Legislature(2015 - 2016)BARNES 124

02/16/2015 01:00 PM House RESOURCES



Audio Topic
01:03:41 PM Start
01:04:42 PM Presentation(s): How Lng Affects Local Markets and Marketing Alaska's Gas
02:12:57 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ Enalytica Presentations: TELECONFERENCED
"How LNG Affects Local Markets" & "Marketing
Alaska's Gas"
-- Testimony <Invitation Only> --
                    ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE                                                                                  
               HOUSE RESOURCES STANDING COMMITTEE                                                                             
                       February 16, 2015                                                                                        
                           1:03 p.m.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative David Talerico, Co-Chair                                                                                         
Representative Mike Hawker, Vice Chair                                                                                          
Representative Kurt Olson                                                                                                       
Representative Paul Seaton                                                                                                      
Representative Andy Josephson                                                                                                   
Representative Geran Tarr                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative Benjamin Nageak, Co-Chair                                                                                        
Representative Bob Herron                                                                                                       
Representative Craig Johnson                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
COMMITTEE CALENDAR                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
PRESENTATION(S):  HOW LNG AFFECTS LOCAL MARKETS AND MARKETING                                                                   
ALASKA'S GAS                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     - HEARD                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
No previous action to record                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
WITNESS REGISTER                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
JANAK MAYER, Partner, Energy Consultant                                                                                         
enalytica                                                                                                                       
Washington, DC                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT:  As consultant to the Alaska State                                                                        
Legislature, discussed how liquefied natural gas (LNG) affects                                                                  
local markets and marketing Alaska's gas.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
NIKOS TSAFOS, Partner, Energy Consultant                                                                                        
enalytica                                                                                                                       
Washington, DC                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT:  As consultant to the Alaska State                                                                        
Legislature, discussed how liquefied natural gas (LNG) affects                                                                  
local markets and marketing Alaska's gas.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
ACTION NARRATIVE                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
1:03:41 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  DAVID  TALERICO  called the  House  Resources  Standing                                                             
Committee meeting to order at  1:03 p.m.  Representatives Seaton,                                                               
Josephson, Tarr, Hawker, Olson, and  Talerico were present at the                                                               
call to order.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
^PRESENTATION(S):   How LNG Affects  Local Markets  and Marketing                                                               
Alaska's Gas                                                                                                                    
 PRESENTATION(S):  How LNG Affects Local Markets and Marketing                                                              
                          Alaska's Gas                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:04:42 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR TALERICO announced that the  only order of business is a                                                               
refresher presentation  and question and answer  session with the                                                               
legislature's natural gas project consultant, enalytica.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:04:58 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JANAK MAYER, Partner, Energy Consultant,  enalytica, noted he has                                                               
advised the  committee for  the last  four years  - two  years of                                                               
providing advice and  testimony on oil taxation and  two years on                                                               
issues  around  the  gasline  and  liquefied  natural  gas  (LNG)                                                               
project.  When  last before the committee on 1/28/15,  he and his                                                               
partner Nikos Tsafos provided  a PowerPoint presentation ["Alaska                                                               
LNG [AK LNG]:   Project Overview and Update"], which  is the same                                                               
presentation he has today.   This presentation provided an update                                                               
on  the Alaska  LNG  Project  (AK LNG)  regarding  what needs  to                                                               
happen this  year to keep  the project moving  forward, addressed                                                               
the question  of how to best  manage a domestic gas  market given                                                               
the presence  of a large  LNG project,  and looked at  options to                                                               
consider for how the state disposes  of its share of LNG assuming                                                               
it takes  the LNG in-kind.   He explained  that today he  and Mr.                                                               
Tsafos will focus on the latter two topics.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:06:45 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
NIKOS TSAFOS,  Partner, Energy  Consultant, enalytica,  stated he                                                               
has spent 10  years as a consultant to the  oil and gas industry,                                                               
the majority  of that time  in natural gas helping  companies buy                                                               
or  sell  gas or  figure  out  what is  going  on  in the  world.                                                               
Turning to  slide 5, he  addressed enalytica's  paper ["Marketing                                                               
Alaska's Gas  From AK  LNG:   Key Issues"],  explaining enalytica                                                               
put the paper together because  one prospect envisioned by Senate                                                               
Bill 138  [28th Alaska State  Legislature] was that the  State of                                                               
Alaska  would take  control/possession of  gas and  therefore the                                                               
state must  figure out what  to do with that  gas.  This  being a                                                               
new  role for  the state,  especially  in terms  of natural  gas,                                                               
enalytica has laid  out some ground rules and some  ways to think                                                               
about  how  the state  might  dispose  of  this  gas.   The  four                                                               
principles listed  on slide 5  are a distillation of  the lessons                                                               
that  can  be   drawn  upon  from  other   sovereigns  that  have                                                               
participated in LNG projects.   Those propositions are very, very                                                               
big picture items - the  yardsticks through which legislators can                                                               
judge  information, agreements  for  ratification, and  direction                                                               
that  legislators may  wish to  convey to  the administration  in                                                               
terms of how the administration  should be negotiating agreements                                                               
for the disposition of the state's gas.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
1:09:14 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  TSAFOS said  the first  of  the four  principles, "Focus  on                                                               
performance over time," is a  wise investment decision in general                                                               
but particularly  true in the  case of  LNG because of  the long-                                                               
term nature of  the investment.  All going well,  he said, AK LNG                                                               
will be on line for possibly  30 years or longer.  The temptation                                                               
over such a long  period of time is to check on  how the state is                                                               
doing on a given day.   In general this is very counterproductive                                                               
because lots of  things are happening at the same  time, and over                                                               
short periods of  time the market sometimes changes  a little bit                                                               
and sometimes  dramatically.  A good  way to think about  this is                                                               
