppliers.   He                                                               
explained  that in  a similar  way  [to roads],  the Yukon  River                                                               
system is a  logical avenue for moving propane.   The difference,                                                               
however, is  that there are no  data points for moving  this type                                                               
of  a commodity  on a  frozen river.   He  related that  ANGDA is                                                               
working with several entities to  conduct a demonstration project                                                               
based on trucking  a small volume of propane out  of Prudhoe Bay,                                                               
putting it  into a facility at  the Yukon River, and  then, in an                                                               
experimental sense, letting the entrepreneurs act.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:42:20 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  HEINZE  subsequently displayed  a  PowerPoint  picture of  a                                                               
propane tank.  He noted that it  is the same size and shape as an                                                               
ISO or  intermodal container.   The tank  ships just like  an ISO                                                               
container and  can be  stacked and handled  together with  and in                                                               
the  same manner  as  ISO  containers.   He  explained that  this                                                               
propane tank  is the storage  mechanism as well as  the transport                                                               
mechanism.  Therefore it can  be delivered to a destination, used                                                               
until empty,  and then exchanged for  a full tank with  the empty                                                               
tank being  returned, just  like changing the  propane tank  on a                                                               
barbecue grill.   Additionally, he  remarked, these tanks  can be                                                               
built in Alaska  because they are modest  pressure vessels, there                                                               
is nothing hard about them, and  there could be a standard Alaska                                                               
design.  He explained that ANGDA  is trying to make this work for                                                               
everybody and  that ANGDA believes  that over  a period of  a few                                                               
decades  there  is  an opportunity  to  influence  energy  prices                                                               
everywhere in Alaska.  For  example, he said, the Yukon-Kuskokwim                                                               
Demonstration  Project  is  of   great  interest  to  the  Denali                                                               
Commission.   They do  not have  a lot  of opportunities  to come                                                               
into new  energy models, he  explained.   Most of their  money is                                                               
being  spent on  perpetuating  the system  that  exists and  this                                                               
offers a chance for a new paradigm.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
2:43:51 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE commenced  explaining why he needs  $5 million dollars                                                               
and why  it is  good for  Alaska.  He  directed attention  to the                                                               
detailed  matrix  on  the  last  page  of  the  document  in  the                                                               
committee packet.   He  stated that  the 80  tasks listed  in the                                                               
matrix  will be  undertaken  during the  first  one and  one-half                                                               
years in  order to move the  project forward.  The  total cost of                                                               
the tasks is $10  million, he said, but he is  only asking for $5                                                               
million because  he can attract  the other $5 million  as in-kind                                                               
contributions.  The actual task list  will be worked out with the                                                               
joint-work participants.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE stated  that at the end  of the year or  year and one-                                                               
half, the  project concept  will be described  to the  point that                                                               
the participants  can make  a decision  - at  their own  cost and                                                               
risk  - on  whether to  proceed to  a formal  application to  the                                                               
State of  Alaska as  visualized under  the Alaska  Gas Inducement                                                               
Act (AGIA).   Participants can hold  an open season and  they can                                                               
make  the  major  financial  commitments  to  design  and  permit                                                               
applications.    He pointed  out  that  this  is a  $100  million                                                               
decision.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:46:04 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE argued that what Alaska  gains is an alternative.  The                                                               
project has two significant virtues:   1) it is not vulnerable to                                                               
what does or  does not happen in  Canada, and 2) it is  of a size                                                               
that  meets  Alaska's needs  and  it  only  requires one  of  the                                                               
producers  at Prudhoe  Bay  along  with the  State  of Alaska  to                                                               
commit their reserves.  It does  not require the unanimity of all                                                               
the upstream reserve holders to make the project happen.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE asserted that $5 million  is a cheap insurance for the                                                               
legislature to  know that there  will be a backstop  available if                                                               
all else does not  work out.  He argued that  the reality is that                                                               
the biggest and  best of these projects is  still very challenged                                                               
in terms  of probability.   The AGMS  project is a  highly doable                                                               
project  with  a strong  market  pull  and  makes sense  in  many                                                               
different ways, he said.   He expressed his hope that legislators                                                               
will choose  to amend the  supplemental appropriation  to include                                                               
the  $5  million   for  the  AGMS  project  since   there  is  no                                                               
legislation to appropriate the money.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:48:50 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR GATTO  inquired whether  the $1  billion figure  for the                                                               
gas  conditioning plant  is also  the same  figure that  has been                                                               
