Legislature(2013 - 2014)Anch Temporary LIO

09/29/2014 01:00 PM Senate RESOURCES

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Audio Topic
01:02:54 PM Start
01:03:04 PM Introduction by Joe Balash, Commissioner, Alaska Department of Natural Resources (dnr)
01:09:42 PM Alaska Lng Project Update by Steve Butt, Project Manager
03:32:05 PM Progress from the State's Perspective - Commissioner Balash & Commissioner Rodell
04:13:21 PM Report of Money Obligated to a Third Party: Commissioner Balash
04:21:18 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
-- Teleconference --
ANC Temp LIO 1st Floor Conference Room #105
Joint with House Resources
+ Alaska LNG Project Update Briefing TELECONFERENCED
-Joe Balash, Commissioner, Dept. of Natural Res.
-Alaska LNG Project Update - Steve Butt, Proj Mgr
-Progress from the State's Perspective
-Required Report on Money Obligated to a Third
Party
-- Testimony <Invitation Only> --
                    ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE                                                                                  
                         JOINT MEETING                                                                                        
              SENATE RESOURCES STANDING COMMITTEE                                                                             
               HOUSE RESOURCES STANDING COMMITTEE                                                                             
                       September 29, 2014                                                                                       
                           1:02 p.m.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                              
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
SENATE RESOURCES                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
 Senator Cathy Giessel, Chair                                                                                                   
 Senator Fred Dyson, Vice Chair                                                                                                 
 Senator Click Bishop - via teleconference                                                                                      
 Senator Peter Micciche                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
HOUSE RESOURCES                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
 Representative Eric Feige, Co-Chair                                                                                            
 Representative Dan Saddler, Co-Chair                                                                                           
 Representative Peggy Wilson, Vice Chair                                                                                        
 Representative Mike Hawker                                                                                                     
 Representative Craig Johnson                                                                                                   
 Representative Kurt Olson                                                                                                      
 Representative Paul Seaton                                                                                                     
 Representative Geran Tarr                                                                                                      
 Representative Scott Kawasaki - via teleconference                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SENATE RESOURCES                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
 Senator Lesil McGuire                                                                                                          
 Senator Anna Fairclough                                                                                                        
 Senator Hollis French                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
HOUSE RESOURCES                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
 All members present                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
 OTHER LEGISLATORS PRESENT                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Senator Charlie Huggins                                                                                                         
Representative Sam Kito III                                                                                                     
Representative Andy Josephson                                                                                                   
Representative Chris Tuck                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
COMMITTEE CALENDAR                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
INTRODUCTION BY JOE BALASH - COMMISSIONER~ ALASKA DEPARTMENT OF                                                                 
NATURAL RESOURCES (DNR).                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     - HEARD                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ALASKA LNG PROJECT UPDATE BY STEVE BUTT - PROJECT MANAGER.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     - HEARD                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PROGRESS FROM THE STATE'S PERSPECTIVE - COMMISSIONER BALASH &                                                                   
COMMISSIONER RODELL.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     - HEARD                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPORT OF MONEY OBLIGATED TO A THIRD PARTY: COMMISSIONER BALASH.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     - HEARD                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
No previous action to record                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
WITNESS REGISTER                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
JOE BALASH, Commissioner                                                                                                        
Alaska Department of Natural Resources                                                                                          
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT: Provided an update for the Alaska LNG                                                                     
Project.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
STEVE BUTT, Project Manager                                                                                                     
Alaska LNG Project                                                                                                              
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Provided an update for the Alaska LNG                                                                     
Project.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
JACK BEATTIE, Pipeline Manager                                                                                                  
Alaska LNG Project                                                                                                              
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Addressed construction questions for the                                                                  
Alaska LNG Project.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
ANGELA RODELL, Commissioner                                                                                                     
Alaska Department of Revenue                                                                                                    
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION  STATEMENT:  Addressed  financing and  revenue  questions                                                            
for the Alaska LNG Project.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
ACTION NARRATIVE                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
1:02:54 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR SENATOR GIESSEL  called the joint meeting of  the Senate and                                                            
House  Resources  Standing  Committees   to  order  at  1:02  p.m.                                                              
Senators present  at the call to  order were Vice-Chair  Dyson and                                                              
Chair Giessel; Representatives  present at the call  to order were                                                              
Representatives Seaton,  P. Wilson, Olson, Johnson,  Tarr, Hawker,                                                              
Co-Chair  Saddler, and  Co-Chair  Feige. Senator  Micciche  joined                                                              
the  meeting   as  it   was  in   progress.  Senator   Bishop  and                                                              
Representative Kawasaki  joined the meeting via  teleconference as                                                              
it was in progress.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  GIESSEL recognized  other  legislators  in attendance  were                                                              
Senator   Huggins,   Representative   Kito,   and   Representative                                                              
Josephson.  She  noted  that  Janak  Mayer  &  Nikos  Tsafos  from                                                              
Enalytica were in attendance.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
^Introduction  by Joe Balash,  Commissioner, Alaska  Department of                                                              
Natural Resources (DNR)                                                                                                         
 Introduction by Joe Balash, Commissioner, Alaska Department of                                                             
                    Natural Resources (DNR)                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:03:04 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR GIESSEL  announced that the  first item on the  agenda would                                                              
be  an   introduction  from  Joe   Balash,  Commissioner   of  the                                                              
Department of Natural Resources.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
JOE BALASH, Commissioner,  Department of Natural  Resources (DNR),                                                              
Anchorage, Alaska,  explained that a provision in  SB 138 requires                                                              
that  a public  presentation and  update on  the Alaska  Liquefied                                                              
Natural Gas  Project (Alaska  LNG Project) be  held three  times a                                                              
year. He  noted that the  signing of SB  138 in May  dictated that                                                              
the first presentation be held in September.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER   BALASH  called   attention   to   the  sharing   of                                                              
information  with the Legislature.  He explained  that SB  138 set                                                              
out the broad  terms of an  arrangement where the details  need to                                                              
be filled  in. He  noted that  DNR and  the Department  of Revenue                                                              
(DOR)   were   given  authority   to   enter   into   confidential                                                              
discussions  and certain  types of  agreements. He  said that  DNR                                                              
has  developed an  agreement between  the agencies  and the  other                                                              
project  sponsors  that  has  involved   confidential  information                                                              
access  protocols   and  personnel  training  for   the  executive                                                              
branch.  He  informed  the  committees   that  DNR  is  developing                                                              
similar confidentiality  agreements between  the agencies  and the                                                              
legislative branch.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
1:05:56 PM                                                                                                                    
COMMISSIONER BALASH  noted that a draft confidentiality  agreement                                                              
had  been sent  the previous  week to  the Division  of Legal  and                                                              
Research  Services  for  review.  This  confidentiality  agreement                                                              
will  allow  information  access for  individual  legislators  and                                                              
their agents that  would not be presented at a  public meeting. He                                                              
pointed  out that  as  an equity  participant  in  the Alaska  LNG                                                              
Project,  the dollars  and  cents involved  has  everything to  do                                                              
with   expenditures  and   costs   pertaining   to  dealing   with                                                              
contractor bidding.  He asserted that the intent should  be not to                                                              
put  the Alaska  LNG Project  at a  negotiating disadvantage  with                                                              
contractors and engineering firms.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
He added that the  other side of the equation  pertains to buyers.                                                              
He pointed  out that  buyers are going  to take every  opportunity                                                              
to  drive sales  prices  lower. He  stated  that discussions  will                                                              
occur  in   executive  session   to  protect  Alaskan's   resource                                                              
interest,  royalty  value,  production  tax,  and  ultimately  the                                                              
treasury.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:07:59 PM                                                                                                                    
CO-CHAIR  FEIGE asked  what the  timeline  is for  confidentiality                                                              
agreements and training.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER BALASH  replied that he would not try  to predict the                                                              
timeline. He explained  that DNR and DOR spent a  couple of months                                                              
going back  and forth  with the  Department of  Law and  the other                                                              
project parties,  and now the confidentiality agreement  is just a                                                              
matter  of getting  the  legislative and  state  attorneys on  the                                                              
same page.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  GIESSEL  recognized  that Representative  Tuck  joined  the                                                              
meeting via teleconference.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
^Alaska LNG Project Update by Steve Butt, Project Manager                                                                       
    Alaska LNG Project Update by Steve Butt, Project Manager                                                                
                                                                                                                              
1:09:42 PM                                                                                                                    
STEVE  BUTT,  Project  Manager,  Alaska  LNG  Project,  Anchorage,                                                              
Alaska, shared his work experience as follows:                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
   · 30 years of experience with oil and gas projects.                                                                          
   · Worked in South America building a few projects.                                                                           
   · Worked in West Africa for 8 years.                                                                                         
   · Worked most recently in Qatar on the world's largest LNG                                                                   
     facilities as well as the world's largest gas treatment                                                                    
     plant.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
He  explained  that  the  opportunity  presented  itself  for  the                                                              
companies to  come together  and work on  the Alaska  LNG Project.                                                              
He  stated  that it  was  a  privilege  to have  this  opportunity                                                              
because Alaska has been worked and looked at for a long time.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
1:12:02 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. BUTT  noted that  one of  the key  questions everyone  asks is                                                              
what  makes  this  effort  different. He  explained  that  he  was                                                              
representing the  parties that signed the Joint  Venture Agreement                                                              
(JVA)  at the  end  of  June. This  was  a landmark  agreement  to                                                              
create    a   Pre-Front-End    Engineering    Design    (Pre-FEED)                                                              
organization to  progress the design and regulatory  work required                                                              
to  build and  understand  what  would be  required  to build  the                                                              
Alaska LNG Project.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
He  said  in  2012  the  phrases  "unprecedented  challenges"  and                                                              
"unprecedented  opportunities"   were  used  to  characterize  the                                                              
Alaska  LNG Project  because  by  any metric,  it  is  one of  the                                                              
largest  projects in  the  world.  He pointed  out  that the  term                                                              
"mega  project"  has  been  used to  define  projects  between  $1                                                              
billion to  $5 billion. He  said the Alaska  LNG Project  has been                                                              
forecast  to   range  from   $45  billion   to  $65  billion.   It                                                              
encompasses  five mega-projects  and the  term "giga project"  has                                                              
been  used to  describe  it.  He set  forth  that  the Alaska  LNG                                                              
Project is the first  true giga-project. It is one  of the largest                                                              
projects ever executed and the largest project in U.S. history.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
He  added that  bigger LNG  plants, pipelines,  and gas  treatment                                                              
plants  have been built,  but there  has never  been a  standalone                                                              
project built  with all  three at once.  He said his  presentation                                                              
would  provide a  progress report  for  an unprecedented  project,                                                              
challenge, and opportunity.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:14:14 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. BUTT  stated that what separates  the Alaska LNG  Project from                                                              
others  is the  amount  of public  engagement  a  higher level  of                                                              
transparency  without  compromising  project  competitiveness.  He                                                              
asserted that  "transparency" and  "competitiveness" are  the core                                                              
elements.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
He summarized the update agenda as follows:                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
   · Safety overview-executive summary:                                                                                         
     A key  principal is to  ensure a safe environment  where                                                                   
     everybody goes home safely and nobody gets hurt.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
   · Schedule status:                                                                                                           
     The  schedule is  the one  that's been  talked about  in                                                                   
     public forums  so as  to give everybody  a sense  of the                                                                   
     progress that's been made and some of the steps ahead.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
   · Project components-recent progress:                                                                                        
     Specifics    about   the    design   and    construction                                                                   
     characteristics.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
   · Team status-build-up:                                                                                                      
     The Pre-FEED  leadership team  and the Pre-FEED  project                                                                   
     management team are actually executing this work.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
   · Regulatory status-LNG export permit application:                                                                           
     This  was submitted  to Department of  Energy (DOE)  and                                                                   
     posted  to the Federal  Register, which  is the way  DOE                                                                   
     accepts  and opens  public  comment.  Public comment  is                                                                   
     open through November.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
   · Regulatory status-National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)                                                                 
     pre-file accepted:                                                                                                         
     NEPA  is  the  enabling  legislation   behind  the  U.S.                                                                   
     Environmental    Protection   Agency   (EPA)    on   the                                                                   
     Environmental  Impact Statement  (EIS).  The first  step                                                                   
     in  the  process   is  called  the  pre-file   and  this                                                                   
     document  has been  submitted. It  notifies the  federal                                                                   
     government   about  the   project  need   for  help   in                                                                   
     obtaining a  permit, which is necessary before  any work                                                                   
     can  be  executed.  It's  the   law.  A  project  cannot                                                                   
     undertake  work or  disturb  the environment  without  a                                                                   
     document  from the  federal  government or  an EIS  that                                                                   
     indicates that  the project  has done the work  required                                                                   
     to  mitigate  any  potential  environmental  damage  and                                                                   
     that  any environmental  damage it  the least  possible.                                                                   
     This  is  called  LEDPA.  It's  critical  to  have  this                                                                   
     document and permits in hand before moving forward.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
   · Cooperation framework with the Alaska Gasline Development                                                                  
     Corporation (AGDC):                                                                                                        
     This  is  to ensure  alignment  to  be as  efficient  as                                                                   
     possible.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
   · 2014 Summer Field Season:                                                                                                  
     Included are  pictures of the 2014 summer  field work to                                                                   
     provide  some  background on  some  of the  things  that                                                                   
     have been found  and some of the work that  was done. He                                                                   
     noted  that he  had had  the privilege  of hosting  some                                                                   
     committee members at the site.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
   · Website:                                                                                                                   
     One of  the key messages  is to promote discussion  with                                                                   
     the  broader public  in Alaska. The  website provides  a                                                                   
     way for  corporations to  register, express interest  in                                                                   
     working with  the project,  ask questions, and  find out                                                                   
     about community engagement sessions.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:18:18 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  BUTT asserted  that the  ideas presented  on page  3 are  the                                                              
philosophical underpinnings  that will differentiate  a successful                                                              
project from a project that can't move forward.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
He  stated  that  there  have  been  no  health  or  environmental                                                              
incidents  to date.  Over the course  of three  years, 210,000  to                                                              
220,000 person  hours of  field work and  50,000 to  80,000 person                                                              
hours  of work  of  office  has been  executed.  The  total is  in                                                              
excess of 300,000  person hours of work. He revealed  that was one                                                              
minor  medical treatment  incident  during the  2014 summer  field                                                              
season. A field  worker removed his safety glasses  to better read                                                              
the tablet  where he enters  data for the  permit and his  eye was                                                              
scratched by an  alder branch. This required some  medication, but                                                              
he was  able to  return to  work within  a matter  of hours.  This                                                              
incident   captured  the   importance   of  "personal   protective                                                              
equipment"  (PPE) and  has been  used subsequently  as a  teaching                                                              