to step back at  any given point and look at  how the money being                                                               
made from this gas, and the  risk being taken, is performing over                                                               
a period  of time.   If  one to four  years go  by and  the state                                                               
feels it  has a bad  deal, then yes something  must be done.   He                                                               
cautioned, however,  about the state  thinking it has a  bad deal                                                               
and wanting  to renegotiate  if, for  example, it  discovers that                                                               
one country is selling its gas  in Japan for $13 and someone else                                                               
is  selling it  for  $14.   If  that  kind  of conversation  gets                                                               
started,  he warned,  it can  get  really counterproductive  very                                                               
quickly; rather, an eye  needs to be kept on the  ball in the big                                                               
picture.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:11:24 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  TSAFOS addressed  the second  principle listed  on slide  5,                                                               
"Focus on  risk not the  highest price."   The key word  is risk,                                                               
not price, he said, and definitely  not the highest price.  Every                                                               
seller likes to  get the highest price the same  way that a buyer                                                               
always likes to get the lowest  price.  However, there are things                                                               
about the  LNG market  that make  it difficult  to know  what the                                                               
highest price is.  It is not  a very liquid or a very transparent                                                               
market.  For  example, the price of gas in  Asia cannot be looked                                                               
up in the Wall  Street Journal in the same way  that the price of                                                             
oil in  international markets or the  Lower 48 can be  looked up.                                                               
This second  principle is  important because  many times  a price                                                               
may be  quoted, but that  price is  being traded in  a completely                                                               
different market  than is another price.   An example is  a long-                                                               
term contract versus a spot sale;  or, put in different terms, it                                                               
is  the  difference  between  having  a  five-year  renter  on  a                                                               
property versus something that can be  booked for a weekend.  Not                                                               
only are  prices nontransparent and difficult  to understand, the                                                               
highest price today may not be  the highest price tomorrow due to                                                               
the way the  pricing system works.  This is  because the standard                                                               
practice in LNG is what he  calls an S-curve.  In a straight-line                                                               
relationship, the  price of gas  is linked to  oil - if  oil goes                                                               
up,  gas  goes up.    An  S-curve, however,  has  a  floor and  a                                                               
ceiling.  If the  price of oil goes up, the  price of gas doesn't                                                               
always go up  at the same rate.   So, if [Alaska's] gas  is on an                                                               
S-curve,  it may  be earning  a  lower price  than someone  else,                                                               
which [the  state] may feel  is unfair.   But if prices  go down,                                                               
[the  state] will  be earning  a  higher price  than someone  who                                                               
doesn't have  a floor  and a  ceiling, which  is why  what really                                                               
matters   is  risk;   and,  related   to  the   first  principle,                                                               
performance over  time, rather than  how [the state] is  doing at                                                               
any given point.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:14:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  TSAFOS  drew  attention  to   the  third  principle,  "Don't                                                               
outsource  your risk  profile."   As envisioned  by the  Heads of                                                               
Agreement  (HOA) and  Senate Bill  138,  he said,  the state  has                                                               
contemplated the option of selling  its gas through its partners.                                                               
The partners would  take the state's gas, sell it,  and then push                                                               
back to the state whatever the  partners get for their gas.  That                                                               
perfectly legitimate  way to sell gas  has pros and cons.   A pro                                                               
is that  these companies really know  what they're doing.   A con                                                               
is  that  [the  state]  ultimately would  be  adopting  the  risk                                                               
tolerance  of the  other companies.   As  an example  he posed  a                                                               
scenario  in which  he has  someone at  a hedge  fund invest  his                                                               
savings for him.   While the hedge fund person  knows the market,                                                               
the hedge fund  person is probably willing to take  risks that he                                                               
is not willing  to take with his  savings.  He said  his point is                                                               
not that  the state shouldn't sell  its gas to its  partners, but                                                               
rather that the  state should assess the offer to  sell gas based                                                               
on what it does for the  state's risk tolerance.  Just because it                                                               
works for  Exxon, BP,  or Conoco  doesn't mean  it works  for the                                                               
state.   That doesn't mean that  if it works for  them it doesn't                                                               
work for the state, it could work  for the state, but that is the                                                               
base upon which to evaluate  any offers that these companies will                                                               
make to market the state's gas together with their gas.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
1:16:34 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  TSAFOS  turned  to the  fourth  principle,  "Build  in-house                                                               
expertise."   To explain this  principle he noted the  oil market                                                               
is so deep  and liquid the state could be  a passive investor and                                                               
still do okay.  Being an active  marketer of oil may add 50 cents                                                               
or a dollar to  the state's sales price.  So,  there is a benefit                                                               
in having active  marketing and knowing how to  place the state's                                                               
gas, but  the forgone revenue of  not doing so is  not that high.                                                               
For gas on the other hand,  the market is fragmented and there is                                                               
no one  price that everyone  gets, so it  all depends on  how the                                                               
state sells  its gas.  Something  enalytica has seen is  that, in                                                               
general, those sovereigns choosing to  take a backseat in selling                                                               
their gas  and just letting  the foreign  company do it  on their                                                               
behalf many  times come back and  try to retake control  over the                                                               
marketing.  This  was seen in Atlantic LNG in  Trinidad where the                                                               
government had some tax-as-gas equivalent  and was letting one of                                                               
the  partners sell  that  gas.   A  few  years  into the  project                                                               
Trinidad  said  it  did  not  think the  partner  was  trying  to                                                               
maximize  the  gas the  same  way  that  Trinidad would  like  to                                                               
maximize the gas, so it tried to  take that gas back and sell the                                                               
gas on its  own.  Qatar invested heavily  in building significant                                                               
gas  marketing capabilities  within  the state-owned  enterprise,                                                               
not  because it  didn't  have good  partners,  but because  Qatar                                                               
recognized that  its risk profile,  risk tolerance,  and interest                                                               
may not be the same as its  private partners.  So, in general, it                                                               