given for a 52-inch pipeline.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE  responded that the number  shown on his chart  may be                                                               
toward  the  higher  end  because  he  has  nothing  to  gain  by                                                               
understating the  number.  He  said that  he is unsure  who would                                                               
want to  build and own  the gas  conditioning plant, but  that it                                                               
has  so  many  virtues  it  is hard  for  him  to  visualize  the                                                               
producing operation  not wanting  to own the  plant as  a Prudhoe                                                               
Bay unit  facility.  The  carbon dioxide that could  be recovered                                                               
is very  usable in  enhanced oil  recovery.   Additionally, under                                                               
federal  legislation  the  facility  would  receive  special  tax                                                               
treatment, such as enhanced oil  recovery (EOR) tax credits.  The                                                               
plant would also be eligible  for carbon sequestration credits if                                                               
those are ever established.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:50:14 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE WILSON asked how much  money the AGMS project will                                                               
bring to  the State  of Alaska.   A pipeline  must be  capable of                                                               
carrying a  large enough volume of  gas to generate an  income to                                                               
the  state,  she  opined.    Otherwise, the  state  must  find  a                                                               
different way to raise money, such as an income tax.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE acknowledged that a  project two or three times larger                                                               
than AGMS  will generate two or  three times more revenue  to the                                                               
state.   However, he cautioned,  the probability of  that project                                                               
moving forward  needs to  be considered.   The  size of  the AGMS                                                               
project  has a  very high  level of  do-ability.   If things  are                                                               
looking grim in another year and  one-half, the state may be very                                                               
happy to  have this  size of  a project  available.   While state                                                               
revenues are important, the citizens  of Alaska also value having                                                               
a plentiful,  modestly priced supply  of gas.  They  value having                                                               
construction  jobs and  the level  of construction  for the  AGMS                                                               
project is  much more Alaska sized.   He contended that  the AGMS                                                               
project  will  not  create  hyper-inflation   or  cause  the  in-                                                               
migration  of workers  that other  projects might.   Lastly,  Mr.                                                               
Heinze  opined, Alaska  citizens are  looking for  something that                                                               
pays attention  to the economy here,  for the short term  as well                                                               
as the long  term.  The creation of a  petrochemical industry and                                                               
other  types of  things  are potentially  more  valuable here  in                                                               
Alaska than anything  else.  In moving AGMS forward  as part of a                                                               
Phase I  activity, the virtues  will be carefully defined  in the                                                               
sense of benefits  to Alaskans on all those  dimensions, not just                                                               
state revenue.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE  related that past  work by ANGDA indicates  that this                                                               
size of a  project will have a significant impact  here in Alaska                                                               
far beyond the  $5 million.  A  project of this size  does not in                                                               
any way foreclose a bigger project  in the future, he argued.  In                                                               
fact, it  could be tacked onto  any other project that  is built.                                                               
Additionally,  a  smaller  project  has  the  virtue  of  getting                                                               
started because  this is one  of the  biggest problems.   "I have                                                               
been here since  1969, and if I am worried  about anything, it is                                                               
not getting started," he said.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
2:54:58 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  GATTO remarked  that Alaska's  new governor  wanted all                                                               
proposals on the table, therefore  this certainly is a legitimate                                                               
proposal.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE responded  that he is describing a system.   Once AGIA                                                               
is brought  forth, he said,  this may turn  out to be  a proposal                                                               
for  three   to  five  projects   because  there   are  different                                                               
variations of AGMS.   Right now it is unknown  which variation is                                                               
the best.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:55:33 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SEATON  commented that  two to three  times bigger                                                               
does not  necessarily mean two to  three times more revenue.   He                                                               
pointed out that provisions in  the previously proposed [Stranded                                                               
Gas Development  Act] canceled two-thirds  of the state tax.   He                                                               
then noted that  NGLs are currently put into TAPS  and counted as                                                               
oil under  the production  profits tax (PPT).   He  asked whether                                                               
Mr. Heinze is proposing to blend  all the NGLs or only those that                                                               
are not sold as oil and injected into TAPS.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE stated that the current  oil system has as much butane                                                               
blended into  it as the  oil will hold  and still meet  the vapor                                                               
pressure specifications;  if more  is added  it gets  too "fizzy"                                                               
and causes air quality issues and  other problems.  There is some                                                               
propane  in the  oil naturally,  but  more propane  would not  be                                                               
added  purposely to  the  pipeline.   He  said  that  what he  is                                                               
talking about  is that along  with moving methane  molecules down                                                               