tool.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
1:20:53 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR MICCICHE joined the meeting.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT  reviewed the  Executive Summary.  He explained  that the                                                              
Pre-FEED team  consists of 27  key leadership positions  that were                                                              
staffed from  all the project owners.  This team has in  excess of                                                              
800  years  of  experience.  In  addition,  about  102  more  team                                                              
members were added  and there are plans to add about  7 more. This                                                              
brings  the total  to  130 to  135  people working  fulltime.  The                                                              
project is  moving from the concept  stage to what is  called pre-                                                              
phase-FEED stage.  The core team  will be responsible  for working                                                              
with  a  wide range  of  contractors  involving  several  thousand                                                              
people  to  ensure   the  broader  work  gets   done  to  progress                                                              
regulatory  filings  and  design  work  required  to  de-risk  the                                                              
project and make sure it's viable.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
He  continued  to explain  that,  to  date, the  project  spending                                                              
exceeds  $100M  on  concept, regulatory  work,  and  the  Pre-FEED                                                              
commitment  is about  five  times this  amount.  The $100  million                                                              
includes  gathering regulatory  data in  the field  over the  last                                                              
two summers, the  preliminary design work to finish  the NEPA pre-                                                              
file, and  the DOE  export permit application.  He noted  that the                                                              
export permit application is 200 pages.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
The Pre-FEED  contracting  is progressing  with good support  from                                                              
primary  contractors that  have  demonstrated  success in  similar                                                              
projects. He acknowledged  that while a lot of work  has been done                                                              
on Pre-FEED  contracting, the  presentation is  a little  light on                                                              
this  because the  project  team  is currently  in  the middle  of                                                              
awarding  the contracts.  He asked  for latitude  to provide  more                                                              
information on  contracting at  the next update,  but that  he did                                                              
have information  on what it means  for Alaska hire. Once  the key                                                              
contractors have  been identified  they would hold  open-houses to                                                              
make  sure  Alaskan  corporations   know  how  to  plug  into  the                                                              
project. Now  some of these  contractors are Alaskan  corporations                                                              
and some are not.  Given the scope and complexity  of the project,                                                              
most  of  the  contracting  arrangements  will  be  with  multiple                                                              
companies  to make  sure that they  can handle  the complexity  of                                                              
the  project.  If  one  company  has  strength  in  one  area  and                                                              
weaknesses  in  another,  the  idea is  to  find  a  complementary                                                              
company   that  can  offset   the  weaknesses   and  augment   the                                                              
strengths.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR SADDLER  asked if it was possible to  provide information                                                              
on how many contractors were Alaska based.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT  answered that the  Alaska LNG Project  has had a  lot of                                                              
success  with  companies  that  are Alaska  based,  but  he  would                                                              
rather not identify  the specific contractors. He  noted that with                                                              
every single contractor  contact, there is a  technical evaluation                                                              
process to identify  a contract group's strengths. One  of the key                                                              
areas of  the evaluation  process includes:  the amount  of Alaska                                                              
hire, how  the contractor leverages  local resources, and  how the                                                              
contractor works within communities.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
1:26:41 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. BUTT continued  to discuss the Executive Summary.  He reported                                                              
that  the NEPA,  pre-file  request  was  approved by  the  Federal                                                              
Energy  Regulatory Commission  (FERC)  on September  12, 2014  and                                                              
that  triggers the  EIS process.  This is  a fundamental  document                                                              
that allows the project to engage FERC and work with its third-                                                                 
party consultant,  Natural Resource Group (NRG) to  coordinate all                                                              
federal   regulatory  agents.   This   very  important   milestone                                                              
triggers a  community engagement process,  which is posted  on the                                                              
website.  He noted  there have  been about  50 community  meetings                                                              
and more  will occur over  the next six  months. FERC  attends and                                                              
is  involved in  those meetings,  clarifying  that this  community                                                              
and  stakeholder engagement  process  is done  under the  umbrella                                                              
and auspices of FERC.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT  advised that DoE  posted export  application to Federal                                                               
Register  on September  17,  2014 -  process to  secure  right to                                                               
export LNG.  This is  the process to  secure the  right to export                                                               
LNG  and the  fact that  the  application has  been  accepted and                                                               
posted  it  to the  Federal  Register  in  a  very timely  manner                                                               
indicates  that  this  project  is  moving  along  and that  very                                                               
thorough and bonafide work has been done.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:29:26 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE  KAWASAKI  and SENATOR  BISHOP  joined the  meeting                                                              
via teleconference.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT  turned to  the  Key  Messages  in Recent  Meetings.  He                                                              
reported  that there  have been  50 community  meetings that  have                                                              
been very  well attended; 300 people  came to talk to  the project                                                              
team at  Dena'ina Center. One of  the most important  messages the                                                              
team  tries to  share at  these meetings  is that  the Alaska  LNG                                                              
Project participants  are the owners of  99 percent of  the gas on                                                              
the North  Slope. This is the  State of Alaska plus  the producers                                                              
who  purchased the  right  to produce  the  oil and  gas from  the                                                              
North  Slope leases  in  the 1960s  and 1970s,  it's  not any  one                                                              
group. He  emphasized that the  state has a  seat at the  table as                                                              
an equity participant; the state is an owner of gas.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT  opined that  as owners  of the gas,  it is important  to                                                              
ask  "What is  the best  thing  to do?"  From  that framework,  he                                                              
suggested  committee  members speak  on  behalf of  all  Alaskans,                                                              
because  it shapes  the  discussions with  buyers.  He noted  that                                                              
Commissioner  Balash  alluded to  this.  Buyers have  a  different                                                              
view than  sellers on  how to structure  the deal owners  probably                                                              
view  thing  more  like  a  seller than  a  buyer.  He  said  that                                                              
paradigm is  critical and  it helps  to get to  what he  calls the                                                              
first leg of the "arc-of-success," which is alignment.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Butt explained  that ARC  is a  quick acronym  for the  three                                                              
touchstones  to  answer  questions  about the  project.  How  does                                                              
something  influence  alignment,   how  does  something  influence                                                              
risk, and how does something influence cost?                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Alignment  - Mr.  Butts  said it  may be  simplistic  to say  that                                                            
anything  that  increases  alignment  is good  and  anything  that                                                              
undermines alignment  is bad, but  almost all questions  come back                                                              
to this point.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Risk reduction  - He described  Pre-FEED as all  about identifying                                                            
and mitigating uncertainty.  Some of the things that  might get in                                                              
the   way  of   the   project   are  labor   challenges,   weather                                                              
construction  challenges, and  challenges to  get 250,000  tons of                                                              
steel  to the  North  Slope over  four sealifts  8,000  tons at  a                                                              
time. These  are technical issues  and Pre-FEED is  about ensuring                                                              
that all of  these risks are understood beforehand  and mitigating                                                              
steps  taken  before  something  goes wrong.  He  highlighted  the                                                              
importance of  acquiring a sufficient  number of the  right barges                                                              
to move  safely all materials,  crews and equipment.  These things                                                              
are risks  and uncertainties that  are identified  during Pre-FEED                                                              
so there  is confidence that the  project will work in  an aligned                                                              
manner, if  the owners  choose to  put up all  the money  to build                                                              
the project.  The investment  decision isn't  whether the  project                                                              
will  work  if the  owners  put  up  the money.  The  question  is                                                              
whether  all  the   risks  have  been  considered   and  mitigated                                                              
sufficiently  so the owners  can be  told "Yes, if  we put  up the                                                              
resources required  to do this work,  we will be able  to generate                                                              
revenues and the benefits we have all forecast from this work."                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:36:33 PM                                                                                                                    
Cost reduction -  Mr. Butts explained that gas is  a commodity and                                                            
Alaska must be careful  to ensure that it is able  to sell its gas                                                              
molecules at  a price that is  low enough to attract  buyers. That                                                              
means  that the  project  must be  designed  to  minimize what  is                                                              
called  the "cost  of supply."  This is  driven by  the amount  of                                                              
money that it takes  to build the infrastructure such  that it can                                                              
be  recovered  over  time.  This project  will  cost  between  $45                                                              
billion and  $65 billion  and the  owners won't  get any  money in                                                              
excess of  that until  their investment  is recovered.  It's about                                                              
being competitive.  The only  projects that  survive are  the ones                                                              
that  can  continue  to  deliver  energy at  a  cost  below  their                                                              
competition.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
He  highlighted  the structural  advantages  of the  project  that                                                              
help  drive down  costs and  pay  for some  of the  infrastructure                                                              
that other  LNG projects  don't  need, like a  very long  pipeline                                                              
and a  very large gas  treatment plant.  He said these  advantages                                                              
and disadvantages  become the background  that is used  to analyze                                                              
the  cost of  supply,  which  is  the fundamental  parameter  that                                                              
defines  whether or  not a project  can be  competitive. "If  it's                                                              
not  competitive,  it  can't  survive."  He  summarized  that  the                                                              
Alaska  LNG Project  can be  successful  if the  partners work  as                                                              
owners and  they figure  out how  to stay  aligned, how  to reduce                                                              
risk, and how to reduce cost.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT  explained that  the Alaska  LNG Project  is more  than a                                                              
pipeline.  It is  a  pipeline plus  two  large  facilities: a  gas                                                              
treatment facility at  the top that is required to  remove and re-                                                              
inject   CO   and   other   non-hydrocarbon  impurities,   and   a                                                              
           2                                                                                                                    
liquefaction facility  at the south-end which makes  the gas small                                                              
enough  to  efficiently  sell  and  ship  overseas.  The  pipeline                                                              
allows  for gas delivery  to local  markets and  its LNG  facility                                                              
allows  for gas  delivery  to the  world.  He  asserted that  this                                                              
project  can provide  energy  to improve  standards  of living  if                                                              
costs  can  be   driven  down  through  economies   of  scale.  He                                                              
explained that  the Alaska LNG  Project provides economy  of scale                                                              
because its  large size puts  a lot of  gas through  one pipeline.                                                              
This drives down costs.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
He remarked that  he will continue to use words  like "ownership,"                                                              
"alignment,"  "risk  reduction,"  and  "cost  reduction,"  because                                                              
most questions  can be answered  through these four  lenses. "What                                                              
would an  owner do, does it  help alignment, does it  reduce risk,                                                              
and does it reduce cost?"                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:41:19 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. BUTT reviewed  the Alaska LNG Project Work  Plans/Key Decision                                                              
Points (October  2012) [page  4]. He  explained that he  addressed                                                              
the  Legislature  in early  2012  to  talk  about the  Alaska  LNG                                                              
Project and  wade through  the skepticism.  He recounted  that the                                                              
first hurdle was  to test the concept and make sure  it worked. He                                                              
explained that project viability was examined as follows:                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
   · Technically, is there enough understanding of the                                                                          
     project to ensure that it will work?                                                                                       
   · Can the project get adequate government support?                                                                           
   · Can the project get the necessary permits that will                                                                        
     help provide confidence to move into Pre-FEED?                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
He reported  that the  Alaska LNG Project  moved into  Pre-FEED in                                                              
June  2014. The  $100 million  that  was spent  prior to  Pre-FEED                                                              
will be  leveraged up  to five  times that  amount to advance  the                                                              
regulatory and design  work required to test whether  or not to go                                                              
to the Front-End Engineering & Design (FEED) stage.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
He highlighted the key questions that go into the FEED decision.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
   · Can we build the Alaska LNG Project?                                                                                       
   · Can we make the Alaska LNG Project work?                                                                                   
   · Do we have support from the permitters?                                                                                    
   · Do we continue to have the kind of support we need                                                                         
      from the government, both at a federal level on the                                                                       
     export permit and the NEPA process for the EIS?                                                                            
   · Are we confident that we would have the permits                                                                            
     required to move into construction?                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT drew  an  analogy between  the  Pre-FEED  process and  a                                                              
hurdle  race. He  said  you never  start a  hurdle  race and  quit                                                              
halfway  through; you  want to  jump all  the hurdles.  Similarly,                                                              
it's important to  have confidence that the Alaska  LNG Project is                                                              
technically  viable,  that federal  permits  can  be obtained  and                                                              
that there  is support from the  state and other owner  parties to                                                              
put  money in  a frontend  investment decision,  which is  flagged                                                              
after  FEED  as  money  that  would  be  well  spent.  He  advised                                                              
committee  members that  they want  to be  able to  look at  their                                                              
constituents  and all  the other  owners  and say  that this  will                                                              
work, that the  structure is durable and predictable  and that the                                                              
owners will  derive benefit  from their  investments. "You  put up                                                              
all the money upfront  and you get the benefits over  time, so you                                                              
want to have tremendous confidence up front."                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
He  also  drew  an  analogy  between   the  Pre-FEED  process  and                                                              
building a house.  He said you don't build a house  unless you are                                                              
confident  that  it's  on  a  solid  foundation,  you  can  get  a                                                              
mortgage  at a  reasonable interest  rate  and you  know what  the                                                              
structure will  look like and  that it  will be suitable  for your                                                              
family over the next 30 years or so.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT  noted the additional  project challenges listed  on page                                                              
4, and  asserted that  the Alaska LNG  Project was so  intertwined                                                              
with the  regulatory and  state processes  that maintaining  owner                                                              
alignment and confidence had to continue.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:45:35 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  BUTT reviewed  the One  Team-World  Class Project  Management                                                              
[page 5].  He noted that  a conversation  was framed with  each of                                                              
the project  owners for statements  on their approach  for safety,                                                              
values, and  project management.  He pointed  out that all  of the                                                              
companies involved  share a very similar  view of safety.  It is a                                                              
core principal for  all participants. He asserted  that the Alaska                                                              
LNG  Project  wants  to execute  in  a  safe  and  environmentally                                                              
responsible manner.  He remarked  that additional information  has                                                              
been  provided  on  making  sure  the  project  has  a  successful                                                              
structure  that  provides energy  to  help  people have  a  better                                                              
standard of living.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
He  pointed out  that all  parties, including  the Alaska  Gasline                                                              
Development  Corporation (AGDC)  and TransCanada  (TC), have  very                                                              
common language  about how to move  things forward for  the Alaska                                                              
LNG Project.  He shared with  the committee  that AGDC and  TC are                                                              
working  on  behalf   of  the  state  to  represent   the  state's                                                              
participating equity  in the Alaska LNG Project.  He remarked that                                                              
the Alaska  LNG Project  parties have  some challenges  in staying                                                              
aligned,  but the  parties have  a  philosophical commonality  and                                                              
common ground to work from.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT  reviewed the Development  Concept Summary [page  6].] He                                                              
stated  that  the   intent  of  the  Alaska  LNG   Project  is  to                                                              
commercialize  the North  Slope  gas resource.  He explained  that                                                              
the PTU/PBU gas  source has up to 35 trillion cubic  feet (TCF) of                                                              
gas. Within  the export  permit application and  some of  the NEPA                                                              
filings   there   is   supporting   information   from   reservoir                                                              
consultants,  DeGolyer &  MacNaughton, that  this is thousands  of                                                              
years  of gas  for state  use and  hundreds  of years  of gas  for                                                              
state use if it  is done in conjunction with export.  It is one of                                                              
the largest single  gas resources in North America  and the world.                                                              
The  resource has  been under  production for  decades at  Prudhoe                                                              