is hard  to think of many  countries that are involved  in an LNG                                                               
project as an  owner that have taken a backseat  to the marketing                                                               
and felt very happy about it.   In general, the trend of the last                                                               
10 years is  to hear of sovereigns that realize  five years later                                                               
that their gas  is being marketed in a way  that seems suboptimal                                                               
and they've  tried to change the  terms.  No one  really wants to                                                               
change terms  halfway through the  project, so  enalytica submits                                                               
to the committee  that the best thing is to  think about building                                                               
that capability up front so  that at the moment [the legislature]                                                               
makes a decision it is known  exactly what [the state] is getting                                                               
into.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
1:20:05 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. TSAFOS  moved to slide 8  of the presentation.   Referring to                                                               
enalytica's paper, "How  LNG Affects Local Markets?   Lessons for                                                               
Alaska  from Western  Australia from  Western Australia,  he said                                                               
the point  of departure is  that when  a state or  country starts                                                               
exporting gas in large quantities there  will be an impact on the                                                               
already  existing  local market.    This  is inevitable  and  has                                                               
happened in pretty  much every jurisdiction where  there has been                                                               
LNG exports.  The question is  how to think about the impact that                                                               
this  megaproject is  going to  have  on the  domestic market  in                                                               
Alaska.   In the Lower  48, as well  as in Queensland  in Eastern                                                               
Australia,  there have  been  either forecasts  or  facts of  gas                                                               
prices  rising because  of  or in  anticipation  of LNG  exports.                                                               
Queensland  has  had  a  huge amount  of  development  to  export                                                               
natural gas  and gas  consumers there complain  that they  can no                                                               
longer get  gas at the  affordable rates of  five years ago.   As                                                               
part of  the effort in the  Lower 48 to approve  export projects,                                                               
the  U.S. Department  of  Energy  (DOE) has  issued  a number  of                                                               
studies  examining the  impact of  exports on  gas prices  in the                                                               
U.S.   The general consensus  is that exports will  raise prices.                                                               
The question and subject of  debate is whether exports will raise                                                               
gas prices by  a little or a  lot.  As a  jurisdiction looking to                                                               
export gas, [the  state] will want to know whether  some of those                                                               
lessons  from the  Lower 48  or  Eastern Australia  are going  to                                                               
apply to [Alaska].                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
1:22:27 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. TSAFOS  specified that in  the Lower 48 everything  is driven                                                               
by a  model, by  what an economics  textbook says  should happen.                                                               
In  Eastern  Australia  the fuss  about  rising  prices  happened                                                               
before  any exports  actually occurred;  LNG exports  effectively                                                               
started in December  [2014] with startup of the  first [of three]                                                               
projects.   Neither of  those two  cases provided  enalytica with                                                               
enough confidence  that a case  could be studied and  a generally                                                               
complete picture  be offered of  the dynamic effects  that happen                                                               
with the  passage of  time.   Prices today may  be high,  but the                                                               
question is whether over a  longer period of time people reinvest                                                               
and prices  come down.  Therefore,  enalytica chose to do  a case                                                               
study  on  Western  Australia, which  has  many  similarities  to                                                               
Alaska.   Western  Australia has  a domestic  market and  exports                                                               
that have been  running since 1989, which provides  a fairly long                                                               
history   for  figuring   out  what   really  happened   in  this                                                               
jurisdiction.   Western  Australia  has a  select  number of  big                                                               
companies that  are gas  producers, similar  to Alaska.   Western                                                               
Australia  also has  a  specific policy  that  LNG projects  must                                                               
supply the  domestic market by  50 percent  of the gas  that they                                                               
have.  While  Alaska doesn't have that, part  of the negotiations                                                               
for AK LNG  effectively include a question about  whether to have                                                               
a version of  that - whether to have some  kind of obligation for                                                               
all of the producers to meet local demand.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:24:15 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  TSAFOS discussed  the three  lessons from  Western Australia                                                               
that, in enalytica's  opinion, fit Alaska's own  experience.  The                                                               
first  lesson,  he  said,  is   that  domestic  prices  sometimes                                                               
correlate  with exports  and sometimes  not.   This  lesson is  a                                                               
major  conclusion because  it shows  the benefit  of studying  an                                                               
actual case  rather than  doing an  economic textbook  model that                                                               
tells  how  they should  work.    History actually  showed  there                                                               
wasn't a given  correlation between export and  domestic prices -                                                               
sometimes they moved together and sometimes they did not.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. TSAFOS  said the aforementioned  leads to the  second lesson,                                                               
which is  that what really matters  is the local market,  not the                                                               
export  price.   This can  be seen  in the  Cook Inlet  where the                                                               
export and local  market prices have correlated  for some periods                                                               
of time and other  times not.  Right now prices  are lower in the                                                               
Cook Inlet  even though prices  in Japan have  gone up.   This is                                                               
partly  because  Alaska  is  exporting much  less  and  at  times                                                               
nothing, partly because Alaska has  changed the way it prices the                                                               
gas,  and more  importantly because  Alaska has  a lot  more gas.                                                               
However, none  of these things  would have been  possible without                                                               
the turnaround in gas supply in  the Cook Inlet.  That, more than                                                               
anything else,  is what allows  Alaska to keep prices  lower even                                                               
though prices in Japan are very high.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. TSAFOS  addressed the third lesson,  noting Western Australia                                                               
was concerned  that if  it started  exporting LNG  everyone would                                                               
want only  to export LNG  and no one  would care about  the local                                                               
market.  However, he said,  that didn't happen; instead companies                                                               
came in  that were interested  in the  local market.   The reason                                                               
for this  is that  LNG is  a very  specific type  of beast.   Not                                                               
every company likes  to do LNG because it exposes  the company to                                                               
a ton  of risks that  it may or may  not want to  take, something                                                               
