Legislature(2015 - 2016)BUTROVICH 205

10/31/2015 10:00 AM Senate FINANCE

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10:08:11 AM Start
10:08:11 AM SB3001
12:30:39 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+= SB3001 Presentation: Overview FY17 Operating Budget TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
Janak Mayer, Partner, enalytica
Nikos Tsafos, Partner, enalytica
                 SENATE FINANCE COMMITTEE                                                                                       
                   THIRD SPECIAL SESSION                                                                                        
                     October 31, 2015                                                                                           
                        10:08 a.m.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
10:08:11 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CALL TO ORDER                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair MacKinnon called the Senate Finance Committee                                                                          
meeting to order at 10:08 a.m.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Senator Anna MacKinnon, Co-Chair                                                                                                
Senator Pete Kelly, Co-Chair                                                                                                    
Senator Peter Micciche, Vice-Chair (via teleconference)                                                                         
Senator Click Bishop                                                                                                            
Senator Mike Dunleavy                                                                                                           
Senator Lyman Hoffman                                                                                                           
Senator Donny Olson                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
None                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
ALSO PRESENT                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Janak Mayer,  Chairman, enalytica; Nikos  Tsafos, President,                                                                    
enalytica;  Laura  Pierre,  Staff, Senator  Anna  MacKinnon;                                                                    
Senator  Kevin Meyer;  Senator  Cathy  Giessel; Senator  Mia                                                                    
Costello;  Senator  John   Coghill;  Senator  Gary  Stevens;                                                                    
Representative  Liz Vasquez;  Representative Lora  Reinbold;                                                                    
Representative Mike Chenault.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SUMMARY                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
SB 3001   APPROP: LNG PROJECT and FUND/AGDC/SUPP.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
          SB 3001 was HEARD and HELD in committee for                                                                           
          further consideration.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SENATE BILL NO. 3001                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     "An Act making supplemental appropriations; making                                                                         
     appropriations    to     capitalize    funds;    making                                                                    
     appropriations  to the  general  fund  from the  budget                                                                    
     reserve  fund (art.  IX, sec.  17, Constitution  of the                                                                    
     State of Alaska) in accordance  with sec. 12(c), ch. 1,                                                                    
     SSSLA 2015; and providing for an effective date."                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
10:08:11 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair MacKinnon discussed the  bill before the committee.                                                                    
She relayed that  SB 3001 was an appropriation  bill for the                                                                    
AKLNG project.  The bill included  a work plan  increase and                                                                    
would  buy out  Alaska's partner  TransCanada. Additionally,                                                                    
the  bill included  a $13  million  supplemental request  to                                                                    
support  the  Department of  Law  (DOL),  the Department  of                                                                    
Natural  Resources  (DNR),  and the  Department  of  Revenue                                                                    
(DOR)  in advancing  a gasline  project. She  introduced the                                                                    
legislators   present  in   the  room.   She  relayed   that                                                                    
legislative   consultants   enalytica  would   address   the                                                                    
committee  and  would  speak   specifically  to  the  Alaska                                                                    
participation in gas and sales agreements.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
10:10:55 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
JANAK  MAYER, CHAIRMAN,  ENALYTICA,  introduced himself.  He                                                                    
stated that  enalytica had been  contracted as  a consultant                                                                    
to the legislature through the  Legislative Budget and Audit                                                                    
Committee. The  company had been  advising the  Alaska State                                                                    
Legislature on oil and gas issues  for the past four or more                                                                    
years.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
NIKOS TSAFOS,  PRESIDENT, ENALYTICA, introduced  himself. He                                                                    
relayed   that  his   background  was   as  a   natural  gas                                                                    
consultant;  he had  worked  with organizations,  companies,                                                                    
and governments around the world  on buying and selling gas.                                                                    
He    introduced    a   PowerPoint    presentation    titled                                                                    
"TransCanada's  Participation in  AKLNG:  Key Issues"  dated                                                                    
October  31, 2015  (copy  on file).  He  explained that  the                                                                    
presentation   would   address   the   components   of   the                                                                    
TransCanada buyout proposal. At  the end of the presentation                                                                    
he planned to address what it  would take to sign a sales of                                                                    
purchase agreement and risks to the state.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Mayer  looked   at  slide  2,  "View   from  2014:  Why                                                                    
TransCanada."  He  relayed  intent  to  frame  TransCanada's                                                                    
participation in  the AKLNG  project by  looking legislative                                                                    
debate on  the Heads of  Agreement (HOA) and  the Memorandum                                                                    
of Understanding (MOU)  discussed during legislative session                                                                    
2014,  which had  ultimately led  to the  passage of  SB 138                                                                    
[legislation  passed  in 2014  related  to  a gas  pipeline,                                                                    
AGDC,  and oil  and gas  production tax].  He noted  that in                                                                    