Bay and the development is moving forward at Point Thomson.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT  explained that gas  will be treated  at the  North Slope                                                              
Gas Treatment  Plant (GTP) near  Prudhoe Bay Central  Gas Facility                                                              
(CGF), and  carbon dioxide  (CO)  and hydrogen sulfide  (HS)  will                                                              
                               22                                                                                               
be  re-injected   in  the  Prudhoe  Bay  Unit   (PBU)  to  support                                                              
pressure. There  will be  800 miles  of 42" pipe  that is  able to                                                              
withstand 2075 pounds  of force per square inch.  Eight compressor                                                              
stations  are  required  to  move  the  gas  north  to  south.  At                                                              
minimum,  there  will  be  5  domestic  gas  off-takes  along  the                                                              
pipeline route for instate use.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:47:48 PM                                                                                                                    
The  development concept  calls  for  an LNG  plant  in East  Cook                                                              
Inlet  in  the  Nikiski  area. Three  LNG  trains  will  have  the                                                              
capability  of 20  million  tons per  annum  (MTA) to  accommodate                                                              
peaks during  cold weather,  although the  average will  be closer                                                              
to  17-18 MTA.  Also included  in  the development  concept are  3                                                              
165,000  cubic meter  storage  tanks  and a  single  jetty with  2                                                              
berths for  LNG and  support vessels. Having  2 berths  will allow                                                              
loading  every  36-48  hours;  while one  ship  is  being  loaded,                                                              
another will be moving out.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT reviewed  the strengths of the development  concept [page                                                              
6]. He related  that there is high resource confidence  in Prudhoe                                                              
Bay  and  Point   Thomson.  The  gas  at  Prudhoe   Bay  has  been                                                              
reinjected  three  times,  so  it's  a known  entity.  This  is  a                                                              
critical differentiator  because with other projects  in the world                                                              
that are  trying to  find the  gas to  underpin the  liquefaction.                                                              
This  is a  key factor  in risk  reduction. "Here  in Alaska  that                                                              
resource risk is pretty minimal, and that is good news."                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:49:42 PM                                                                                                                    
Another  development  strength  is the  opportunity  to  integrate                                                              
with   Prudhoe   Bay.   Because   it  has   been   operating   for                                                              
approximately  40 years,  a lot  of the  frontend compression  has                                                              
already been  built. He  noted that the  Prudhoe Bay  operator has                                                              
done  an  excellent   job  of  maintaining  and   operating  those                                                              
machines and  they can probably  provide feed-gas to  this project                                                              
for another 50 years.  This is a great cost reduction  and it goes                                                              
back  to the  ARC  of Success.  "We  don't have  to  pay for  that                                                              
compression on  the frontend, it  already exists. It allows  us to                                                              
kind  of  piggyback on  the  oil  business,  so that  healthy  oil                                                              
business is really important to us."                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
He said  that yet another  resource strength  is the  potential to                                                              
deliver  domestic  gas through  the  rail corridor  for  Alaskans.                                                              
This is  where most of  the population  resides, but a  good thing                                                              
about LNG is  that when it is liquefied,  it can be put  on a boat                                                              
and  delivered  to any  port  city.  The other  characteristic  of                                                              
resource strength,  he said,  is the potential  to provide  LNG to                                                              
the world. Alaska  is closer to Asian markets than  the Gulf Coast                                                              
and does  not require transit through  the Panama Canal,  which is                                                              
very  expensive. The  distance from  the  Middle East  to the  Far                                                              
East is farther,  and to move gas  from the Middle East  to Europe                                                              
is  extremely expensive  because  it has  to go  through the  Suez                                                              
Canal  so  market  proximity  is   very  important.  Finally,  the                                                              
ambient temperature increases relative thermal efficiency.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:52:12 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  BUTT  set  forth  that  the   development  concept  strengths                                                              
underpin  the  project,  but  the strengths  are  offset  by  some                                                              
significant  development  concept  challenges.  One  challenge  is                                                              
having  to build  in the  harsh,  tough environment  on the  North                                                              
Slope.  A tremendous  amount of  fuel and equipment  will  move in                                                              
and out  of that  environment, and  it has to  be moved  on water,                                                              
which creates  another risk. Another  challenge will be  to manage                                                              
uncertainty  and  cost while  securing  the required  permits.  He                                                              
recapped that  spending to date  is about $100 million,  and about                                                              
another  $500 million  has been  committed. This  is $600  million                                                              
Pre-FEED. He noted  that a quote to the governor  in a 2012 letter                                                              
was that a number  of parties had invested somewhere  on the order                                                              
of  $700 million  prior  to  that, so  the  real number  prior  to                                                              
getting to FEED  is $1.3 billion so the spending  will probably be                                                              
north of  $2.5 billion  the final  investment decision  in Alaska.                                                              
He emphasized  that this is a  tremendous investment risk  so it's                                                              
important to get things right from the onset.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
He  also stressed  the  importance  of addressing  commercial  and                                                              
fiscal uncertainties.  He said LNG is a tough  business and buyers                                                              
all want to pay  as little as possible. It is  therefore important                                                              
to  think as  an  owner  and work  to  develop a  predictable  and                                                              
durable fiscal environment.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:54:20 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  BUTT  advised that  there  are  some  issues in  the  process                                                              
design  and  execution  of  an  800  mile  pipeline  across  three                                                              
different  terrains. The  pipeline and  treatment facilities  will                                                              
require 2.2  tons of steel so  putting all the pieces  together is                                                              
a challenge. "They  don't come together like a kit;  you've got to                                                              
weld all  the pipe together,  you've got  to bolt all  the flanges                                                              
together,  you've got  to make sure  that they  all come  together                                                              
just right."  He explained that  the underpinning challenge  is to                                                              
ensure that once  the project is built that the cost  of supply is                                                              
globally competitive.  "We've got to  be able to deliver  LNG from                                                              
Alaska at a price that can compete with anybody in the world."                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT offered  his perspective  that  the strengths  give                                                                   
the project  "a really  good shot"  which is  why the  owners                                                                   
elected to  increase the investment  in the project  and move                                                                   
the  concept into  Pre-FEED. Moving  forward,  the talk  will                                                                   
center on feelings  about FEED, global competitiveness,  cost                                                                   
of supply, and alignment among owners.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:56:00 PM                                                                                                                    
He explained  the [page  7] LNG  plant and storage  facility,                                                                   
which will  be built  by 3,500-5,000  people, is  modularized                                                                   
and will  have a 20 metric  ton capacity. This  translates to                                                                   
about 2.4  billion cubic feet  of gas a  day or 10  times the                                                                   
amount  currently  used  for  export   and  domestic  use  by                                                                   
Alaskans. He highlighted  that the 35 trillion  cubic feet at                                                                   
the top  of the system  can supply the  needs for decades  to                                                                   
come   and  that   this   is   underpinned  by   DeGolyer   &                                                                   
MacNaughton. He  reminded the members  that gas is  liquefied                                                                   
"to make  it small" and thus  easier to transport.  The ratio                                                                   
is 600  to 1.  "If you  don't liquefy  the gas,  you have  to                                                                   
move 600  boats to get  a certain amount  of gas to  a buyer.                                                                   
If you  liquefy the  gas, you  only have  to move one  [boat]                                                                   
and that's why we build these facilities."                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:58:10 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  BUTT explained  the  two berth  LNG  Marine Facility  (LNGMF)                                                              
[page  8] accommodates  LNG motor  vessels (LNGMV)  that are  very                                                              
different from crude oil carriers. He outlined the following:                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
   · An LNGMV is a 300 foot "thermos bottle," built with a lot                                                                  
     of good technology and capacity.                                                                                           
   · The walls are 4 feet thick of foam, balsa wood and                                                                         
     insulating materials.                                                                                                      
   · The idea is to keep the LNG in the tank cold.                                                                              
   · The Alaska LNG Project needs 15 to 18 LNGMVs.                                                                              
   · The Alaska LNG Project believes that the LNGMVs will be in                                                                 
     the 160,000 cubic meter range.                                                                                             
   · A 160,000 cubic meter LNGMV is called a conventional                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
He  noted  that  the  160,000  cubic   meter  LNGMV  is  called  a                                                              
conventional  LNG carrier  with a  capacity ranging  in size  from                                                              
80,000 to 265,000  cubic meters. He specified that  the very large                                                              
265,000 cubic  meter carriers  are for places  in the  Middle East                                                              
where huge  volumes are  going long  distances. He explained  that                                                              
when  one  designs  LNG  carriers   in  marine  routing,  what  is                                                              
actually  being done  is inventory  management.  He detailed  that                                                              
the  objective in  managing  inventory is  keeping  the amount  of                                                              
inventory  down.  Inventory does  not  make  money and  using  the                                                              
giant  LNG  carriers places  large  amounts  of LNG  in  inventory                                                              
until delivery.  He explained that inventory management  entails a                                                              
balancing of  cost between  carrying LNG  as inventory  versus the                                                              
cost of  delivering the LNG.  He pointed  out that Alaska  is very                                                              
close  to  market  and  there  is no  need  to  build  the  large,                                                              
limited-market  LNG  carriers. He  asserted  that  the Alaska  LNG                                                              
Project  needs  more conventional,  smaller  vessels  because  the                                                              
distances are much  smaller. He explained that  the "conventional"                                                              
160,000 cubic  meter LNG carrier  is considered a  sweet-spot that                                                              
allows for a larger range of ports of call.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
He reviewed the following support required for the LNGMVs:                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
   · Tug boats will be required to manage the LNGMVs.                                                                           
   · Work has been done on how LNGMVs will be handled in the                                                                    
     East Cook Inlet.                                                                                                           
   · Ice modeling has been done by the Alaska LNG Project marine                                                                
     team in Gothenburg, Sweden, which has the world's most                                                                     
     advanced ice modeling vessel systems.                                                                                      
   · Work has been done with the Alaskan Pilots Association to                                                                  
     make sure they can move the LNGMVs using Alaskan pilot                                                                     
     characteristics and successfully navigate in a range of                                                                    
     ice, current, and wind conditions.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT  advised that  LNGMVs  are  subject  to  wind due  to  a                                                              
shallow, forty  foot draft versus crude  carriers with a  90 to 95                                                              
foot  draft. The  port requirements  are also  very different.  He                                                              
explained  that  testing and  modeling  has  shown that  the  east                                                              
coast of Cook Inlet  can work having had 40 years  of success with                                                              
LNG. This  LNG plant  has successfully  delivered every  scheduled                                                              
LNG  cargo   load,  which   is  a   very  important  data   point.                                                              
Additionally,  the flat  land in  East Cook Inlet  will make  land                                                              
support less expensive.  Finally, the 90-inch average  annual snow                                                              
load in East Cook  Inlet is much lower than the  averages in other                                                              
parts of  Alaska, some of which  exceed 300 inches.  "Operating an                                                              
LNG plant is demanding  on a daily basis and almost  impossible to                                                              
operate in heavy snow conditions."                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
He said  the Alaska LNG  Project is still  working with  the local                                                              
community  to make  the lead  site happen.  He noted  that two  or                                                              
three alternate sites  have also been identified in  the event the                                                              
lead site does not  work. He remarked that the  Alaska LNG Project                                                              
feels good about  moving forward with its design work  if the site                                                              
requires  a  little moving  around.  He  explained that  the  NEPA                                                              
process  is  the trigger  on  site  adjustments. He  reminded  the                                                              
members  that this  is  the process  that  brings  in the  federal                                                              
regulator  and increases  community engagement.  He asserted  that                                                              
the Alaska  LNG Project feels good  about where it is  in the site                                                              
process and is moving forward.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT  explained that the  800 mile pipe  will be 42  inches in                                                              
diameter and  carry an average of  3.3 billion cubic feet  per day                                                              
(BCFD)  [page  9]. He  said  the  reason  for  a 3.7  BCFD  permit                                                              
application  is to cover  Alaska's added  cold day demands  during                                                              
the  winter.  He specified  that  the  Alaska LNG  Project  design                                                              
allows  for  400 to  450  million  cubic  feet  of added  gas  for                                                              
Alaskans when it is cold.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Additional  pipeline  details  include   that  it  will  be  built                                                              
between  Point Thomson  and the  North Slope  Gas Treatment  Plant                                                              
(GTP), 8  compressor stations  will be  required and the  pipeline                                                              
will  have   the  capacity  to   heat  the  gas   during  freezing                                                              
temperatures. He  summarized that a  lot of work centers  on cost,                                                              
schedules, and supporting the federal regulatory work.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:04:54 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. BUTT  reiterated that the purpose  of the Gas  Treatment Plant                                                              
(GTP) [page  10] is  to remove impurities.  He explained  that all                                                              
non-hydrocarbons  must be  removed before  the gas  can enter  the                                                              
pipeline  and  Prudhoe  Bay  has  a  very high,  11  percent,  CO                                                               
                                                                 2                                                              
content.  In  the past  two  years,  the  Alaska LNG  Project  has                                                              
focused  on making  the  gas treatment  plant  more efficient  and                                                              
better   able   to  remove   impurities   because   industry   has                                                              
historically stayed away from  large CO  resources due to expense.                                                              
                                       2                                                                                        
The effort has been  focused on ways to reduce the  plant size and                                                              
making  the trains  more  efficient. GTP  vessels  were made  more                                                              
efficient by  changing interior packings  and how the  gas touches                                                              
the liquids that  remove the impurities. He noted  that the vessel                                                              
change has  decreased cost  estimates by  hundreds of  millions of                                                              
dollars. He  pointed out that GTP  reactor-tower is 128  feet tall                                                              
and the  thickness is  12 to 14  inches thick.  He added  that the                                                              
reactor-tower  will  be fabricated  from  a 12  to  14 inch  thick                                                              
piece of  steel that  is 30 feet  by 128  feet. He explained  that                                                              
the  piece of  steel  will be  folded  to make  a  vessel that  is                                                              
basically a  tube with  a shell  at the top  and bottom  to handle                                                              
the pressures.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT reported  that the Alaska  LNG Project has done  a lot of                                                              
work with the PBU-interface focusing on power systems and the CO                                                                
                                                                 2                                                              
systems  integration. He  related  that the  Prudhoe Bay  operator                                                              
has done a great  job of trying to understand how  to take the gas                                                              
out and move it  so that the gas can be produced  in a manner that                                                              
does not compromise oil.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:08:03 PM                                                                                                                    
He  explained   that  interface   work  will   be  staged   during                                                              
turnarounds   to    avoid   adversely   impacting    Prudhoe   Bay                                                              
productivity.  He   detailed  that  over  the  next   five  years,                                                              
compressors will  be modified during maintenance to  move gas from                                                              
Prudhoe Bay  to the project  at the right  pressure and  the right                                                              
temperature.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT  informed  the  members  that  the  Point  Thomson  (PT)                                                              
operator  and the  PT  working interest  owners  have invested  in                                                              
excess of  $2 billion  building the PTU  central pad  and ensuring                                                              
readiness  to export  condensate  in early  2016.  He pointed  out                                                              
that PTU  is a  $2 billion  facility that  will require  more than                                                              
$1.5  billion to  finish the  wells and  compression. He  revealed                                                              
that  when  the current  PT  team  is finished  with  the  initial                                                              
production  system,  the  project  team  will  work  with  the  PT                                                              
operator  to expand  the  facilities  to provide  gas  exportation                                                              
capabilities.  He noted  that  the current  facilities  at PT  can                                                              
only export  oil so  a gas  pipeline and  compression facility  is                                                              
needed to move gas.  The Alaska LNG Project has  been working with                                                              
the  PT  operator  and  the  PT  working  interest  owners  in  an                                                              
integrated   manner   so   that   PT   accommodates   the   design                                                              
characteristics  of the plant.  He pointed  out the importance  in                                                              
maintaining  gas   temperature  delivery  parameters   for  better                                                              