that  is  currently being  learned  in  Alaska.   In  enalytica's                                                               
opinion, he said, this experience  in Western Australia also fits                                                               
the experience of  the Cook Inlet where there  are companies that                                                               
are quite happy to find and produce gas for the local market.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
1:27:15 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. TSAFOS  spoke to the path  forward for Alaska as  outlined on                                                               
slide  8, explaining  that enalytica  arrived  at two  takeaways,                                                               
both a  bit counterintuitive, after teasing  out the implications                                                               
of the Western  Australia case study.  The first  takeaway is the                                                               
temptation to ensure that every  single molecule of gas demand in                                                               
the state is met before the  project goes forward, as was done in                                                               
Western Australia.   During  the process  of developing  its LNG,                                                               
Western Australia  authorized local  market development  first to                                                               
meet all  demand.  This resulted  in prices crashing -  there was                                                               
so  much gas  that no  one came  to invest  because there  was no                                                               
demand to  meet.  Market  conditions matter, however, so  this is                                                               
not to  say that if Alaska  does the same thing  prices are going                                                               
to crash.   But, it  is important  to consider what  happens, the                                                               
repercussions, if  all the gas demand  must be met by  the AK LNG                                                               
partners.  It means that anyone  having smaller amounts of gas on                                                               
the North  Slope has no outlet  for their gas because  the market                                                               
has already  been taken up.   This leads to the  second, and most                                                               
important,  takeaway.    When starting  this  paper  the  initial                                                               
question that enalytica began to  answer was, How will LNG impact                                                               
domestic gas in Alaska and how  can the state manage and mitigate                                                               
those  impacts?   However, by  the  end of  the paper,  enalytica                                                               
discovered  that that  wasn't the  right question.   Rather,  the                                                               
right  question  was, How  to  ensure  a well-functioning  market                                                               
given there  is now  this big  player joining  in?   In answering                                                               
that  question, a  broader toolkit  must be  thought about.   Not                                                               
everything that  is done  needs to  be done with  AK LNG.   Other                                                               
things can  be done  that will just  incentivize more  players to                                                               
come into  the market, more  transparency, more liquidity.   Much                                                               
of the policy of dealing with AK  LNG may have nothing to do with                                                               
AK LNG; it will  have to do with how to set  the pieces around AK                                                               
LNG  in a  way  that  ensures that  AK  LNG  doesn't disrupt  the                                                               
market.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR. TSAFOS  concluded his presentation  by pointing out  that the                                                               
aforementioned  is enalytica's  attempt to  provide a  very broad                                                               
conceptual  framework through  which [legislators/the  state] can                                                               
process  the information  to  assess proposals  and  plans.   The                                                               
aforementioned is  the question  to ask  any time  somebody comes                                                               
forth asking  whether to  do this  or do  that.   Once AK  LNG is                                                               
added to  the picture, the question  to ask is whether  this is a                                                               
well-functioning market or are  distortions being introduced that                                                               
[the state] may come to regret later on.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:31:10 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HAWKER stated  that enalytica's 1/28/15 PowerPoint                                                               
presentation  was  the committee's  overview  and  update of  the                                                               
Alaska LNG Project  (AK LNG).  He observed that  slide 2 revisits                                                               
the anticipated schedule of the  project.  Today, he related, the                                                               
committee's  colleagues  "across  the  way" laid  out  some  very                                                               
specific detailed benchmarks for the  project.  He requested that                                                               
enalytica comment on the difference  between the major benchmarks                                                               
and the ancillary  benchmarks on the way to those.   For example,                                                               
the  major benchmarks  are going  into pre-front-end  engineering                                                               
and  design (Pre-FEED),  then  front-end  engineering and  design                                                               
(FEED), then final investment decision  (FID), and ultimately the                                                               
project  being on  line.   He inquired  whether enalytica  thinks                                                               
there  is  room for  the  ancillary  benchmarks to  slip  without                                                               
impacting the major benchmark timelines.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. MAYER  replied the biggest  major benchmark coming up  is the                                                               
question of moving from the current  Pre-FEED stage to FEED.  The                                                               
timeline laid out  last year was that that would  happen in 2016.                                                               
A lot  needs to be done  to reach that very  important milestone.                                                               
For that to  occur, a very broad range of  agreements needs to be                                                               
negotiated  between now  and  then.   Much  of  what those  hinge                                                               
around  is getting  to  the point  that the  state  can say  with                                                               
comfort yes or  no to taking tax and royalty  in-kind rather than                                                               
in-value.  To get to a  point of comfort in making that decision,                                                               
a very  broad range of  things needs  to be pretty  firmly nailed                                                               
down for gas offtake, how the  state will market its LNG, how all                                                               
these  pieces will  fit together,  and  how that  works with  the                                                               
partnership with  TransCanada and  agreements that are  signed on                                                               
that front.   In terms of minor milestones, 12/31/15  is the date                                                               
that's currently  in agreements with TransCanada  for signing the                                                               
next  round of  agreements.   All of  those things  need to  come                                                               
together to  get to  the point  that the  project can  proceed to                                                               
FEED, which  is a very  ambitious schedule  for this year.   That                                                               
said, he  advised, it's incredibly important  that major projects                                                               
like this  not be primarily  schedule driven.   It is  much, much                                                               
more  important to  negotiate well  and to  sign good  agreements                                                               
that serve  the state's interest  than to say that  "because this                                                               
needs to happen by this date we'll  live with it."  Be very aware                                                               
of just how  much under this schedule is supposed  to happen this                                                               
year.  But  more than anything else, he stressed,  care about the                                                               
quality of  negotiations and  the fact  that agreements  take the                                                               
time  that they  take and  good agreements  are wanted  more than                                                               
anything else.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:35:05 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  JOSEPHSON  said  it   seems  fundamental  that  a                                                               
contract doesn't need  to be adjusted if both  parties don't want                                                               