the  [gas  line],  the  high  pressure in  the  pipe  allows  the                                                               
addition of large quantities of  ethane, propane, and butane.  He                                                               
advised the  committee to think  of the  gas line as  a transport                                                               
mechanism  that is  fundamentally unlimited  as far  as quantity.                                                               
For  instance, he  said, approximately  80,000 barrels  a day  of                                                               
NGLs are  currently being re-injected  into North Slope  wells as                                                               
part of enhanced oil  recovery.  Even a gas line  as small as the                                                               
one he  is proposing has  a high  enough pressure to  accept that                                                               
amount of NGLs.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:58:08 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SEATON related  his understanding  that a  unique                                                               
feature of  Prudhoe Bay  is that all  three producers  must agree                                                               
before any one  of them can do something.   He asked whether this                                                               
could legally limit one of  those producers from taking out their                                                               
third  in  order to  participate  in  one  of the  proposed  AGMS                                                               
scenarios.   Additionally,  he  asked whether  Mr.  Heinze saw  a                                                               
possibility of resolving the Point  Thomson issue before the open                                                               
season for  that area closes  in order  to have a  possibility of                                                               
getting a commitment on that gas.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE  took the second question  first.  He said  that he is                                                               
not an  expert on Point  Thomson, but that  it seems to  him that                                                               
the state  and the owners of  the Point Thomson unit  have locked                                                               
horns.   The court's ruling that  the owners have failed  to live                                                               
up to  their lease is a  significant ruling in the  business.  In                                                               
his opinion, Point  Thomson may actually be off the  table and it                                                               
is going  to be  very hard  to have  a 4.5  bscf/d pipeline.   He                                                               
argued they are in big trouble  because pulling 4.5 bscf/d out of                                                               
Prudhoe  Bay will  not be  allowed.   Much of  the 4.5  bscf/d is                                                               
premised on delivery from Point Thomson, he said.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE  then moved to Representative  Seaton's first question                                                               
regarding the  agreements within the  Prudhoe Bay unit  that deal                                                               
with how the owners relate to  each other.  He explained that one                                                               
type of agreement  is called a Balancing Agreement  - it dictates                                                               
how things  will be rebalanced if  one company gets ahead  of the                                                               
others.    Based  on  his  anti-trust  training  when  he  was  a                                                               
corporate executive,  Mr. Heinze  surmised that the  decisions to                                                               
market  are separate  decisions  of these  companies  and that  a                                                               
collective decision is not permissible.   As a lease holder, each                                                               
company has  a responsibility to  the State of Alaska  to dispose                                                               
of and market the state's royalty.   It has a right to market the                                                               
royalty,  but it  also has  a responsibility  and this  is not  a                                                               
collective right.   He said that in his  opinion a representative                                                               
of the  State of Alaska could  not talk to one  company while the                                                               
other  companies were  in the  room without  there being  serious                                                               
anti-trust implications.   He said  that he did not  know exactly                                                               
what  the [Prudhoe  Bay] agreements  are, but  that he  could say                                                               
that no agreement  amongst companies can contravene  law and that                                                               
the  companies  are  obligated   to  consider  market  conditions                                                               
separately.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:01:51 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR GATTO turned the gavel over to Representative Seaton.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SEATON  expressed his  concern about going  down a                                                               
path  that  is based  on  scenarios  that are  not  realistically                                                               
possible.  He  noted that there might be other  scenarios such as                                                               
the  National Petroleum  Reserve-Alaska (NPR-A)  and "Shell  off-                                                               
shore", but  that he  wants to  make sure  whether a  scenario is                                                               
going to be useable during the proposed open season.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR.  HEINZE pointed  out that  in ANGDA's  task list  there is  a                                                               
proposal  under the  heading of  "Risks and  Rewards" to  look at                                                               
these  scenario-type issues  because there  are very  significant                                                               
assumptions that  are taken  for granted  when, in  reality, they                                                               
are not 100 percent deals.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:03:16 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SEATON  inquired whether  open season  would start                                                               
in the fourth quarter of 2007 if ANGDA received the $5 million.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR.  HEINZE  responded  affirmatively.    He  explained  that  he                                                               
carefully defined that  bar as a year because it  is a negotiated                                                               
type of open season rather than a  bid type of open season.  "All                                                               
you have to do is  be willing to negotiate evenhandedly, equally,                                                               
offer the  same terms to everybody  and that may be  a better way                                                               
at  this system,"  he said.   He  pointed out  that if  there are                                                               
several  participants, such  as  electric utilities  in the  Cook                                                               
Inlet area and an LNG exporter, there  must be a way for them not                                                               