recovery  across  the  system.  He  summarized  that  the  project                                                              
design  decisions  are  predicated  on looking  on  an  integrated                                                              
basis  and  trying  to  make  sure  that  any  design  honors  the                                                              
principles  of alignment,  risk,  and cost.  "Molecules are  moved                                                              
all  over  the  system  and  the   Alaska  LNG  Project  wants  to                                                              
understand what happens to the molecules."                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:11:10 PM                                                                                                                    
He  related  that the  Alaska  LNG  Project  team consists  of  27                                                              
leadership roles  with over 800 combined years  of experience and,                                                              
on average,  over 30  years of experience  individually.  He noted                                                              
that the  phrase best-players-play  was used  to describe  the way                                                              
the  project  team  was assembled.  The  Joint  Venture  Agreement                                                              
(JVA)  calls   for  each  company   to  select  people   with  the                                                              
experience  necessary to  do all  of the work  and be  successful.                                                              
For  example  the  Alaska  LNG Project  plant  manager  built  the                                                              
Qatargas (3) trains  and his engineering manager built  the RL (2)                                                              
trains, the  RL (3) trains, the  Qatargas (2) trains, the  PNG (2)                                                              
trains, and  personally designed  multiple  LNG plants. This  very                                                              
competent manager  and his team  provide a lot of  confidence that                                                              
the LNG plant will  be designed right. He asserted  that this same                                                              
level  of capability  was found  in every  one of  the Alaska  LNG                                                              
Project teams.  He pointed out  that most individuals  have global                                                              
experience and many are Alaska alumni.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:13:51 PM                                                                                                                    
He  detailed that  the Alaska  LNG Project  teams are  co-located,                                                              
which  means workers  are placed  where the  contractors and  work                                                              
is. He said  the Alaska LNG  Project has doubled its  office space                                                              
in Anchorage  with 30 individuals,  and it  has a new  building in                                                              
Houston  where all  the parties  can get  together and  work in  a                                                              
single project  office. The  Houston office  accommodates  work on                                                              
really difficult  problems in real-time. He noted  that the Alaska                                                              
LNG  Project also  has an  office  in Calgary.  Jack Beattie  runs                                                              
that  office  this  is  where  all  of  the  pipeline  people  are                                                              
located.  He  pointed  out  that  taking work  to  the  people  is                                                              
important due  to the  many contractors  involved in the  project.                                                              
He related that  each team is purposefully integrated  with people                                                              
from  every   company  to  ensure   that  all  views   and  design                                                              
philosophies  are  represented.  He  noted  that  the  Alaska  LNG                                                              
Project is  nearly finished with  hiring and the current  focus is                                                              
on contracting.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT  reported that the  LNG export application  was submitted                                                              
to  the Department  of Energy  (DOE) on  July 16,  2014, with  key                                                              
requests [page  14]. He explained  that this is  important because                                                              
it underpins  the economy  of scale  that drives  down costs.  For                                                              
this reason, they  have worked very hard with DOE  over the last 9                                                              
to  12 months  so all  the parties  understand and  agree what  is                                                              
needed to make  the project successful. "I got  this 200-plus page                                                              
book [of]  the fundamental characteristics  that the DOE  wants to                                                              
understand."  DOE   wants  to  understand  is  does   the  project                                                              
represent  the  owners of  the  gas?" DOE  wants  to  know if  the                                                              
applicant has the  experience to build and execute  a project like                                                              
this  and if  the experience  of the  team and  the resources  are                                                              
sufficient to build it.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
He  advised that  the DOE  just changed  the rules  for an  export                                                              
permit  application so  that applicants  are now  required to  get                                                              
the  EIS and  show that  they  are working  with  the FERS  before                                                              
submitting  their  application.  The  idea  is  to  weed  out  the                                                              
speculators.  He related  that  the DOE  Secretary  Moniz and  his                                                              
team has been very helpful.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:18:39 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. BUTT  related that the Alaska  LNG Project has asked  for some                                                              
very unique permit  applications. First, have asked  for the right                                                              
to export  20 million  tons per  year (MTA) of  LNG for  30 years.                                                              
Most export  applications are  for 15 to  20 years and  they asked                                                              
for  30  years  to  have  confidence  that  longer  exports  would                                                              
generate  the  kind of  returns  to  underpin the  investment.  He                                                              
pointed out  that it gets  back to mitigating  risk and  cost. The                                                              
federal government  has been  incredibly  supportive and  said the                                                              
Alaska challenges  are great enough  and the project  is important                                                              
enough that they would handle it a little bit differently.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT related  that  the  project also  asked  for  a 12  year                                                              
period  between   receipt  of  the  permit  and   commencement  of                                                              
operations, rather  that the regular, short construction  cycle of                                                              
7  to 10  years.  This provides  more  flexibility  which is  risk                                                              
mitigation. "The  federal government  has been very  supportive of                                                              
this"                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
He said  the third  and most important  difference between  Alaska                                                              
projects  and  others  is  confirmation  of  a  1988  Presidential                                                              
Finding that characterized  Alaskan gas as stranded  and available                                                              
for export.  They are waiting  for confirmation that  this finding                                                              
is  valid, but  both DOE  and the  administration  have been  very                                                              
supportive.    In   fact,   the    president's   energy    advisor                                                              
characterized  the administration's  support  for  the project  as                                                              
enthusiastic. "So  we're pushing these  three issues and  we think                                                              
that that gives us the right to export the gas."                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
He  stated that  one  other  thing that  DOE  has  offered to  the                                                              
project  is a  conditional approval  before the  FEED decision  is                                                              
made. This  was requested because the  costs are so great  and DOE                                                              
agreed. "We  felt that was very  supportive and to date  we've had                                                              
a good relationship  with them and we're very hopeful  that we can                                                              
continue to preserve that goodwill."                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:22:17 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. BUTT  discussed the  NEPA Pre-File  request that was  approved                                                              
by  FERC September  12,  2014,  noting  that it  triggers  ongoing                                                              
community  consultation and  near term activities.  He noted  that                                                              
this first  step in getting the  EIS went smoothly because  of the                                                              
work that was already done with the FERC and NEPA.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     We really appreciate  that they have been  proactive and                                                                   
     helpful  in guiding  us to  make  sure that  we get  the                                                                   
     right EIS  because that is  the most important  document                                                                   
     required to  get the permits to construct  and they have                                                                   
     been very  helpful on  it, trying to  help us make  sure                                                                   
     we get the  right third party agent, making  sure we get                                                                   
     the right  stakeholders and  interested parties  engaged                                                                   
     so that we start doing what's called Resource Reports.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
He explained  that these  reports summarize  the work  that's been                                                              
done  to demonstrate  that  there  will be  no  adverse impact  on                                                              
cultural  resources, soils,  land use,  air and  noise quality  as                                                              
well  as how  that  particular site  compares  to  all the  others                                                              
sites. "Which means  you have to have looked at  all others." This                                                              
reduces risk  moving toward the EIS  and then the final  report is                                                              
due  during FEED.  "[This] is  an  even more  detailed process  to                                                              
make sure  that the  risks of  securing these  documents has  been                                                              
mitigated." Mr.  Butt then recapped that FERC  coordinates federal                                                              
oversight  and the  interactions  with  all federal  agencies.  He                                                              
cited the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers as an example.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:25:10 PM                                                                                                                    
MR  BUTT  reported   that  the  Alaska  LNG  Project   has  worked                                                              
extensively  with  the  Alaska   Gasline  Development  Corporation                                                              
(AGDC) to  ensure there is alignment  with the Alaska  Stand Alone                                                              
Pipeline  (ASAP). The  effort is  focused  on using  a common  and                                                              
making sure that  when one project gathers data  it's available to                                                              
the other project.  "We all understand that there's  two pipelines                                                              
in the same corridor." He continued to say the following:                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     We  are eminently  trading  data between  Livengood  and                                                                   
     Prudhoe  Bay  which  some of  the  parties  own  through                                                                   
     Trans  Alaska Pipeline  System  (TAPS), Alaska  Pipeline                                                                   
     Project  (APP), and  the  Alaska Gas  Pipeline  (Denali)                                                                   
     with other parties  who need that data for  their design                                                                   
     work.  ASAP   in  turn  is   providing  data   south  of                                                                   
     Livengood  that they  have  worked over  the last  three                                                                   
     years  so  that  as  we  look  at  the  route  south  of                                                                   
     Livengood, we're only working on the data once.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT  said they  worked to  have the  right framework  and the                                                              
right confidentiality  agreements  in place  and he would  suggest                                                              
it's important  to put  that statement  in a competitive  context.                                                              
"We want to  be able to manage  the work so that we  share it with                                                              
the state  and the  state's agencies,  but we  don't share  it too                                                              
broadly." He agreed  with Commissioner Balash that the  idea is to                                                              
be   as  transparent   as   possible,  while   understanding   the                                                              
importance  of confidentiality.  This is how  risk is  managed and                                                              
costs driven down.                                                                                                              
K                                                                                                                               
2:27:42 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. BUTT  reviewed the summer field  season [page 16].  He advised                                                              
that  the route  between Livengood  and Wasilla  was surveyed.  He                                                              
directed  attention   to  a  list   of  the  fieldwork   that  was                                                              
accomplished, including  the approximately 10,000 acres  that were                                                              
tested  looking for  remnants of  early human  activity. He  noted                                                              
that  most  of  the  anthropological  models  suggest  that  early                                                              
humans  came across  the Bering  Strait and across  this route  to                                                              
populate  North America.  He explained the  measured process  when                                                              
the archeologists  find something of  interest and the  steps that                                                              
are taken to ensure  that the route goes nowhere  near anything of                                                              
significance.  The intent is  to catalog  and preserve  sites that                                                              
are  of cultural  significance  and demonstrate  in  the EIS  that                                                              
cultural  resources  or any  of  the other  things  listed in  the                                                              
resource  reports are not  impacted. "You  can see  a list  of all                                                              
the sites  that we've  worked and all  of the different  waterways                                                              
and lakes and streams."                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                              
2:30:45 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  BUTT discussed  the  importance of  field  crew safety  [page                                                              
17].  He  stated   that  the  project  is  proud   of  its  safety                                                              
performance and  the cultural caring  that the team has  built. He                                                              
noted that  the team  has worked  in excess  of 140,000  hours and                                                              
driven 300,000  miles, always  with an eye  on safe  execution. He                                                              
highlighted  that  these  crews  receive  extensive  survival  and                                                              
learn-to-return training  because they travel to and  work in very                                                              
remote  areas,  sometimes  under   harsh  weather  conditions.  He                                                              
related that  another thing that  was done this year  is something                                                              
called "escalation  potential."  It's a different  way of  looking                                                              
at safety.  The idea is  to look not only  at what did  happen but                                                              
what  could have  happened.  He  cited the  example  of finding  a                                                              
helicopter  with a  bad tail  bushing after  careful hazard  hunts                                                              
and maintenance  procedures and fixing  the problem before  it was                                                              
put back  in service.  He continued  to explain  that the  project                                                              
has  begun to  hold "Safety  Stand Ups"  as a  way of  recognizing                                                              
safe  performance. This  is opposed  to the  "Safety Stand  Downs"                                                              
that  take place  after  someone is  hurt and  work  stops so  the                                                              
incident can  be discussed. Safety  Stand Ups are a  more positive                                                              
approach and build a cultural framework of safety.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTTS  displayed the list [page  18] of Alaskan  business that                                                              
are  involved  in  the  Alaska LNG  Project.  He  noted  that  the                                                              
spending to  date is close to  $35 million and will  probably rise                                                              
to $40  million  by the end  of the  season. Work  is expected  to                                                              
continue until October  because it is concentrated  farther south.                                                              
He  noted that  the total  contractor  workforce is  255 about  80                                                              
percent  of  which are  Alaskans.  Mr.  Butt displayed  photos  of                                                              
various  workers  from the  summer  field  season and  noted  that                                                              
safety  coins  are  presented to  individuals  executing  work  to                                                              
encourage and promote a positive work environment.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
He  provided an  overview  of the  Alaska  LNG Project's  website,                                                              
explaining  that the website's  important characteristics  include                                                              
the following:                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
  · Allows people to talk directly to the Alaska LNG Project.                                                                   
   · Provides access for contractors interested in work.                                                                        
   · Provides   contractors   the    ability   to   submit   their                                                              
     capabilities.                                                                                                              
   · Includes a community session calendar.                                                                                     
   · Summarizes the various projects.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT stated  that the  Alaska LNG  Project is  at a  critical                                                              
juncture  and   continuing  a  successful  trajectory   will  make                                                              
alignment  perseverance with  all  the owners  more important.  He                                                              
remarked that  risks and  costs must be  driven out.  He concluded                                                              
the presentation  an alignment metaphor  where people  are pushing                                                              
and pulling  a whipsaw as a  team, working under  harsh conditions                                                              
and with  great challenges. It takes  the same type  of commitment                                                              
to work together as a team to build a pipeline.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:36:25 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR GIESSEL opened the forum to questions.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR BISHOP  asked about  using X80 pipe  and if there  are any                                                              
mills in North America that can roll it.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT answered  that there are several mills with  X80 pipe. He                                                              
noted that  Jack Beattie's team  is looking at possibly  using X70                                                              
pipe during the Pre-FEED stage.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
He explained that  X80 refers to a wall thickness  of eight tenths                                                              
of an  inch, (0.814).  He stated  that the  Alaska LNG  Project is                                                              
looking at  a wall thickness that  makes the most sense  on an 800                                                              
mile pipeline  built 40 feet at  a time. He noted that  one option                                                              
is to  make the pipe  wall thickness a  little different  and that                                                              
makes  a  huge  difference.  He  noted  that  where  the  pipe  is                                                              
purchased  determines the  pipe quality,  cost, and difficulty  in                                                              
moving.  He said the  Alaska LNG  Project is  working hard  during                                                              
the   Pre-FEED   process  on   pipe   sourcing  with   the   right                                                              
specifications. He detailed the specifications as follows:                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     To operate at  about 2075 pounds per square  inch (PSI),                                                                   
     which  is called American  National Standards  Institute                                                                   
     (ANSI) 900  spec, the reason  that's important  is ANSI-                                                                   
     900  is  a very  common  pipe  spec,  there's a  lot  of                                                                   
     different  flanges and  different  valves and  equipment                                                                   
     that  is  readily  available.  If you  go  to  a  higher                                                                   
     pressure,  it's   a  much  more  specialized   piece  of                                                                   
     equipment,  it requires  much heavier  walls, it's  much                                                                   
     more  complex,  and even  if  you  can manage  the  cost                                                                   
     elements you increase the risk.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DYSON asked if they  anticipate that CO  from the GTP will                                                              
                                               2                                                                                
have  a monetary  value  in  utilized reservoir  pressure  lifting                                                              
heavy oil.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:39:14 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. BUTT  answered that  enhanced oil  recovery benefits  from CO                                                               
                                                                 2                                                              
reinjection  will  not be  seen  in  Prudhoe  Bay. There  will  be                                                              
pressure benefits, but oil viscosity will not be reduced.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:40:37 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  DYSON asked  if  there  are existing  wells  that can  be                                                              