to  adjust it,  unless  that is  laid  out in  the  terms of  the                                                               
contract itself  in some way.   He  recalled that about  a decade                                                               
ago under  a previous  governor there  was the  issue of  the tax                                                               
rate  being established  and the  question  about whether  future                                                               
legislatures can be bound.  In  regard to price, he inquired what                                                               
power the state  would have as a sovereign to  say that the price                                                               
is bad and so the state wants to renegotiate.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. TSAFOS, in  regard to the price question,  responded that the                                                               
state will most likely sign  long-term contracts for its gas, and                                                               
those long-term contracts  are likely to include  a price formula                                                               
rather than  a price.   A price formula is  how in a  given month                                                               
the price  will be determined.   Within that contract is  a sales                                                               
and purchase agreement  (SPA) under which there are  likely to be                                                               
two provisions for potentially revisiting  the price.  One fairly                                                               
common  way is  for  contracts  to have  a  price review  clause.                                                               
Price review  basically happens periodically; for  example, every                                                               
three, four, or five years the  parties agree to sit down and re-                                                               
look at  the price.   Depending on  how the contract  is written,                                                               
this  could  be a  complete  free-for-all  or  it could  be  very                                                               
narrowly  and  tightly written;  for  example,  he knows  of  LNG                                                               
contracts  with boundaries  that  say the  price  review may  not                                                               
allow the  price to change  by more than  10, 15, or  20 percent.                                                               
Also within  those contracts are  provisions for what  happens if                                                               
the parties disagree.   Usually arbitration is tried.   Europe is                                                               
now  in the  golden age  of  arbitration lawyers  because of  the                                                               
changes that have happened in the  gas market there.  Pretty much                                                               
every  contract is  being renegotiated  by  going to  arbitration                                                               
because the  two parties  agree that the  market has  changed but                                                               
disagree about what  needs to happen.  So,  the aforementioned is                                                               
the  simplest way  in which  a contract  can be  revisited:   the                                                               
parties agree about how often  and under what conditions and with                                                               
what boundaries the  revisiting of price may happen.   Mr. Tsafos                                                               
said a  second provision  that may  or may not  be included  in a                                                               
sales and  purchase agreement is a  once-in-a-contract review out                                                               
of the cycle.  In this  provision, each party has the opportunity                                                               
once in the  life of the contract to revisit  the contract.  Both                                                               
of these  two provisions might be  in a contract, or  only one of                                                               
them, or a combination of them.  These two provisions are pre-                                                                  
established  ways for  the two  parties to  come together.   When                                                               
signing a  20-year contract,  he advised,  it is  impossible that                                                               
both parties  will be happy  with this contract every  single day                                                               
for 20  years.   However, the  point is  performance over  time -                                                               
Does it broadly work?                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. TSAFOS continued  his answer, noting that  enalytica has seen                                                               
contracts that don't have the  aforementioned kind of provisions,                                                               
particularly  with sovereigns.    In these  cases  the option  is                                                               
pretty  simple.   Either  the sovereign  says,  "hey tough  luck,                                                               
we're just  gonna have to live  with it" or the  sovereign pounds                                                               
the  table  until someone  pays  attention  and negotiates.    In                                                               
general,  when   sovereigns  have  serious  issues   with  things                                                               
happening   in   their   jurisdiction,  private   companies   pay                                                               
attention.  Of  course the companies can also  hold the sovereign                                                               
to account,  saying it  is liable and  responsible, if  there are                                                               
signed  contracts.   In general,  there are  enough normal  legal                                                               
avenues for the state to revisit  the price that it worked in the                                                               
beginning  of  the  contract,  and,  if  something  extraordinary                                                               
happens that  is not provided by  the contract, there is  still a                                                               
possibility to sit down and find a new agreement.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
1:41:16 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SEATON noted that 20-25  percent of the Alaska LNG                                                               
Project cost is  on a gas treatment plant  to remove the CO  from                                                               
                                                           2                                                                    
the natural  gas going down  the pipeline to be  liquefied, while                                                               
gas out  of Cook Inlet may  be more pipeline ready.   He inquired                                                               
whether there  is enough of a  difference in the quality  of Cook                                                               
Inlet gas  versus North Slope  gas to create a  price sensitivity                                                               
between those two supplies in both the local and export markets.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. TSAFOS  answered he  is unsure,  but that  he knows  the Cook                                                               
Inlet gas  that is exported as  LNG is very lean,  meaning it has                                                               
very few impurities.  He  said he doesn't know what specification                                                               
the Alaska  LNG Project's  gas will be.   However,  Asian markets                                                               
generally prefer  "hot" gas, which  is methane with  other things                                                               
in it  like ethane, propane,  or butane.   He said he  is unclear                                                               
whether AK  LNG will  try to  create a gas  quality that  meets a                                                               
specification  of the  buyers  or whether  the  project has  even                                                               
settled on this yet.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
1:43:44 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  TALERICO  offered   his  appreciation  for  enalytica's                                                               
advice, especially regarding the fluctuation  of the markets.  He                                                               
asked  whether, historically,  gas  prices have  risen or  fallen                                                               
faster than have oil prices.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. TSAFOS replied the broadest  principle to remember for gas is                                                               
that there  is no  such thing as  a global gas  price.   The most                                                               
important  answer to  the question  is that  it depends  on where                                                               
[State of Alaska] wants to look.   Each place being looked at may                                                               
have  specific  trends or  relationships  between  gas and  other                                                               
fuels that can be identified.   For example, there may be a place                                                               
where gas  has been 50  cents for the  last 15 years  and another                                                               
place where gas prices have tumbled  up and down.  In addition to                                                               
the  broad  principle, there  are  a  few things  that  generally                                                               
happen.   One is that on  energy equivalency, how much  energy is                                                               