to compete against each other because  it is necessary for all of                                                               
them  to succeed.   This  is done  through a  negotiating process                                                               
because then all of  them will win, he contended.   It is hard to                                                               
know how  each company  will respond until  a cycle  is completed                                                               
and  there is  a feel  for what  the commitments  are.   Then the                                                               
numbers  are revised  and you  go back  out again,  which is  why                                                               
ANGDA has allowed a year for  the process.  He explained that the                                                               
information necessary to  start this process is  minimal and that                                                               
is  why he  "pulls the  trigger" so  quickly on  an open  season.                                                               
This would be  difficult to do in a traditional  FERC bid system,                                                               
he said.  However, completing a  process that leads to some level                                                               
of commitment by  participants is a much easier thing  to do on a                                                               
negotiated basis.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
3:05:29 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SEATON  noted that  a problem associated  with the                                                               
previous  contract was  a  35 percent  tax  credit on  everything                                                               
upstream, including the  gas treatment plant, and  that the state                                                               
would lose two-thirds of its PPT  rate to this.  He asked whether                                                               
he was correct  in understanding that under  ANGDA's proposal the                                                               
open  season  will  not  be  open   to  any  of  these  kinds  of                                                               
negotiations and that  participants will come to  the table under                                                               
the existing system.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE said  that there is nothing in this  system that deals                                                               
with the  upstream issues.  He  noted that nothing he  is talking                                                               
about, in terms  of the open season, involves  a negotiation with                                                               
the state.   However,  to lessen  the front  end risk  ANGDA does                                                               
need some sort of financial interaction  with the state such as a                                                               
line of  credit, but not an  investment.  He said  that some help                                                               
through  a  completion  guarantee  is also  needed  because  this                                                               
lowers the  interest rate  for building this  kind of  a project.                                                               
Coupled with utility financing, ANGDA  thinks that this project -                                                               
on a  tariff basis  - can  do far  better than  what is  shown by                                                               
ANGDA's numbers.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
3:08:06 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE WILSON expressed her  concern with not knowing how                                                               
ANGDA  arrived at  its  numbers.   She inquired  as  to how  many                                                               
phases are envisioned  and whether ANGDA would be  coming back to                                                               
the state for more money after Phase I.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR.  HEINZE answered  the second  question first.   He  explained                                                               
that Phase I would be feasibility.   The next steps would involve                                                               
taking a  further cut  at design  and developing  information for                                                               
regulatory approvals,  environmental permits, and those  kinds of                                                               
things.  It  still would not be a commitment  of the major amount                                                               
of money; at that point the state  is still in for less than five                                                               
percent of  the total  cost.   The next phase  would lead  to the                                                               
decision to commit to the big  project and move forward and "that                                                               
is when  the big money hits  the table."  Mr.  Heinze stated that                                                               
it is  not his  intention to  come back to  the legislature.   If                                                               
this project does  not work, he said, I will  apologize to all of                                                               
you for the $5 million.  If  the project does work, there will be                                                               
really big  companies that will  take over the ownership  of this                                                               
project.   He  promised that  he  will require  the companies  to                                                               
reimburse the  state for every  nickel that  it has put  into the                                                               
project.   He said that he  is asking for a  "grubstake" and that                                                               
he would  rather ask the  legislature for that grubstake  than to                                                               
go sell  "grubstake bonds" which  is his other  available option.                                                               
He explained that  he needs enough money to be  able to support a                                                               
part of the  process that will convince  these other participants                                                               
that the  state is at least  serious about taking care  of itself                                                               
by making sure that the gas gets to the state's own markets.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:10:50 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE  explained that  the numbers  are cost  estimates that                                                               
are based  on benchmark  and that ANGDA  has had  three different                                                               
cost  estimates done  by three  different companies.   He  stated                                                               
that he believes the numbers  are conservative in that the actual                                                               
numbers will  be less than  what ANGDA  is presenting.   He noted                                                               
that the  numbers calculated  on ANGDA's chart  are based  on two                                                               
different tariff  levels.  One is  based on the utility  model of                                                               
financing that looks at an  annual revenue requirement and has no                                                               
equity  investment because  it  is all  debt  or borrowed  money.                                                               
"That leads  to a  number that  is about  one-half of  the number                                                               