modified for reinjection.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT answered  correct.  He explained  that  Prudhoe Bay  has                                                              
used what's  called the  Miscible Injection  System (MIS)  for the                                                              
past  25 plus  years  to handle  the  higher  end products  called                                                              
lighter hydrocarbon  products (LHP); they  cannot be put  into the                                                              
Trans-Alaska Pipeline System (TAPS).                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE   P.  WILSON  noted   the  need  to   maintain  gas                                                              
temperatures  in the  pipeline and  asked if  they have taken  the                                                              
impact from climate change into consideration.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
2:42:05 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. BUTT  answered that ambient  temperature models  indicate that                                                              
climate change  is very slow. He  explained that the  intention is                                                              
not to  contribute or  adversely impact  climate change.  He noted                                                              
that another reason for  CO reinjection is  not to release the gas                                                              
                           2                                                                                                    
into the atmosphere.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:43:29 PM                                                                                                                    
CO-CHAIR SADDLER  expressed appreciation for the  presentation and                                                              
remarked that  he is glad to see  a lot of work is  being done. He                                                              
asked Mr.  Butt how  he would  address advocates  who ask  to stop                                                              
wasting time with studying and start building the project.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT   said  he  understands   and  respects  the   sense  of                                                              
impatience  and skepticism and  he understands  the desire  of the                                                              
folks  in  Fairbanks  to  see  affordable   energy.  However,  the                                                              
federal  government  has  specific  construction  regulations  for                                                              
when  a  project  can  begin.  He  emphasized  that  any  sort  of                                                              
construction  activity prior  to  receiving the  right permits  is                                                              
illegal, and  that the  Alaska LNG Project  was going  through the                                                              
required   process  to   generate   successful   export  and   EIS                                                              
applications. He  reiterated his previous statements  about making                                                              
sure that  every archaeological  site is  found and not  adversely                                                              
impacted  and  asserted   that  doing  things  right   has  to  be                                                              
respected, too.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:45:54 PM                                                                                                                    
CO-CHAIR SADDLER  noted that  skeptics have  said that  the Alaska                                                              
LNG  Project  is moot  if  the  Alaska  Oil and  Gas  Conservation                                                              
Commission (AOGCC) does not give off-take permission.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:46:10 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. BUTT  answered that the Alaska  LNG Project has had  some good                                                              
meetings  with AOGCC.  He explained  that AOGCC  has a mandate  to                                                              
understand  how the  state's oil  recovery will  be maximized.  He                                                              
noted that AOGCC  works on behalf of the Legislature.  He said the                                                              
Alaska  LNG Project  has tried to  make AOGCC  understand  why the                                                              
project,  design,  and offtakes  make  sense.  He added  that  the                                                              
Alaska  LNG Project  will  be working  with  AOGCC's senior  staff                                                              
over  the   next  several  months   to  address   their  technical                                                              
questions;  the  Prudhoe  Bay  operator   and  the  Point  Thomson                                                              
operator  are leading  that  work because  they  own the  upstream                                                              
data and  they have relationships  with AOGCC. He said  the Alaska                                                              
LNG Project  hopes in the  first half of 2015  to be able  to have                                                              
the  right  hearings  with  the  commissioners  to  address  their                                                              
concerns and  demonstrate why  producing 30  to 35 trillion  cubic                                                              
feet of gas over  the life of the project makes  sense and why the                                                              
Alaska LNG  Project can  do it in  the right  way to minimize  any                                                              
adverse impacts on hydrocarbon recovery.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  TARR asked  Mr. Butt  to address  the Pt.  Thomson                                                              
development.  She inquired what  part of  the remaining  work will                                                              
be paid by the Alaska LNG Project versus the operator.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT advised  that all work at Pt. Thomson is  paid for by the                                                              
Pt.  Thomson  working  interest  owners.  He  explained  that  Pt.                                                              
Thomson is a  unit operation and everything that  Pt. Thomson does                                                              
to  deliver gas  to the  Alaska  LNG Project  is  through the  Pt.                                                              
Thomson working  interest owners.  He added  that the  Prudhoe Bay                                                              
CO  system will be done  by the Prudhoe Bay operator  and paid for                                                              
  2                                                                                                                             
through the  unit. He said the  Alaska LNG Project design  work is                                                              
done  in  conjunction  so  that  it works  in  an  integrated  and                                                              
seamless  manner because  the working interest  owners at  Prudhoe                                                              
Bay and Pt.  Thomson are in  the Alaska LNG Project.  He continued                                                              
to  explain the  work  being done  at  Pt. Thomson  operations  as                                                              
follows:                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     The work that  the current Pt. Thomson team  is doing to                                                                   
     move  condensate  to  the  Badami  oil  field  has  been                                                                   
     designed  with the  expectation  that, at  some time  in                                                                   
     the future,  gas export will begin. They have  built the                                                                   
     system  large enough  that in  the event  they begin  to                                                                   
     produce more  condensate, the  pipeline they have  built                                                                   
     is  properly  sized. The  wells  they are  drilling  are                                                                   
     properly  positioned and  designed  for both  condensate                                                                   
     production  and  gas  production. What's  missing  is  a                                                                   
     couple extra  wells to increase  gas production  and the                                                                   
     compression  facilities to move  the gas and  a pipeline                                                                   
     to  move the  gas from  Pt. Thomson.  So everything  the                                                                   
     Pt. Thomson working interest owners are doing through                                                                      
       the unit operator, right now, will be used in the                                                                        
     event the Alaska LNG Project goes forward.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  TARR asked  if the  Alaska LNG  Project will  bear                                                              
the pipeline cost from Pt. Thomson to Prudhoe Bay.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT answered yes.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:50:22 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE  KAWASAKI asked if  information that  was developed                                                              
under the Denali  Line, TC, and  AGDC is being shared  so that the                                                              
work isn't redundant.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT answered  yes. He  then  directed attention  to page  15                                                              
shows data  exists from  the previous TAPS,  APP, Denali  and ASAP                                                              
pipeline  projects and  the framework  that's  been developed  for                                                              
sharing data and coordinating work efforts going forward.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR FEIGE  addressed pipe thickness  and noted that  Mr. Butt                                                              
talked  about  using different  schedule  pipe.  He asked  if  the                                                              
Alaska LNG  Project was looking  at different pipe  thicknesses at                                                              
different  points  in the  line,  depending  on pressures  in  the                                                              
pipe.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT deferred the question to Jack Beattie.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:53:27 PM                                                                                                                    
JACK  BEATTIE, Pipeline  Manager, Alaska  LNG Project,  Anchorage,                                                              
Alaska, explained  that pipeline  thickness is generally  the same                                                              
except in  areas with  population density,  at valve stations  and                                                              
at compressor stations.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT  added  that  the  intent is  to  always  keep  the  gas                                                              
temperature and pressure relatively constant.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  FEIGE noted that  future pipeline  expansion has  always                                                              
been one  of the  state's long  term interest  in the  project. He                                                              
asked if  going to  Schedule-70 pipe will  affect the  ability for                                                              
pipeline expansion.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR. BEATTIE  replied that pipeline  expansion is in  the project's                                                              
long term  interest as  well. He  explained that  he did  not know                                                              
that  the schedule  of pipe  would  particularly affect  expanding                                                              
the pipeline.  He pointed out that  going with 42 inch  pipe makes                                                              
it more likely to obtain pipe in North America.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT  added that the system  has been very  carefully designed                                                              
and balanced with  expansion firmly in mind. He  asserted that the                                                              
Alaska  LNG Project  understands  the importance  of expansion  to                                                              
the owners as follows:                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     I'm going to  come back to owners, alignment,  cost, and                                                                   
     risk. We  understand owner issues around  expansion. The                                                                   
     Heads  of Agreement  (HOA) that was  signed in  December                                                                   
     has some  very good language  in there on expansion  and                                                                   
     how each  owner, individually,  has the right  to manage                                                                   
     expansion as  long as it doesn't adversely  impact other                                                                   
     owners;  that's a  very  important characteristic  of  a                                                                   
     successful agreement  where we have preserved  alignment                                                                   
     to honor  owner issues  and mitigate  risk and  mitigate                                                                   
     cost. The current  design is pretty well  balanced there                                                                   
     because  if  I  could suggest,  on  average,  we  handle                                                                   
     about  3.3  BCF at  the  top,  through 3  gas  treatment                                                                   
     plants,  we  put  about  3  BCF  into  the  pipeline  to                                                                   
     deliver  about 2.4 BCF  to the LNG  plant, where  3 LNG-                                                                   
     trains  process it. The  pipeline as  its design  with 8                                                                   
     compression stations  can be expanded 20 to  30 percent,                                                                   
     which is somewhere  between 800 million and  1 BCF which                                                                   
     is very nicely  one more (GDTP) and one  more LNG-train.                                                                   
     So as  it stands, it's designed  with that in  mind, and                                                                   
     with all due respect, it's not an accident.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:56:46 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE  HAWKER  stated   that  he  looks  forward  to  the                                                              
project  actually  reaching  the  anticipated  FEED  decision.  He                                                              
asked what the major  obstacles are for the Alaska  LNG Project in                                                              
reaching the FEED  decision. He asked what the  legislators should                                                              
be mindful  of in order to  anticipate and aid the  project moving                                                              
forward towards FEED.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT  replied that  he worries  about the inherent  skepticism                                                              
amongst all  the parties  on whether all  the parties  are willing                                                              
to do the  work and pull the  "whipsaw" when it is their  turn. He                                                              
asserted that  legislators in both  the Senate and  House Resource                                                              
Committees  are the "pointy  end of  the spear"  on how  the state                                                              
ownership  is worked.  He  said  there are  some  things that  the                                                              
legislators can do  to help in terms of addressing  commercial and                                                              
fiscal uncertainty as follows:                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     I  know that  sometimes when  we talk  about fiscal  and                                                                   
     commercial uncertainty  it sounds like one  party trying                                                                   
     to  get  something  out  of the  other  party,  I  would                                                                   
     respectively  suggest that  is not  the case  at all.  I                                                                   
     would suggest  that all of the owners need  some durable                                                                   
     and predictable  terms so that  when they talk  to their                                                                   
     constituents  or  their stakeholders  or  whatever  they                                                                   
     are  accountable  to,  they   understand  that  if  they                                                                   
     invest  the  type of  resources  required to  execute  a                                                                   
     project  of this magnitude,  it will  generate the  kind                                                                   
     of  benefits  that  will  really   help  them  in  their                                                                   
     future.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     Now  I  see   Enalytica  behind  us  and   I  know  that                                                                   
     publically  in  previous hearings  they  suggested  this                                                                   
     project can  generate $3 billion to $4 billion  per year                                                                   
     for the state,  it generates some real benefits  for the                                                                   
     other parties  as well.  I hope that  what we can  do as                                                                   
     owners is  preserve alignment so  that we can  create an                                                                   
     environment  where all  the owners  can reduce risk  and                                                                   
     reduce cost and create a successful project.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     If  we get  into  situations  where we  have  unilateral                                                                   
     behaviors or  drivers and we  can't find common  ground;                                                                   
     that creates  huge risk that ripples through  the buyers                                                                   
     and  the investors,  because  the buyers  and  investors                                                                   
     are  looking very  closely  at the  Alaska LNG  Project.                                                                   
     The  buyers  saw  what  happened  with  the  DOE  export                                                                   
     permit  application,  they saw  the ALASKA  LNG  PROJECT                                                                   
     get posted in  a very timely manner, they  saw Secretary                                                                   
     Moniz  make very favorable  comments,  they saw the  EIS                                                                   
     be accepted,  the NEPA pre-file  and the FERC  agencies,                                                                   
     they saw  that and that says  to the buyers, 'This  is a                                                                   
     place  where maybe  I  can underpin  my  economy in  the                                                                   
     future.   Do  I   have   enough  certainty   that   that                                                                   
     environment is  durable and predictable, that  I'm going                                                                   
     to put  my economy at  risk and buy  LNG from them?'  If                                                                   
     I'm an  investor, am I going  to take the kind  of money                                                                   
     required  to invest  my share  of a $45  billion to  $65                                                                   
     billion project and have confidence in the long haul?                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     The esteemed  group here is probably the  most important                                                                   
     group of  all in creating  that right framework  so that                                                                   
     all  of the  owners can  work together  and create  that                                                                   
     right  alignment  and  there's lots  of  specific  ways,                                                                   
     Commissioner  Balash  is probably  going  to talk  about                                                                   
     some in his presentation up next.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HAWKER replied as follows:                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     I heard some  pretty strong words there, but  one of the                                                                   
     words  used there  was  'unilateralism.'  What I  really                                                                   
     hear is the  need for all of the players  to continue to                                                                   
     work together  towards a common  goal, a common  good to                                                                   
     achieve   the  desired  common   outcome,  it's   fairly                                                                   
     simple, but it's  a big deal. You have put  together big                                                                   
     projects in  your life, some at this table  put together                                                                   
     big industrial  projects; we understand that.  I've also                                                                   
     sat on  this side of this  table since 2003 in  at least                                                                   
     one  committee or  another.  I've watched  not just  you                                                                   
     the commercial  parties having unilateral  self-interest                                                                   
     issues,  but also  the State  of Alaska.  We've kind  of                                                                   
     had,  in my view,  kind of  had a  habit of about  every                                                                   
     two  to   four  years   changing  horses  and   changing                                                                   
     directions.  I  worry  personally  about  the  political                                                                   
     risk  of  the  state  one more  time  trying  to  change                                                                   
     directions   again  and  basically   changing  our   own                                                                   
     philosophy  and saying  we  want to  a  bigger piece  of                                                                   
     this  pie, we  want  more  unilateral control  over  the                                                                   
     outcomes.  I am  just wondering,  what have  you as  the                                                                   
     commercial  parties involved  done to insulate  yourself                                                                   
     from  the possibility  that  the  state steps  up  again                                                                   
     where  one more  time there's  different people  sitting                                                                   
     in  these tables  and  in fact  there  is a  significant                                                                   
     change  in the political  environment  in which you  are                                                                   
     working?  Frankly, in my  opinion, our common  objective                                                                   
     is  gas to  Alaskans, gas  to the  world, and  political                                                                   
     change  is  inevitable.  What   are  you  all  doing  as                                                                   
     business people in this to mitigate that risk?                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT answered as follows:                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     If I  chose words that were  too strong, that  wasn't my                                                                   
     intent. I  wasn't pointing the  finger at any  one party                                                                   
     when  I said  that.  All these  parties  as owners  have                                                                   
     concerns  and issues  that are  unique to  them and  the                                                                   
     challenges  to find  ways for  them to  be aligned.  The                                                                   
     question  that I think  hear is  'What are the  producer                                                                   
     entities  doing in the  event the  state entity  somehow                                                                   
     changes tact  and that the  alignment that is  inscribed                                                                   
     in the  Heads of  Agreement and  very carefully  defined                                                                   
     in   the    joint   venture    agreement   is    somehow                                                                   
     compromised?'                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HAWKER replied that Mr. Butt's assessment was a                                                                  
very fair characterization of his question.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT replied as follows:                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     In that event,  the answer is that the gated  process is                                                                   