needed from oil and gas to get  the same outcome, gas trades at a                                                               
discount to oil.  For one-to-one  energy, gas is cheaper than oil                                                               
and  this has  generally held  true across  many geographies  and                                                               
many different periods  of time.  The reason for  this is because                                                               
if it  doesn't, people switch back  to oil, which creates  a sort                                                               
of cap  on natural gas.   Secondly, in many places  of the world,                                                               
certainly  in Asia  and  parts of  Europe, the  price  of gas  is                                                               
contractually linked to oil.  So,  in a place like Japan, oil and                                                               
gas prices  generally move together.   There are  exceptions from                                                               
time to time, such as when the  Japanese are buying a lot of spot                                                               
LNG.   Also, the volatility  is much greater  in oil than  in gas                                                               
and that  is purely contractual.   The way it works  is the price                                                               
today  is based  on  an average  of three,  four,  or six  months                                                               
beforehand and because of that  average some of the volatility is                                                               
smoothed out.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
1:47:46 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  TSAFOS,  continuing  his answer,  noted  that  a  definitive                                                               
statement cannot  be said for markets  where the price of  gas is                                                               
set by supply and demand, like  the Lower 48 or Northwest Europe.                                                               
Before the  2008 crisis, gas  prices in the  U.S. had gone  up to                                                               
$12 per million  British thermal units (mmBtu).   Multiplying $12                                                               
mmBtu  by 6  equals $72  per barrel  of oil  equivalent.   In the                                                               
summer of  2008 oil had  gone up to $146  or $147 and  gas topped                                                               
out in the Lower 48 at  $72, showing that gas never quite fetches                                                               
as much.   However, gas is a lot more  expensive to transport and                                                               
is priced  lower, which is  why most  companies like to  find oil                                                               
rather than gas.   Especially after 2009, there  is no systematic                                                               
correlation between oil and gas in  the Lower 48.  So, the answer                                                               
is that it  really depends on how  price is set and  where in the                                                               
world it is  being looked at.  The broad  implication of this for                                                               
the State  of Alaska is that  at any given time  there are dozens                                                               
and dozens  of wildly  varying prices  of gas.   For  example, in                                                               
just the  one country  of Japan  in 2013  the most  expensive gas                                                               
stream was  twice as expensive as  the cheapest gas stream.   The                                                               
price at which "Kenai" sold gas  in Japan was much different than                                                               
the price at which  Oman sold gas in Japan.   At times that price                                                               
was  2:1, so  Alaska was  selling gas  into Japan  for twice  the                                                               
price  that Oman  was.   This  was because  of renegotiation  and                                                               
before that it  was not that, which is why  these things are very                                                               
dynamic.  So  there isn't really a very clear  answer and that is                                                               
why even speaking of averages or  the Asian price or the Japanese                                                               
price can  be very  misleading because  those averages  conceal a                                                               
huge amount  of variations.   Another example is China,  in which                                                               
the cheapest  gas is an  old contract  signed in the  early 2000s                                                               
that  comes  in from  Australia  for  $3.15.    But in  a  Qatari                                                               
contract that China signed in 2008  when oil was at $110, the gas                                                               
comes in  at about  $18.   The supplier that  gets $3  was really                                                               
happy  when it  signed the  contract because  there was  no other                                                               
buyer in the early 2000s.  It all depends on the circumstances.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:50:56 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. TSAFOS, responding to Co-Chair  Talerico, said enalytica will                                                               
be providing  an informational overview  tonight about  where the                                                               
Alaska LNG Project  is at and why the state  decided to become an                                                               
investor  in   the  project   and  why   the  state   brought  in                                                               
TransCanada.   Referring to  slide 2,  he said  that if  all goes                                                               
well the  state will  have gas  in another  eight or  nine years.                                                               
So, it will  be a long process  and a lot of things  are going to                                                               
change in there interim.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:51:50 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE   TARR  inquired   whether   domestic  gas   means                                                               
comparing North  Slope gas versus  Cook Inlet gas, or  Alaska gas                                                               
compared to Lower 48 gas, or both.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. TSAFOS replied the simple answer  is to think just of Alaska.                                                               
But, he qualified, there is a  regime connection to the Lower 48.                                                               
If Alaska  decided to price its  gas in Anchorage based  on Henry                                                               
Hub, then by definition Alaska is  connected to the Lower 48, but                                                               
Alaska's  ability to  sustain that  price depends  on supply  and                                                               
demand conditions  in Alaska.   Overwhelmingly the price  will be                                                               
determined by supply  and demand conditions in  Alaska, but there                                                               
may be  periods of time  where the  way Alaska sets  prices could                                                               
link it to the  Lower 48 or could link it to  Asia.  For example,                                                               
Alaska could have a system that says  the price of gas in Place X                                                               
is linked  to the  price of gas  in Asia minus  $5, $10,  or some                                                               
other amount.   He said he  thinks of Alaska as  connected to the                                                               
Lower 48 mostly  because of a regulatory  and commercial decision                                                               
to be  tied to the  Lower 48, not  because there is  any physical                                                               
linkage that affects the market in Alaska.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:53:53 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SEATON  observed the  last  sentence  on slide  5                                                               
states,  "The  LNG market  is  highly  fragmented, and  expertise                                                               
makes  a difference;  an autopilot  approach will  not serve  the                                                               
state's interests over  the long term."  He asked  how that works                                                               
when talking about a sales agreement  with a price formula and S-                                                               
curve  and re-openers.   He  expressed his  concern over  how the                                                               
state would  fluctuate and the  changes that could take  place if                                                               
the  state  doesn't  have  a  robust,  self-correcting  autopilot                                                               
system.  He requested Mr.  Tsafos to explain why enalytica thinks                                                               
an  autopilot approach  with  self-correcting  mechanisms is  not                                                               
best for the state.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR. TSAFOS  responded that "passive  approach" would have  been a                                                               
better term to have used  than "autopilot" because what enalytica                                                               
was  meaning  by autopilot  is  that  the  state cannot  make  an                                                               
agreement in 2017  and then step back saying that  it isn't going                                                               