that we would scale off of,  the $2.50 producer tariff number you                                                               
have  heard many  times before,"  he said.   "We  have calculated                                                               
both numbers  and said we do  not know where exactly  it will end                                                               
up," he  continued.  "It is  probably not higher than  the number                                                               
that is scaled off of $2.50  to Chicago, but it could be starting                                                               
to approach the  lower utility end number.".  He  said that it is                                                               
a big range at this point and the  purpose of the Phase I work is                                                               
to get different  participants comfortable.  He  pointed out that                                                               
there has been  a lot of input from financial  people and that he                                                               
expects many  financial people will  be involved  as participants                                                               
because they are very interested.   A multi-billion dollar energy                                                               
project in  a place where there  is this much gas  on the Pacific                                                               
Rim is a natural, he asserted.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:12:53 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SEATON asked  how  ANGDA and  the Alaska  Gasline                                                               
Port Authority  (AGPA) would work  together if AGPA were  to come                                                               
to the table with its design.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR.  HEINZE explained  that  ANGDA and  AGPA  are both  political                                                               
subdivisions of the  state.  One was created by  a statewide vote                                                               
and the  other was created by  more of a municipal  type of vote.                                                               
The two entities therefore have  different histories and slightly                                                               
different positions.  However, he  said, the missions and desires                                                               
are shared  and the  boards are now  working closer  together and                                                               
have  recently  signed a  Memorandum  of  Understanding (MOU)  to                                                               
facilitate  the exchange  of confidential  information.   He said                                                               
that  he hopes  that  AGPA  will be  one  of  the first  entities                                                               
willing  to work  with ANGDA.    At the  same time,  he said,  he                                                               
expects them  to continue  working on a  proposal that  is bigger                                                               
and more  suited to where they  are in their process.   He stated                                                               
that  ANGDA  is   not  in  competition  with   AGPA,  but  rather                                                               
compatible with them.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
3:15:09 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SEATON  inquired  whether   ANGDA  would  need  a                                                               
federal loan guarantee.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE stated that one of  the chores on ANGDA's task list is                                                               
to  clearly understand  the ins-and-outs  of  the federal  system                                                               
because  ANGDA is  obviously skating  on the  edge of  that.   He                                                               
contended  that  federal  law  for the  Alaska  gas  pipeline  is                                                               
written in a  language where delivery to the market  in Alaska is                                                               
the same as delivering gas to  Chicago.  This is because the term                                                               
used  in the  law  is "continental"  as  opposed to  "contiguous"                                                               
United States.   According to a legal opinion  received by ANGDA,                                                               
Alaska is  part of the  "continental" United States.   Therefore,                                                               
he said,  some portion  of the  project might  be eligible  for a                                                               
federal  loan guarantee.   He  said  that on  projects like  this                                                               
there  are a  number  of  ways to  lower  the  interest rate  and                                                               
ultimately lower  the tariff  in the long  run.   He acknowledged                                                               
that the federal  loan guarantee is an effective way  to do that,                                                               
but  in   ANGDA's  case  there   may  be  more   effective  ways.                                                               
Furthermore,  he stated,  having a  state guarantee  on the  loan                                                               
might  lower  the  interest  rate   more  than  would  a  federal                                                               
guarantee.    It  is  ANGDA's  intention to  pursue  all  of  the                                                               
options, he said.   There is also the issue of  export which is a                                                               
federal jurisdiction.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
3:18:11 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  HEINZE,  in  response  to  a  question  from  Representative                                                               
Wilson, explained  that he is  a state employee, hired  and fired                                                               
by a  seven member  board of the  Alaska Natural  Gas Development                                                               
Authority that  was created by  statute.   He said that  ANGDA is                                                               
under the Department of Revenue, as  required by the statute.  He                                                               
noted that in  the previous administration there  were times when                                                               
a lot of the studies done  by ANGDA were to answer questions that                                                               
would be  helpful to the  whole process.   He explained  that the                                                               
tone he  is trying to set  is to ensure that  there is sufficient                                                               
information available  to the public  during the process,  not at                                                               
the end  of the process.   In response to a  further question, he                                                               
explained that  AGMS, the Alaska  Gas Market System, is  the name                                                               
of a project.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
3:21:51 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. HEINZE announced that all  of the information he presented is                                                               
publicly available at angda.state.ak.us.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
There being no  further business before the  committee, the House                                                               
Resources Standing Committee meeting was adjourned at 3:22 p.m.                                                                 

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