     designed to  incrementally increase resource  investment                                                                   
     into the  project as  certainty is  built. One of  those                                                                   
     fundamental  certainties   is  understanding   that  the                                                                   
     state party,  as both  a regulator and  as an owner,  is                                                                   
     ready to move  forward, and that this project  is so big                                                                   
     and  so complex  that without  the  state in  lock-step,                                                                   
     it's going  to be very  difficult to move from  Pre-FEED                                                                   
     to FEED. We'll  have done a lot of great  work and we'll                                                                   
     have moved  this project to  a place where it  has never                                                                   
     been  before,  but we  will  end up  in  the same  place                                                                   
     where it has  been before which is stopped.  I hope that                                                                   
     doesn't happen,  I lose  a lot of  sleep on that  one. I                                                                   
     think with  the folks  at this table,  we have  a chance                                                                   
     to  try and talk  about ways  to make  the project  work                                                                   
     for all  the parties in a  way that makes sense  for all                                                                   
     of  the parties  and finding  that solution-space  where                                                                   
     we  have an  aligned  structure  that reduces  risk  and                                                                   
     drives down cost.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
3:04:28 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR MICCICHE  asked Mr. Butt  to talk about the  total acreage                                                              
footprint  of   the  proposed  facility   in  his   district,  the                                                              
operating versus  buffer acreage,  the status for  acquiring land,                                                              
and the probability for an eminent domain situation.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
3:05:26 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. BUTT answered  that the LNG plant needs somewhere  between 400                                                              
and 600  acres. The  LNG-trains are very  efficient and  will take                                                              
up no more than  40 acres, but the storage tanks  will take a more                                                              
space to  contain potentially spilled  liquid until it  returns to                                                              
a  vapor  state. Also,  80  to  120  acres  will be  required  for                                                              
berthing  and  storage,   in  addition  to  room   for  utilities,                                                              
warehouses, and offices.  He said they want to be  a good neighbor                                                              
and have  durable and  fair terms with  adjacent landowners  and a                                                              
large  enough  footprint  to  provide  a buffer  and  be  able  to                                                              
operate for 30 to 50 years.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
He noted that under  the FERC process, the Alaska  LNG Project has                                                              
sent out  letters to everybody that  might be near the  LNG plant.                                                              
Furthermore, NEPA  requires the project to engage  every landowner                                                              
within approximately  a half  mile from  any possible  plant site.                                                              
He  said  people  are  part  of   the  stakeholder  and  community                                                              
engagement processes.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
3:08:16 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  BUTT stated  that the  Alaska LNG  Project hopes  not to  use                                                              
eminent domain,  but rather  to come  up with  a fair and  durable                                                              
deal with  landowners. "Having  to move a  little will  be another                                                              
part of the puzzle."                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MICCICHE  stated that his community is  thrilled about the                                                              
potential  for the  project  to  be located  in  the district.  He                                                              
asked Mr.  Butt to address the  EIS and concerns about  the impact                                                              
from thousands of workers during the construction phase.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT  answered that  the underpinning of  the NEPA  process in                                                              
FERC's  engagement  is  community  engagement,  making  sure  that                                                              
anybody  that  has  any  concerns   in  the  community  is  heard,                                                              
recognized,  and  addressed.  He  asserted  that  the  Alaska  LNG                                                              
Project manages camps  and environments so that  workers are moved                                                              
in  and  out  to  limit  adverse   impact  on  the  community.  He                                                              
explained that  the work  camps are designed  in the  Pre-FEED and                                                              
perfected  in the  FEED to  make  sure local  communities are  not                                                              
adversely impacted.  He said as  part of the FERC  review process,                                                              
the  Alaska LNG  Project will  share the  work camp  plans with  a                                                              
local  community so  that it  is  comfortable with  the plans  and                                                              
concerns are  incorporated. He noted  that the Alaska  LNG Project                                                              
has an office  in Kenai where folks  can come in and  talk if they                                                              
have  issues.  He  added  that an  open  house  is  scheduled  for                                                              
October 9 in Kenai to answer questions.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT stated  that one ongoing  is to make sure the  Alaska LNG                                                              
Project  honors transparency  and individual  information as  much                                                              
as  possible.  He   noted  that  people  have   asked  why  public                                                              
information is  not posted about  how much the Alaska  LNG Project                                                              
has  paid  for  every  piece  of  land  that  is  purchased.  This                                                              
information  isn't posted  to protect the  privacy of  individuals                                                              
that  sold the  land. Transparency  is important  but the  project                                                              
guidelines dictate  two things: 1. all agreements  with landowners                                                              
have to be  fair and durable, 2.  the Alaska LNG Project  will not                                                              
talk about  other people's land  with anybody else.  He reiterated                                                              
that the intent is to be a good neighbor.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:12:44 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE JOHNSON  noted the  upcoming election and  that the                                                              
composition  of  the Legislature  and  these committees  might  be                                                              
very  different  in   January.  He  asked  Mr.  Butt   if  he  has                                                              
confidence  in AGDC's  independence, durability,  and its  ability                                                              
to  function  if  one  of  the  partners  philosophically  changed                                                              
direction.  He noted his  concern about  alignment and  asked what                                                              
would happen  if the four  producers and TransCanada  were without                                                              
a partner.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT  replied that,  to  date,  AGDC  has been  an  excellent                                                              
participant  in the project.  It was  a signatory  to the  JVA and                                                              
helped structure the  HOA, both of which framed  the path forward.                                                              
If the forward path  changes all of the parties are  going to have                                                              
to reexamine  it, but the key  characteristic is to make  sure the                                                              
HOA and  JVA are  honored. He  continued to  say that  understands                                                              
the  nature  of  the political  process,  but  believes  that  the                                                              
benefits  of  the  project  are  great  enough  and  the  will  of                                                              
Alaskans strong enough to move the project forward.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  JOHNSON  asked  if a  partner  changing  direction                                                              
would adversely affect or jeopardize the project.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT  replied  that  he  is  carefully  avoiding  words  like                                                              
"adverse  impact"  and hesitates  to  speculate.  He continued  as                                                              
follows:                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     As  long as  we  act like  owners  and we  preserve  the                                                                   
     alignment  and we look  to the HOA  and the JVA  for the                                                                   
     structure to  move the path  forward, we'll be  okay. If                                                                   
     we somehow  had any  party moving  away from that,  it's                                                                   
     going to be a problem for all of the parties.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE JOHNSON  commented that maybe the  question was the                                                              
answer.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
3:16:07 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE SEATON  noted the September 25 article  in the Wall                                                              
Street  Journal about  Australia  potentially reserving  up to  15                                                              
percent of  its domestic  gas because  exporting LNG export  would                                                              
potentially triple  the prices for domestic users. He  said he was                                                              
trying to  figure out  how the project  was balancing  local costs                                                              
in Alaska and if they'd be handled by AGDC.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT  answered  that  DNR  and  DOR  are  working  under  the                                                              
framework of  SB 138  to understand  the implications  on domestic                                                              
gas. He continued as follows:                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     To   the  broader   kind   of  economic   framework   of                                                                   
     alternative value,  which is, 'Do I sell  this gas here,                                                                   
     or do  I sell  this gas there?'  That is something  that                                                                   
     you  have to get  the owners  to look  at in an  aligned                                                                   
     manner  and  make  sure  that  you  understand  how  you                                                                   
     reduce the project  risk and reduce the project  cost so                                                                   
     that you  are moving as  much gas  as you can to  export                                                                   
     buyers, which  creates the  economy of scale  to service                                                                   
     Alaskan buyers  and then test  what is that  value. Now,                                                                   
     there is  a lot of different  philosophies on how  to do                                                                   
     that  and there  are different  ways to  look it, but  I                                                                   
     think it's  going to be a  critical test of  the owners'                                                                   
     ability to come  up with an aligned solution  that works                                                                   
     for everybody,  and with that  said, there is  no answer                                                                   
     right  now.  I  kind  of  feel  like  I'm  evading  your                                                                   
     question,  because  there really  isn't  an answer  yet;                                                                   
     but that's something  maybe we can owe you  an answer on                                                                   
     either    through    the   executive    sessions    that                                                                   
     Commissioner Balash  referenced or through some  kind of                                                                   
     future  public session  because you  probably are  going                                                                   
     to want to  work that hard in executive  session to test                                                                   
     it  from a lot  of different  angles and  then frame  it                                                                   
     the  right  way  that  it   can  be  communicated  in  a                                                                   
     broader, transparent way at the right time.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SEATON replied  that  he was  specifically  asking                                                              
the question  to make sure that  the public understands  that that                                                              
is being  analyzed or will be  analyzed by the Alaska  LNG Project                                                              
and it's not being ignored.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT  agreed that in-state pricing  was one of the  top issues                                                              
that the Alaska  LNG Project teams were looking at  right now, but                                                              
that  all of  the  owners were  not  necessarily  aligned in  this                                                              
area.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
3:21:34 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR BISHOP  asked about the  working relationship  between the                                                              
project and  the regional  Native corporations  and local  village                                                              
councils along the route.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT  replied that  to date,  the Alaska  LNG Project  has had                                                              
over 50  community engagement meetings  and discussions  with many                                                              
but not  all Native  communities, both  on and  off the  route. He                                                              
noted that  there is a  plan in FERC to  make sure the  Alaska LNG                                                              
Project speaks  to every Native  Alaskan community  that expresses                                                              
any interest. He  maintained that meeting with  interested Alaskan                                                              
communities was  part of the process  to make sure the  Alaska LNG                                                              
Project  speaks  with  everyone.  To date,  the  engagements  with                                                              
Alaska Native  communities  has been very  positive. They  realize                                                              
that a  $45 billion  to $65  billion investment  in the  state has                                                              
some  potential benefits  for everyone.  He  noted that  a lot  of                                                              
Native communities  have the opportunity  to benefit  from working                                                              
on  the project  and understand  the energy  benefits for  heating                                                              
homes by moving  gas from north to south or by  moving LNG through                                                              
port receivers.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
3:23:52 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE TARR  addressed workforce readiness  and noted that                                                              
Mr.  Butt mentioned  where  the  Alaska  LNG Project's  27  member                                                              
leadership  team came  from. She  asked about  the near term  need                                                              
for workforce readiness  for individuals that will  hopefully work                                                              
on the project.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT replied  that one  of the  Pre-FEED studies  is a  labor                                                              
study to address the following project workforce questions:                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
   · How do you get all of the folks?                                                                                           
   · How do you get all of the right skills?                                                                                    
   · How do you balance the skills that Alaskan residents                                                                       
       have versus those skills that you have to bring in                                                                       
     from elsewhere?                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
He advised  that there would be  a significant need for  folks who                                                              
can  do specialty  work  on pipeline  welding  machines, but  that                                                              
wouldn't last very  long so it wasn't a good place  to build local                                                              
skills. He  said the Alaska LNG  Project has a process  to look at                                                              
labor  availability and  local skill  sets. He  revealed that  the                                                              
Alaska  LNG Project  has had  many meetings  with Alaska  training                                                              
facilities and  knows that a  significant investment must  be made                                                              
in the  facilities to  start building  capability. He  stated that                                                              
workforce readiness  was referenced in the HOA.  He explained that                                                              
coming  out  of  Pre-FEED  was the  place  where  workforce  skill                                                              
development  was identified.  He  set forth  that  the Alaska  LNG                                                              
Project knows a  lot of people will be needed. He  said the Alaska                                                              
LNG Project  wants to  get the  long term  benefit by getting  the                                                              
right people in  the right place. He pointed out  that the obvious                                                              
difference  was operators  and  noted that  all  of the  operators                                                              
would  come from  Alaska.  He stated  that  the tougher  workforce                                                              
hiring  challenges   related  to   drivers  hauling   pipe,  heavy                                                              
excavation,   and   activities   where   skills   are   not   very                                                              
transferrable.  He  acknowledged   that  balancing  the  workforce                                                              
would take a lot more study than was currently not done.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:26:09 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE P.  WILSON asked if  the project changes  the route                                                              
when it coming across a cultural heritage site.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT  replied that  they have  only found  a couple  of places                                                              
that required  major reroutes.  He explained  that the  sites that                                                              
are  found are  very exciting  and  the Alaska  LNG Project  makes                                                              
sure  to  work  with  the  State  Historical  Preservation  Office                                                              
(AHPO)  on  preservation.  He  noted   that  moving  the  pipeline                                                              
earlier in the process is a lot easier than moving it later on.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR GIESSEL  thanked Mr.  Butt and  noted that his  presentation                                                              
was robust. She  announced that the third agenda item  would be to                                                              
hear  from Commissioner  Balash  and  Commissioner  Rodell on  the                                                              
progress of  the project from  the state's prospective.  She noted                                                              
that 61 viewers were watching the meeting on AK Legislative TV.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
^Progress  from the State's  Perspective  - Commissioner  Balash &                                                              
Commissioner Rodell                                                                                                             
 Progress from the State's Perspective - Commissioner Balash &                                                              
                      Commissioner Rodell                                                                                   
                                                                                                                              
COMMISSIONER  JOE BALASH  explained  that he  wanted  Mr. Butt  to                                                              
lead the overview  to address the meat-of-the-project  and provide                                                              
specific  information.   He  remarked  that  his   overview  would                                                              
address the following:                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
   · The human resources being devoted by the other project                                                                     
     sponsors towards the effort.                                                                                               
   · Employee hires and expertise added to the project.                                                                         
   · Project progress to date.                                                                                                  
   · The provision required by SB 138.                                                                                          
   · Touch base on things that were suggested, added, or                                                                        
     strongly hinted at.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
He  provided  a  brief  summary  of  the  Alaska  LNG  Project  as                                                              
follows:                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
   · Heads of Agreement (HOA) signed in January, 2014.                                                                          
     -The HOA outlines a roadmap for the parties.                                                                               
   · SB 138 passed and signed by the Governor on May 8, 2014.                                                                   
   · Terms were reached in a bilateral fashion with TransCanada                                                                 
     in June, 2014.                                                                                                             
    -Agreement terminated the Alaska Gasline Inducement Act                                                                     
      (AGIA) license.                                                                                                           
     -Demonstrated the parties' ability to get things done in a                                                                 
      rapid fashion when motivated.                                                                                             
   · Joint Venture Agreement (JVA) was executed the end of June,                                                                
     2014.                                                                                                                      
   · DOE Export License application was filed in July, 2014.                                                                    
   · Pre-file paperwork was filed in early September.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
3:32:05 PM                                                                                                                    
COMMISSIONER  BALASH continued  that  between the  accomplishments                                                              
previously noted,  the Department  of Natural Resources  (DNR) has                                                              
focused  on   developing  the   confidentiality  agreements   (CA)                                                              
necessary for the  state to be treated as an equal  partner in the                                                              
Alaska  LNG Project.  He continued  to explain  the CA process  as                                                              