to  look at  this again  for another  20 years.   The  reason for                                                               
enalytica not  liking that approach  is because things  are going                                                               
to change.  Prices will change.   Customers may come and say they                                                               
cannot take all  of the gas they  signed up for and  they need to                                                               
renegotiate.   Or, a customer  that agreed to take  anywhere from                                                               
"five to ten" now only wants  to take five, leaving an extra five                                                               
that the  state must try to  dispose of.  He  said he understands                                                               
Representative Seaton's concern that the  state could have a team                                                               
that  on any  given day  fluctuates wildly  in terms  of what  it                                                               
wants to  do.  However,  he submitted,  that is not  building in-                                                               
house expertise  because by definition  an expert is  someone who                                                               
is able  to separate  the signal  from the noise  and is  able to                                                               
understand  in what  conditions  the state  needs  to change  its                                                               
approach.  The  overarching principle is the need to  have a core                                                               
group of people working for the  state who can be trusted and who                                                               
know  what  they  are  doing   so  that  [legislators]  can  feel                                                               
comfortable that Alaska's  gas is being marketed in  the best way                                                               
possible, comfortable  with the amount  of risk being  taken, and                                                               
comfortable that  any changes in  the market are  being responded                                                               
to in the proper way.   It would be unacceptable, for example, if                                                               
the moment comes that someone says  "oh, the price is X and we're                                                               
selling  it for  Y  and  at that  point  your  answer is,  'well,                                                               
ExxonMobil says  it's okay.'"   If  Alaska has  a team  of people                                                               
with expertise  that know  this market,  it's all  about trusting                                                               
them  rather than  trusting  someone whose  risk  profile may  be                                                               
different than the state's.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:57:31 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SEATON said  he sees autopilot as  being that [the                                                               
state's] gas  is marketed by  the producers rather than  a robust                                                               
autopilot  in which  there is  a  built-in framework  of a  price                                                               
formula with  review clauses and  such.  Because  legislators are                                                               
elected every two  years he wants to ensure  suggestions are made                                                               
for  building in  robust changes  that can  be considered  at one                                                               
time instead of  coming back and reanalyzing every so  often.  He                                                               
requested further elaboration from enalytica.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MAYER reminded  members that  enalytica  has also  discussed                                                               
focusing  on  risk rather  than  price  and not  outsourcing  the                                                               
state's risk  profile.  The best  way to think about  this is the                                                               
different components of  risk, such as price  risk, country risk,                                                               
what the markets  are that the state is selling  into, whether it                                                               
is only one market or many  markets, or future things that happen                                                               
in a  market.   Counter-party risk  is particularly  relevant and                                                               
important  to everything  being  talked about  here.   The  state                                                               
could  sign  a  deal  and  say, "because  the  state  isn't  well                                                               
equipped to handle these things  it should sign one contract that                                                               
it's happy  with and have,  let's say, a major  producer, whether                                                               
one involved  in the project  or outside,  handle all of  its LNG                                                               
sales."  Such  a contract might look  good on day one.   The time                                                               
at  which a  contract is  signed is  probably the  time that  the                                                               
state has  maximum negotiating leverage  to get good terms.   But                                                               
if the  state has no capability  itself as an alternative  in the                                                               
future, then  as market conditions  change over time and  as that                                                               
counter-party  decides its  priorities are  different, the  state                                                               
has progressively  less leverage to  say that this isn't  a great                                                               
deal because  what is the  state going  to do as  an alternative.                                                               
The  way that  the state  best manages  counter-party risk  is by                                                               
having  other  options  in  terms of  counter-parties.    If  one                                                               
follows that  logic, it  leads one  to say that  the best  way to                                                               
manage many  of the state's  risks is  to have the  best in-house                                                               
team  possible, the  best capability  possible, because  then the                                                               
state always has other options.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:00:33 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SEATON said  he understands  developing a  system                                                               
with checks  and balances and  reopeners.  But, he  continued, he                                                               
doesn't see how the state  having in-house expertise will provide                                                               
stability because  that sounds  like the state  will be  going to                                                               
spot sales so it can make  changes on all these different factors                                                               
and will  have short-term  contracts to be  able to  make changes                                                               
with counter-parties.   He  asked for an  explanation of  what is                                                               
being proposed, what autopilot means  or doesn't mean, and what a                                                               
self-correcting robust system means.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. TSAFOS answered by relating  the term "autopilot" to flying a                                                               
plane.  While  autopilot is great, he said, there  still needs to                                                               
be someone  who knows when  to take it  out of autopilot  and fly                                                               
the plane.  Even  if all of the state's gas  is sold in long-term                                                               
contracts with one re-opener every  four years, [the state] won't                                                               
know what to do with that  re-opener unless it has people who are                                                               
monitoring  the market,  who know  whether  that re-opener  makes                                                               
sense, and  how to  negotiate that  re-opening.   Having in-house                                                               
expertise, having  people who know  what they are  doing, doesn't                                                               
mean [the state]  will be changing things all of  the time.  Many                                                               
times the answer  will be to not do anything.   He submitted that                                                               
[legislators]  will find  it incredibly  difficult to  understand                                                               
whether the [state's]  system of sales is working  if [the state]                                                               
doesn't have  people in-house who  understand it and  can explain                                                               
it to [legislators].   For example, if  [legislators] decide they                                                               
want 80 percent of [the state's]  gas to be at really predictable                                                               
prices and  20 percent at  spot sale,  then [the state]  needs to                                                               
have people who  can carry out that directive.   If [legislators]                                                               
decide  there  is   too  much  volatility  and   they  want  less                                                               