2014   the    Parnell   Administration   had    argued   for                                                                    
TransCanada's involvement  in the  project based  on various                                                                    
strong  points. He  believed  it would  be  useful to  think                                                                    
through the  prior arguments,  the associated  strengths and                                                                    
weaknesses, and what had  fundamentally changed. He detailed                                                                    
it had  been argued  that TransCanada's  participation would                                                                    
provide substantial strategic  and non-financial benefits to                                                                    
the state.  For example,  he cited  TransCanada's experience                                                                    
as  a   large,  highly  capable  and   experienced  pipeline                                                                    
company,  particularly  on  northern pipelines  and  Alaskan                                                                    
natural  gas  pipeline   projects  (especially  through  the                                                                    
Alaska    Gasline    Inducement   Act    (AGIA)    process).                                                                    
Additionally,  there  had  been a  significant  emphasis  on                                                                    
questions  of continuity  and momentum.  He elaborated  that                                                                    
TransCanada had  conducted work during the  AGIA process and                                                                    
it had  a significant  amount of intellectual  property data                                                                    
as a  result. During the transition  period, TransCanada had                                                                    
been working well  with the other AKLNG  sponsors, but there                                                                    
had  been a  desire to  ensure  the transition  of the  work                                                                    
product over to the new AKLNG team in a seamless way.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
10:14:28 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Mayer continued  to address  slide 2.  He spoke  to the                                                                    
state's  obligations under  AGIA  and the  question of  what                                                                    
damages may  be payable if  the state was to  terminate AGIA                                                                    
in  a  unilateral  way (including  discussions  over  treble                                                                    
damages clauses in the contracts).  Given the issues, it had                                                                    
been  determined  that  a   desirable  trajectory  would  be                                                                    
creating a  smooth commercial transition that  was agreeable                                                                    
to all parties.  He believed the issue  had been influential                                                                    
for  many  when  thinking  through the  MOU  and  everything                                                                    
proposed in the SB 138  debate. Additionally, there had been                                                                    
a  strong  argument  made  that  involving  an  independent,                                                                    
highly  experienced pipeline  company in  the project  would                                                                    
provide   significant  benefits   from   a  governance   and                                                                    
expansion  perspective. He  noted that  the three  producing                                                                    
partners had  an interest in  achieving the  most efficient,                                                                    
lowest cost  means of monetizing the  existing resource base                                                                    
at Prudhoe  Bay and  Point Thomson.  He elaborated  that the                                                                    
state  had the  same interest,  but  it also  had a  broader                                                                    
interest  in opening  up  the basin  and  ensuring that  new                                                                    
discoveries would  have access to the  pipeline, which would                                                                    
take  significant experience  and  capability. He  expounded                                                                    
that  it  would take  experience  and  understanding in  the                                                                    
negotiation   of  the   governance   agreements  to   ensure                                                                    
expansion rights  for the state. The  Parnell Administration                                                                    
had  believed  the  negotiation  on  the  state's  expansion                                                                    
principles  in the  HOA was  possible  due to  TransCanada's                                                                    
participation.  The  Parnell  Administration had  felt  that                                                                    
TransCanada  would be  beneficial  in  negotiating the  next                                                                    
round of  agreements and  doing much  of the  technical work                                                                    
product (i.e. the  sizing of individual components  in a gas                                                                    
treatment plant  (GTP), future  development capacity  of the                                                                    
facility, and other).                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Mayer discussed  that  the  Parnell Administration  had                                                                    
pointed to the importance of  partnering with a company with                                                                    
the  technical,  commercial,  and financial  capability.  He                                                                    
continued   to   address    the   importance   the   Parnell                                                                    
Administration had  placed on involving  a company  that the                                                                    
state  could  be   in  touch  with  once   the  project  was                                                                    
operational  and new  discoveries  were  made. He  discussed                                                                    
that  if the  work to  determine potential  commercial terms                                                                    
and  what  may   be  commercialized  was  not   done  by  an                                                                    
independent  pipeline company,  the  work would  have to  be                                                                    
conducted by the  state. He reasoned that many  of the items                                                                    
listed on  slide 2 remained  valid. He noted  the importance                                                                    
of ensuring the  state did have some of  the capabilities if                                                                    
it seemed  likely that the  roles would  be taken on  by the                                                                    
state (i.e. Alaska Gasline Development Corporation (AGDC)).                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Mayer  relayed that the Parnell  Administration had made                                                                    
an  argument  of finance,  specifically  about  the cost  of                                                                    
capital  and the  state's  bonding  capability. He  remarked                                                                    
that enalytica  had many questions  about the  argument when                                                                    