follows:                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     For   the  past   40  some   odd   years,  the   state's                                                                   
     relationship  with  the  leasees   has  engendered  some                                                                   
     adversarial  moments.  The  sharing of  information  was                                                                   
     not  always   in  the  interests   of  all   parties  to                                                                   
     accommodate  the  state's  curiosity  or  otherwise  our                                                                   
     interest, and  that has required a change in  the way we                                                                   
     think about  information moving  back and forth  between                                                                   
     the other parties  and the state. It took a  fair bit of                                                                   
     time  this summer  to work  through how  we handle  that                                                                   
     information  so it's  not  just about  getting  a CA  in                                                                   
     place,   but  also  dealing   internally  within   state                                                                   
     government  on  the  handling of  that  information  and                                                                   
     creating  firewalls  between those  people  who will  be                                                                   
     making  regulatory  decisions  and  those  who  will  be                                                                   
     acting on  and in the  state's proprietary interests  as                                                                   
     owners  and managers of  the resource.  We were able  to                                                                   
     complete  all  of that  earlier  this  month and,  as  I                                                                   
     mentioned  at the beginning  of this  hearing, have  now                                                                   
     turned our  attention to getting the  legislative branch                                                                   
     papered-up and look forward to completing that here.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  BALASH noted  that  actions prior  to  the HOA  were                                                              
taken by  the State of Alaska  and Governor Parnell  in particular                                                              
to  ensure  proper  communication   with  the  other  parties  and                                                              
partners  in the  project.  He  pointed out  accomplishments  made                                                              
prior to 2014 as follows:                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
   · January 2012 meeting with the three CEOs of ConocoPhillips,                                                                
     BP, and ExxonMobil.                                                                                                        
     -Resolved Pt. Thomson litigation.                                                                                          
     -Moved the project forward  with something that Alaskans                                                                   
      could deal with.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
He  explained that  the steps  taken  with the  partners has  been                                                              
done  carefully.  He  said  all   parties  have  grown  much  more                                                              
comfortable with  the process moving forward. He  pointed out that                                                              
progressing from  Pre-FEED to  FEED will be  a step change  in the                                                              
state's commitment  level. He  said the  state's all-in  share for                                                              
the  Pre-FEED was  $125 million  and the  next step  into FEED  in                                                              
early 2016  would be  3 to 5  times greater.  He pointed  out that                                                              
the state's  commitment to FEED  will be big and  other agreements                                                              
will be developed and folded in in the near term.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
3:36:36 PM                                                                                                                    
COMMISSIONER  BALASH  stated  that  key  personnel  were  recently                                                              
hired  to make  sure  the  state's  interests were  protected  and                                                              
Alaska's resource  values maximized.  He noted that  contributions                                                              
have been  made by individuals from  DNR, DOR, and  the Department                                                              
of Law.  He said the previously  noted agencies  have continuously                                                              
provided  personnel and  expertise that  has provided  a value  to                                                              
the  process that  the state  was engaged  in. He  noted that  the                                                              
contractors  Black & Veatch  and Gaffney-Cline  have assisted  the                                                              
state  agencies. He  added that  the  outside council,  Greenberg-                                                              
Traurig,  has provided  commercial  expertise to  the project.  He                                                              
asserted  that he could  not imagine  accomplishing everything  in                                                              
front  of the state's  agencies  without the  broad and deep  team                                                              
that has been assembled.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
He pointed out the following key personnel hires:                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
   · Leslie "Fritz" Krusen.                                                                                                     
     -SB 138 modified AGDC statutes and its board was empowered                                                                 
      to hire an LNG project lead.                                                                                              
     -Reports to AGDC's president-CEO.                                                                                          
     -Starts in September 2014.                                                                                                 
     -Has a tremendous background in LNG technology,                                                                            
      construction, and operations.                                                                                             
     -AGDC is the state's lead for the liquefaction side of the                                                                 
      project and the state will benefit from Mr. Krusen's                                                                      
      expertise and knowledge.                                                                                                  
     -Formally with ConocoPhillips.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
   · Steve Wright                                                                                                               
     -Worked in Alaska with Chevron.                                                                                            
     -Focuses on the resource side of the project, the "Top of                                                                  
      the project."                                                                                                             
     -Knows the project's oil and gas fields.                                                                                   
     -Provides a tremendous benefit when addressing gas-                                                                        
      balancing and off-take agreements.                                                                                        
     -Makes sure that the State of Alaska has the right kind of                                                                 
    field information that will ultimately be used at AOGCC                                                                     
    and for the Sales and Purchase Agreements (SPA) for the                                                                     
      project's LNG.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
He asserted  that not having  the right  foundation up at  the top                                                              
causes other  things to  get a  little bit  slippery. He  said Mr.                                                              
Wright has been a fantastic addition to the team.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
3:41:11 PM                                                                                                                    
COMMISSIONER  BALASH  continued  to address  personnel  hires  and                                                              
noted  an individual  that focuses  on  the project's  "midstream"                                                              
planning as follows:                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
   · Dave DeGruyter                                                                                                             
    -2014 hire for the State Pipeline Coordinator's Office.                                                                     
     -Tremendous breadth of experience in dealing with pipeline                                                                 
      projects in other facilities.                                                                                             
     -Recently helped complete the facilities for the Keystone                                                                  
      XL Pipeline in the Gulf Region.                                                                                           
     -Played a leadership role in pipeline construction in other                                                                
      parts of the Americas.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
He  remarked  that  Mr. DeGruyter's  expertise  will  benefit  the                                                              
State of  Alaska for examining  costs that  are going to  be borne                                                              
by   the  infrastructure   owners.   He  pointed   out  that   the                                                              
infrastructure   owners   consist   of  the   State   of   Alaska,                                                              
represented  by AGDC,  and  TC.  He explained  that  the State  of                                                              
Alaska will  pay TC back for  the infrastructure costs  over time.                                                              
He said  the State  of Alaska  needs someone  with a watchful  and                                                              
experienced  eye  in  the  development   stage  who  monitors  the                                                              
infrastructure  expenses. Mr.  DeGruyter  provides information  to                                                              
make  decisions  to  incur  certain  costs  and  pursue  different                                                              
design options.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
He  continued  to  address  personnel hires  and  pointed  out  an                                                              
individual  who   focuses  on   the  project's  "downstream"   and                                                              
marketing side as follows:                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
   · Mr. Audie Setters                                                                                                          
     -Formerly worked at Chevron.                                                                                               
    -Helped Chevron grow their LNG business over the past 10                                                                    
     years as one of the top 3 or 4 companies in the world.                                                                     
     -Experience with assembling SPAs.                                                                                          
     -Has contacts in the LNG markets.                                                                                          
     -Knows what kind of data is required by LNG buyers.                                                                        
     -Will help assist with maximizing the value for the                                                                        
      LNG that gets sold in the marketplace.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:44:55 PM                                                                                                                    
   · Mr. Steve Swaffield                                                                                                        
     -Formerly worked with BG Group-Canada in Vancouver.                                                                        
     -Experience with LNG project development.                                                                                  
     -Provides an overall broad commercial prospective to make                                                                  
      sure that all of the agreements fit together.                                                                             
     -Will assist the Department  of Revenue in keeping track                                                                   
      of the state's value throughout the project.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
3:46:03 PM                                                                                                                    
ANGELA RODELL,  Commissioner, Alaska Department of  Revenue (DOR),                                                              
Juneau,  Alaska,  stated that  SB  138 called  upon  DOR  to do  a                                                              
couple of things  in advance of the 2015 Session.  She said SB 138                                                              
dictated that  DOR work  with the  Municipal Advisory  Gas Project                                                              
Review Board  (MAGPRB). She  added that SB  138 dictated  that DOR                                                              
address the state's financing plan for the project.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
She explained  that  SB 138 and  an Administrative  Order  (AO) by                                                              
Governor  Parnell  established  MAGPRB. She  noted  that  MAGPRB's                                                              
board  members  have  been  appointed   and  the  board  has  been                                                              
meeting. She remarked  that MAGPRB has provided a  good avenue for                                                              
a number  of members  to understand  where the  project is  and to                                                              
understand  with the  state will  need in terms  of framework  for                                                              
property tax.  She revealed  that MAGPRB  will report  their first                                                              
recommendations by December 15.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
She referenced Mr.  Butt's comments on the Alaska  LNG Project and                                                              
the NEPA process and stated the following:                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     One  of the  things  we focused  early  on  in this  was                                                                   
     giving an  understanding of  the work that Steve  talked                                                                   
     about  in  terms  the NEPA  process  and  the  community                                                                   
     outreach, because  I think it was important  that we not                                                                   
     recreate  that  process but  rather  build on  what  was                                                                   
     going  to  be  learned  and   organize  a  property  tax                                                                   
     recommendation  around all of  that. So really  focusing                                                                   
     in  on  the  fiscal  needs  as opposed  to  all  of  the                                                                   
     community needs  that might be generated as  a result of                                                                   
     this project.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
She  said the  other  big activity  that DOR  has  started is  the                                                              
financing  plan. She  revealed  that DOR  is  required in  January                                                              
2015 to deliver  the first step in a financing plan  which goes to                                                              
the details as follows:                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
   · What type of credit the state can utilize.                                                                                 
   · How the state can get communities, native corporations, and                                                                
     individuals to participate.                                                                                                
   · Look at all of the state's financial resources and what the                                                                
     best avenues are for the state's participation.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
3:48:37 PM                                                                                                                    
She  advised   that  DOR   hired  Lazard   as  financial   advisor                                                              
consultants.  She noted  that First  Southwest was  also hired  by                                                              
DOR to  abide by Independent  Registered Municipal  Advisor (IRMA)                                                              
rules by  the federal  government. She said  DOR has  been working                                                              
hand-in-hand  with the Department  of Natural  Resources  (DNR) to                                                              
understand DOR's tax-as-gas responsibility.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:49:14 PM                                                                                                                    
COMMISSIONER BALASH  reviewed his recent travels to  Asia in early                                                              
September and detailed the following meetings in Japan:                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
   · Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry (METI);                                                                   
     signed a Memorandum of Cooperation (MOC).                                                                                  
   · Japanese Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC).                                                                        
   · Japan Oil, Gas and Metals National Corporation (JOGMEC).                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
He noted  that MOC  was similar to  a Memorandum of  Understanding                                                              
(MOU). He explained  that a MOU  was signed a year ago  with JBIC.                                                              
He pointed  out that JBIC is the  bank that has financed  more LNG                                                              
projects  around the  world than  any other  institution. He  said                                                              
JBIC gets  involved in  any project  that somehow benefits  Japan,                                                              
whether  delivering LNG  or employing  Japanese engineering  firms                                                              
in   construction   companies.   He  asserted   that   having   an                                                              
understanding with  JBIC is very important as  the state considers                                                              
options  going forward.  He explained  that METI's  role was  more                                                              
internal to Japan  and the tariffs that are allowed  to be charged                                                              
by the  power companies.  He noted  that the  Japanese were  going                                                              
through a  power deregulation  that was  creating some  changes in                                                              
the way Japan  gets business done. He asserted  that having METI's                                                              
insights  will prove  very  valuable  so that  the  state was  not                                                              
guessing and  understood Japan's  gas versus power  companies over                                                              
the next 18 months.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
3:52:18 PM                                                                                                                    
COMMISSIONER BALASH  stated that JOGMEC was an  interesting entity                                                              
that  was  more likely  to  be  involved  in  any sort  of  equity                                                              
participation by a company that would also be a potential buyer.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
He said having  met with METI,  JBIC, and JOGMEC, has  allowed the                                                              
state  to dial  in  on Japan's  "three  arms"  and will  basically                                                              
effect or  enable different Japanese  buyers to purchase  LNG from                                                              
the  Alaska  LNG  Project.  He   informed  the  members  that  the                                                              
delegation  from Alaska  hosted a  forum to  introduce the  Alaska                                                              
LNG Project  to the  Japanese buyers.  He noted  that hosting  the                                                              
forum allowed  for an  exchange of  information without  antitrust                                                              
implications.  He said the  forum's attendees  were very  familiar                                                              
with  Alaska, asked  very good  questions,  and showed  tremendous                                                              
interest.  He noted  that  the Nikkei  Asian  Review  (NAR) did  a                                                              
story on the MOC with METI.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:55:25 PM                                                                                                                    
COMMISSIONER BALASH  continued to review  his recent trip  to Asia                                                              
and summarized his meetings in China as follows:                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
   · Chinese National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) in                                                                       
     Shenzhen, China.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
He detailed  that the  Alaska delegation flew  into Hong  Kong and                                                              
drove  into  Shenzhen  were  the   group  was  able  to  tour  the                                                              
receiving terminal  that BP  co-owns with CNOOC  and a  handful of                                                              
other  parties.  He  said  what was  really  interesting  was  the                                                              
challenge China  faces in  some parts in  dealing with  very dense                                                              
coastal  populations   and  less  dense  inland   populations.  He                                                              
explained that  the Shenzhen  re-gas facility  has a large  drive-                                                              
thru  mechanism  for filling  up  LNG  tankers that  delivers  gas                                                              
throughout  the province. He  said close  attention will  be given                                                              
to  the  Shenzhen  re-gas  facility  as the  state  find  ways  to                                                              
deliver gas  and energy to Alaskans  if the Alaska LNG  Project is                                                              
able to move forward successfully.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER BALASH  noted the final stop his recent  trip to Asia                                                              
and summarized his meetings in South Korea as follows:                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
   · Korea Gas Corporation (KOGAS).                                                                                             
   · Korea Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy (MOTIE).                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
He  said  the  Alaska  delegation  flew  to  Seoul  and  met  with                                                              
officials of  KOGAS and MOTIE.  He noted  that South Korea  is not                                                              
as  big a  market as  Japan,  but South  Korea  is a  concentrated                                                              
market through  KOGAS. He informed  the members that KOGAS  is the                                                              
world's  largest LNG  buyer  and the  Alaska  delegation met  with                                                              
officials from  KOGAS to discuss  what opportunities there  may be                                                              
going forward. He  noted that the Alaska delegation  met officials                                                              
from MOTIE.  He detailed that  MOTIE is  basically the arm  of the                                                              
government that oversees  KOGAS. He explained that  KOGAS does not                                                              
buy beyond  the forecast demand levels  that are set by  MOTIE. He                                                              
noted  that MOTIE asked  about the  MOC that  was recently  signed                                                              
with METI. He  summarized that the state agencies  affiliated with                                                              
the Alaska LNG  Project was looking forward to  continuing to have                                                              
a dialog with  MOTIE on opportunities set. He  revealed that KOGAS                                                              
has a very large  void in their 2024 portfolio  with contracts set                                                              
to expire  with regimes  that do  not necessarily  enjoy the  same                                                              
geo-political stability as the U.S.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
He summarized  that DNR  and DOR  have been  busy and noted  their                                                              