volatility, there  needs to  be someone  who can  implement that.                                                               
What  enalytica is  getting at  here is  that this  is all  about                                                               
contrasting with  oil.  In  oil, not much  more needs to  be done                                                               
than reading  the price on the  cover of a journal  and every six                                                               
months the Department  of Revenue does a long-term  forecast.  No                                                               
more than  that needs to  be done because at  the end of  the day                                                               
nothing can  be done  about it -  the oil market  is going  to be                                                               
what it  is going  to be and  [legislators] will  accept whatever                                                               
price is  set in global markets.   However, that is  not going to                                                               
be the  case in natural  gas.  Knowing  how to set  the autopilot                                                               
requires expertise.   Understanding the boundaries,  the clauses,                                                               
and the state's  risk tolerance requires expertise.   A sales and                                                               
purchase agreement, one of many  documents the state will have to                                                               
enter into,  will have  a hundred  pages.   Understanding exactly                                                               
the risk that [the state] is taking is huge.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:04:49 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. TSAFOS,  continuing his answer,  noted that another  big risk                                                               
[the  state] will  take is  counter-party risk,  which is  volume                                                               
risk.   Contracts  typically have  a plus  or minus  to them,  he                                                               
explained.  So, if the state is  in a contract for 4 million tons                                                               
with a  20 percent  flexibility, the buyer  will be  obligated to                                                               
buy, say, 3.2 million tons rather  than 4.  If, for example, [the                                                               
purchaser] has  a regime  change, the state  could find  itself -                                                               
without any violation  of contract terms - with  an extra 800,000                                                               
tons of LNG that  it needs to sell.  Who is going  to do that for                                                               
[the state]?  Those kinds of  things come up all the time, things                                                               
change.    [The  state]  needs   to  protect  its  interest,  and                                                               
enalytica  is  putting that  up  front  because [the  state]  can                                                               
prepare  itself over  time.   It is  not being  suggested that  a                                                               
skyscraper  of LNG  staff be  built, but  rather a  team of  5-10                                                               
people who  manage an  LNG portfolio -  [the state]  needs people                                                               
who know what they are doing.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  HAWKER  surmised  Mr.  Tsafos is  saying  that  a                                                               
hands-off  approach will  not serve  [the state's]  interest best                                                               
over time.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. TSAFOS thanked Representative Hawker.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:07:02 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  TARR  offered  her   belief  that  the  state  is                                                               
following  enalytica's  suggestion  given the  experienced  staff                                                               
being brought  in for the Alaska  Gasline Development Corporation                                                               
(AGDC).   She asked whether  enalytica thinks this  is sufficient                                                               
for building the suggested expertise  or whether the state should                                                               
be  putting together  another team  since AGDC  is a  corporation                                                               
separate from the state.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. MAYER replied that the people  brought on at AGDC are largely                                                               
under  contract to  the Department  of  Natural Resources  rather                                                               
than  specifically within  AGDC.   He said  this is  an excellent                                                               
first start  in what enalytica  is talking about for  bringing on                                                               
serious in-house  expertise.  If  it gets  to the point  of where                                                               
the  state says  yes to  taking tax  and royalty  in-kind, it  is                                                               
enalytica's view  that there needs  to be  a team of  people, not                                                               
just one expert, charged with marketing the state's LNG.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:09:31 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  HAWKER   commented  that   Representative  Tarr's                                                               
question seems to  be drawing a distinction between  AGDC and the                                                               
state.  He pointed out that AGDC  is the State of Alaska and that                                                               
AGDC  was created  to be  an  entity of  the State  of Alaska  to                                                               
represent the interests of the  people of Alaska in this process.                                                               
He said  he is wondering  whether Representative  Tarr's question                                                               
is really  about the difference  between the  regulatory agencies                                                               
of  the Department  of Natural  Resources and  the Department  of                                                               
Revenue versus the actual state gasline entity which is AGDC.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE TARR responded that her  question was to tease out                                                               
that  difference.    At  a  fall  [2014]  meeting,  she  related,                                                               
legislative members  were introduced  to several people  that had                                                               
been brought  on and it was  her mistake in recalling  that those                                                               
individuals  had  been  hired  by   AGDC  if  they  are  contract                                                               
individuals  with the  state.   She  said she  is wondering  more                                                               
broadly  whether  enalytica  has  been following  those  type  of                                                               
people  given enalytica  had recommended  to  the committee  last                                                               
year  that the  state  start  to staff  up.    She asked  whether                                                               
enalytica thinks the  state is heading in the  right direction in                                                               
this regard.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. TSAFOS  responded yes, [the  state] is definitely  heading in                                                               
the right  direction.  These are  the kind of people  [the state]                                                               
wants, he said, and will want more  of them.  In terms of drawing                                                               
lines  between where  these people  sit and  what the  governance                                                               
relationship is between state agencies  and state corporations is                                                               
another conversation  to have.   He  clarified that  enalytica is                                                               
advising to  build in-house expertise,  not necessarily  where to                                                               
put  that expertise.   The  type of  people the  state wants  are                                                               
people who know  the market on both the  technical and commercial                                                               
sides.   If the state decides  to take possession of  the gas, he                                                               
sees that team growing over time.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
2:11:45 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HAWKER  announced that  at 5:00 p.m.  this evening                                                               
in the Senate  finance chambers, enalytica will  be presenting an                                                               
educational/refresher seminar for the entire legislature.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:12:57 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
There being no  further business before the  committee, the House                                                               
Resources Standing Committee meeting was adjourned at 2:13 p.m.                                                                 

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
enalytica Special Report How LNG Affects Local Markets Jan 2015.pdf HRES 2/16/2015 1:00:00 PM
How LNG Affects local Markets? Lessons for Alaska from Western Australia
enalytica Special Report Marketing Alaska's Gas from AK LNG - Key Issues Jan 2015.pdf HRES 2/16/2015 1:00:00 PM
Marketing Alaska’s Gas from AK LNG: Key Issues
enalytica HRES AK LNG Project Update January 2015.pdf HRES 2/16/2015 1:00:00 PM
enalytica AK LNG Project Update