involved  in  the  upcoming  MAGPRB   meetings  for  two  days  in                                                              
Anchorage.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:58:24 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE  P WILSON  asked exactly  who traveled  to Asia  as                                                              
part of the Alaska delegation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER BALASH  replied that  the team consisted  of himself,                                                              
Commissioner  Rodell, DOR;  Dan Fauske, AGDC;  Ester Tempel,  DNR;                                                              
Shelly James,  Office of  International Trade;  Janet Weiss,  head                                                              
of  BP-Alaska; Doug  Rotenberg,  BP, marketing  professional,  San                                                              
Antonio;  and Damin  Bilbao, BP-Alaska,  commercial and  marketing                                                              
LNG team member.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
3:59:32 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE  TARR recalled  that the ability  to market  Alaska                                                              
LNG  successful   was  a  deficiency   pointed  out   in  previous                                                              
testimony. She  commented that the  recent personnel  staffing has                                                              
brought  on  a  lot  of expertise  in  addition  to  DNR  and  DOR                                                              
participating  in an international  trip  to start building  sales                                                              
relationships.  She  asked  for  an  explanation  on  the  state's                                                              
evolving LNG  marketing situation  in addition  to its  ability to                                                              
take on the marketing responsibilities.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER BALASH  responded that  an evaluation was  done based                                                              
on  a study  conducted  by Black  & Beech.  He  explained that  in                                                              
order  for  the state  to  feel  comfortable,  DNR looked  at  the                                                              
differences  between royalty in  value (RIV)  and royalty  in kind                                                              
(RIK) in  order to sort  out how to  make an equity  position with                                                              
the  state working  within the  construct  of RIV  versus RIK.  He                                                              
asserted that  there needed  to be some  assurance that  the state                                                              
would not be left  deficient or somehow losing value  with RIK. He                                                              
said one  way DNR  and DOR got  comfortable was  in the  HOA where                                                              
the  other  parties  committed   to,  upon  the  state's  request,                                                              
working with  the state  on the  disposition of  its share  of the                                                              
LNG. He asserted  that DNR and DOR have not changed  their view on                                                              
the  marketing  strategy.  He  stated that  Mr.  Setters  and  the                                                              
others who  were brought  on would play  an important  role during                                                              
the  continued evaluation  process  over the  next  18 months.  He                                                              
maintained that no  decisions would be made without  first talking                                                              
to legislators in executive session.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER BALASH  called attention to  the recent trip  to Asia                                                              
and noted that BP  was making the trip and invited  DNR and DOR to                                                              
go along.  He asserted that DNR  and DOR had no  arrangements made                                                              
with BP. He  pointed out that joining  BP on the trip  to Asia was                                                              
another  demonstrable  item  that   shows  the  parties  following                                                              
through  on  the statements  in  the  HOA.  He  said the  HOA  did                                                              
identify  that  each  of  the  parties  would  initiate  marketing                                                              
efforts  for Alaska's  LNG.  He stated  that  the project's  other                                                              
parties are  in the  market every  day and  noted that  the recent                                                              
trip   to  Asia   shows   with  certainty   that   at  least   one                                                              
participating partner  was out in the market  specifically talking                                                              
to buyers about the Alaska LNG Project.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
4:02:58 PM                                                                                                                    
CO-CHAIR SADDLER  referred to  the Nikkei  Asian Review  story and                                                              
noted  that Japan  would start  importing  field gas  in 2016.  He                                                              
pointed  out that  the  Lower 48  shale gas  killed  the Lower  48                                                              
pipeline  route.   He  asked  Commissioner  Balash   if  his  risk                                                              
assessment  was that  Lower  48  shale gas  or  China's shale  gas                                                              
might again change the Alaska market dynamics.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  BALASH responded  that  forward  pricing curves  for                                                              
natural gas  in North America  are incredibly volatile.  He stated                                                              
that Asian  buyers are looking for  stable pricing and  noted that                                                              
buyers  during  his  recent  trip  wanted to  know  what  sort  of                                                              
pricing might  be available for  the Alaska LNG Project's  gas. He                                                              
set  forth  that  a  number  of  factors  affect  the  Alaska  LNG                                                              
Project's competitive position.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
He  addressed the  inquiry  on field  gas  and  noted that  simply                                                              
reserving capacity  did not necessarily  guarantee that  gas would                                                              
actually  flow  through  the  North  American  facilities  and  be                                                              
available for  off take. He remarked  that the reference  to field                                                              
gas in some ways  is more of a hedge mechanism  for future pricing                                                              
that  allows for  destination  flexibility  to either  Pacific  or                                                              
Atlantic markets and allows for renegotiations.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Responding to the  inquiry about whether shale  gas will undermine                                                              
the Alaska LNG Project, he replied as follows:                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     I'm  not sure  I  would say  shale  gas specifically,  I                                                                   
     think there's  no question that we have to  compete, and                                                                   
     that competition  is one  that we can  win if we  keep a                                                                   
     focus  on cost and  keep our  cost of  supply as low  as                                                                   
     possible.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
4:06:54 PM                                                                                                                    
CO-CHAIR  SADDLER asked  if he had  heard that  Asian buyers  were                                                              
interested in an equity position in the Alaska LNG Project.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  BALASH replied  that strong  interest was  expressed                                                              
in some of the  conversations in Asia, but he was  not prepared to                                                              
discuss the  exact circumstances  under which  the state  would be                                                              
willing to take an equity position from a buyer.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
4:07:34 PM                                                                                                                    
COMMISSIONER RODELL  added that  any benefit from  possibly taking                                                              
advantage of  potential equity partnerships  will be  an important                                                              
component  in preparing  the  state's  financial  plan. She  noted                                                              
that Japan, in  particular, is under tremendous  economic pressure                                                              
to continually find  lower cost of energy. She  added that Japan's                                                              
trade  deficit  is  significant.   She  agreed  with  Commissioner                                                              
Balash  that  the state  must  continue  to  keep the  Alaska  LNG                                                              
Project competitive  because Japan does  want to do  business with                                                              
Alaska. She  pointed out that Japan  has purchased Alaska  LNG for                                                              
40 years. She added  that Japan takes great comfort  in the Alaska                                                              
LNG  Project's transit  distance and  manageability. She  conceded                                                              
that  Japan needs  to do  something  in the  interim. She  offered                                                              
that  from  the  state's  standpoint,  Alaska  must  see  contract                                                              
diversity  as well  by not  selling  all of  its gas  to the  same                                                              
buyer.  She asserted  that  selling  to the  same  buyer does  not                                                              
serve  the Alaska  LNG Project  well. She  summarized that  Alaska                                                              
will be  looking to  diversify to different  sellers and  Japan is                                                              
looking for diversification of supply.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR SADDLER  commented that he is  glad to know that  DNR and                                                              
DOR is keeping an open mind about financing opportunities.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:09:26 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE OLSON  asked if Japan  is willing to pay  a premium                                                              
for the  security on both  ends on the  production end and  on the                                                              
Cook Inlet  end. He pointed out  that for 40 years Alaska  has had                                                              
a strong relationship  between Cook Inlet LNG and  Tokyo Electric.                                                              
He noted that no  LNG loads were missed or materially  late during                                                              
that  40  year  relationship.  He  asked  if  the  successful  LNG                                                              
history with Japan might give Alaska a bit of a premium.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
COMMSSIONER RODELL  replied she did  not know but  it's reasonable                                                              
to hope it  would bring a premium.  She agreed with Mr.  Butt that                                                              
the scale of this  project is immense and that  necessitates a lot                                                              
of different buyers.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
4:10:34 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE SEATON asked if there is any other cost to the                                                                   
state in developing the Alaska LNG Project that is not currently                                                                
included. He supplemented his inquiry asking the following:                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     Other than our  RIK and tax portion being  taken royalty                                                                   
     and  tax  taken in-kind,  do  we  have further  cost  of                                                                   
     either  capital credits  or  net operating  losses  that                                                                   
     will occur  in the  development of  the project?  If you                                                                   
     don't  have the  answer right  now,  are those  portions                                                                   
     being factored  into the  value to the  state or  are we                                                                   
     only looking at RIK?                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
4:11:28 PM                                                                                                                    
COMMISSIONER BALASH replied as follows:                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     A couple  of things. First of  all, in terms of  an all-                                                                   
     in-look,  we  attempted to  do  that  in our  Black  and                                                                   
     Veatch  work last year.  As we  go forward, we're  going                                                                   
     to   continuously   monitor   and  refine   the   models                                                                   
     associated  with  all of  this,  to  make sure  that  we                                                                   
     continue   to   count   dollars  the   right   way.   In                                                                   
     particular,  that model was  based on an oil-only  world                                                                   
     and  an  oil  plus  gas  world.   Then  subtracting  the                                                                   
     differences, we're  accounting for those  differences so                                                                   
     that  you are keeping  track of  the lease  expenditures                                                                   
     incurred   under   the   production   tax   system   and                                                                   
     accounting  for potential  changes  in corporate  income                                                                   
     tax and that sort of thing.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     Do  I think  that  the outputs  of  that  model are  100                                                                   
     percent  correct today as  they will  be in the  future?                                                                   
     No, but  that's where the  refinements will  continue to                                                                   
     take place.  In terms of  other impacts, costs  incurred                                                                   
     by  the project  that the state  has a  share of,  those                                                                   
     are  ones that are  currently estimated  within a  range                                                                   
     and  those  ranges  will change  and  the  specifics  of                                                                   
     those  costs will change  over time  to the extent  that                                                                   
     any  of  that is  going  to  hit on  our  infrastructure                                                                   
     side.  DOT  is going  to  need  to get  involved,  there                                                                   
     could  be some steps  needed there  to address. But,  at                                                                   
     this  point   I  would  say  that  we  are   still  very                                                                   
     comfortable  that the estimates  made last year  and the                                                                   
     ranges associated with them are correct.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
^Report of money obligated to a third party: Commissioner Balash                                                                
Report of money obligated to a third party: Commissioner Balash                                                             
                                                                                                                                
4:13:21 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  GIESSEL announced  that the  next  agenda item  would be  a                                                              
status report on money obligated to a third party.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER BALASH  stated that a clause in SB  138 that requires                                                              
an update  on the project  also requires  the DNR Commissioner  to                                                              
provide  an estimate  of  any cost  incurred  under  the two  year                                                              
authority  granted. He  said he  has exercised  his authority  and                                                              
entered into a  precedent agreement with TransCanada  for the mid-                                                              
stream portion  of the project's  main pipeline, the GTP,  and the                                                              
transmission lines  associated with  the project. He  advised that                                                              
he  prepared  a  report  in  the form  of  letter  that  would  be                                                              
distributed today to the presiding officers.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  GIESSEL confirmed  that  Commissioner  Balash's report  was                                                              
distributed.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
4:14:52 PM                                                                                                                    
CO-CHAIR SADDLER  asked if there  would be a similar  briefing and                                                              
report before or after the start of Session.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  BALASH replied  that  the reports  will occur  three                                                              
times a  year and the  duration between  updates could  change. He                                                              
stated that January  is the time frame for the  next presentation.                                                              
He noted that  the upcoming gubernatorial election  will determine                                                              
whether  he  or  someone  else   will  be  coordinating  the  next                                                              
presentation.  He noted that  there certainly  could be  a meeting                                                              
well before  Session in the month  of January or it could  be that                                                              
it  makes  the  most  sense  to  wait  until  Session  starts  and                                                              
everybody  is in  place.  He stated  that in  the  event there  is                                                              
change, he would not speak for his successor.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
4:16:14 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE   TARR   addressed    financial   obligations   and                                                              
referenced  SB 138's  fiscal note.  She  asked if  the Alaska  LNG                                                              
Project was on track and noted the concern for cost overruns.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER BALASH  replied that the current estimate  showed the                                                              
Alaska  LNG Project  to  be on  track. He  noted  that AGDC  could                                                              
comment more specifically as to whether there has been any cash-                                                                
calls. He  set forth  that to  his knowledge,  there have  been no                                                              
cash-calls  and the  project  was  on track  in  terms of  whether                                                              
additional funding or resources on either end was needed.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
He  called attention  to  SB 138's  fiscal  note regarding  agency                                                              
expenses during the  project's current phase. He  explained that a                                                              
handful  of positions  have been  deemed necessary,  but hiring  a                                                              
marketing staff  was not required.  He specified that  efforts and                                                              
resources will be  focused on the upstream and  downstream experts                                                              
who can help design  an organization based on the  choices DNR and                                                              
DOR will make  going forward and that information  will be flowing                                                              
in the  right way on  the front end.  He disclosed  that contracts                                                              
have been  done with retired  individuals that do  not necessarily                                                              
need to be employees.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
He noted that  he had failed to  mention that Don Perrin  has been                                                              
hired  to   assist  as  a   bridge  between  the   State  Pipeline                                                              
Coordinator's Office  (SPCO) and the Office of  Project Management                                                              
and   Permitting   (OPMP).   He   detailed   that   Mr.   Perrin's                                                              
contribution  will address  the big  NEPA picture  by making  sure                                                              
the  state  has the  right  sets  of  resources  in order  to  pay                                                              
attention  to the  advancement  process  and avoid  regulatory  or                                                              
advancement problems.  He revealed that DNR has  used the position                                                              
control numbers (PCN)  counts and funds differently  than what was                                                              
projected  in the  fiscal note;  Representative Stoltze  confirmed                                                              
that the action  was made as a onetime item and  will be revisited                                                              
in the next Session.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
4:19:36 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE  TARR noted  that she  received an  inquiry from  a                                                              
constituent  who   felt  discomfort  after  reading   a  newspaper                                                              
article that  talked about  the project confidentiality  agreement                                                              
and what  would be disclosed to  the public. She stated  that some                                                              
individuals feel  that more information should be  released to the                                                              
public. She noted  that she tried to assure her  constituents that                                                              
the legislature  tried to  work through  the process and  included                                                              
any  strong AGIA  language into  the bill  in order  to make  sure                                                              
that there  were folks  advocating on  their behalf. She  asserted                                                              
that she did not  want any unnecessary hurdles so  early and hoped                                                              
to  work  through  the confidentiality  agreement  as  quickly  as                                                              
possible.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
4:20:29 PM                                                                                                                    
COMMISSIONER   BALASH  replied  that   he  has  recommended   that                                                              
legislators talk to their attorneys.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
4:20:46 PM                                                                                                                    
CO-CHAIR  SADDLER commented  that he  was gratified  at the  great                                                              
turnout for  the meeting. He noted  that he was encouraged  by all                                                              
the team's  professionals and  the good work  that has  been done.                                                              
He stated  that the  members were excited  about the  progress and                                                              
looked forward to the next meeting.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
4:21:05 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR   GIESSEL   thanked   the    commissioners   and   expressed                                                              
appreciation to Mr. Butts for his presentation.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
4:21:18 PM                                                                                                                    
There being nothing further to come before the committees, Chair                                                                
Giessel adjourned the joint meeting of the Senate and House                                                                     
Resources Standing Committees at 4:21 p.m.                                                                                      

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
9.29.14 Sec 77 SB 138 Report to the Legislature.pdf JRES 9/29/2014 1:00:00 PM
SB 138
9.29.14 Joint Resources DNR Alaska LNG Update.pdf JRES 9/29/2014 1:00:00 PM
AKLNG - Project Update for SoA Legislature FINAL.pdf JRES 9/29/2014 1:00:00 PM