it had been  made. He noted that it had  been discussed that                                                                    
the  overall   cost  of  capital   through  the   deal  with                                                                    
TransCanada could  be higher to  the state than  the state's                                                                    
own cost  of capital.  It had  been argued  that TransCanada                                                                    
may  relieve the  state from  a  portion of  the cash  calls                                                                    
during the  project development  phase, which  could benefit                                                                    
the state  given concerns about  its bonding  capability. He                                                                    
added that it  had also been discussed that  the veracity of                                                                    
the claim was  uncertain because there were  many reasons to                                                                    
think  that the  impact  on the  state's  credit rating  and                                                                    
balance sheet would be the same either way.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Mayer stated  that  given  the former  administration's                                                                    
arguments,  enalytica  believed   some  of  the  substantial                                                                    
scrutiny  and   skepticism  was  merited.  He   referred  to                                                                    
significant discussion about  whether the TransCanada tariff                                                                    
cost  was  competitive  to market  norms.  He  relayed  that                                                                    
enalytica had  provided some analysis to  show that compared                                                                    
to tariff  costs in the  Lower 48, the TransCanada  cost was                                                                    
well within the  lower end of the norms.  Enalytica had also                                                                    
considered  whether the  more  relevant  comparison was  the                                                                    
state's own  cost of debt,  given the limited risk  borne by                                                                    
TransCanada.   He  recalled   there  had   been  substantial                                                                    
discussion  about  the  risk/reward balance  for  the  state                                                                    
under   the  deal   with  TransCanada.   He  detailed   that                                                                    
TransCanada had taken  on very limited risk  under the deal.                                                                    
He  elaborated that  at numerous  times  during the  project                                                                    
construction  stage   up  to  90   days  after   FID  [final                                                                    
investment decision],  TransCanada had been given  the right                                                                    
to depart the  project and be paid of  7.1 percent interest.                                                                    
He explained  that the risk  of an increase in  capital cost                                                                    
was borne by the state through  a higher tariff. Most of the                                                                    
core  risks  that a  true  equity  partner would  bare  were                                                                    
retained  by the  state. He  relayed  that TransCanada  only                                                                    
bore  one fundamental  risk, which  pertained  to risk  that                                                                    
came from  the credit  outlook of  the state.  He elaborated                                                                    
that  TransCanada  had  agreed  to provide  financing  at  a                                                                    
particular  cost of  debt and  equity,  which involved  some                                                                    
judgements on  the state's financial health  and the ability                                                                    
to take  full faith  in credit  of the  state to  market. He                                                                    
reasoned  that  even  that risk  had  been  limited  because                                                                    
TransCanada  had  the  right  to leave  the  project  if  it                                                                    
decided the project no longer made commercial sense.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Mayer  continued to speak to  the points on slide  2. He                                                                    
relayed that  there was concern  related to  the risk/reward                                                                    
distribution  of the  deal with  TransCanada  and a  feeling                                                                    
that it  reflected the negotiating  leverage of each  of the                                                                    
parties at the time, given  the presence of AGIA obligations                                                                    
as a result. TransCanada had  taken on very limited risk and                                                                    
appeared much more like a debtor  to the project than a true                                                                    
equity  holder; however,  it possessed  much of  the control                                                                    
that an equity holder would  have. The organization had been                                                                    
given  the right  to exercise  the  state's vote  on the  25                                                                    
percent of  the GTP and  pipeline. While there  were certain                                                                    
areas where  the state held  veto rights,  TransCanada could                                                                    
treat the  project as  its own  investment and  exercise its                                                                    
vote as it  saw fit. He noted that there  had been testimony                                                                    
in the  past week about  occurrences where the state  had to                                                                    
view TransCanada  as another  commercial participant  it had                                                                    
to negotiate with.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
10:22:34 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Mayer highlighted  the concept  of back-in-rights  (the                                                                    
final  bullet on  slide 2).  He discussed  that the  MOU and                                                                    
original deal  contained numerous  off-ramps. He  noted that                                                                    
many  legislators had  observed that  some of  the off-ramps                                                                    
appeared to lead straight back  to an on-ramp. He elaborated                                                                    
that  the   state  could   terminate  [the   agreement  with                                                                    
TransCanada] for numerous reasons  at various times, but the                                                                    
MOU  included   a  clause  specifying  that   if  the  state                                                                    
proceeded  with  the  project  or  a  substantially  similar                                                                    
project  within 5  years of  termination, the  state had  to                                                                    
offer  TransCanada  the right  to  participate.  Due to  the                                                                    
areas of  concern, the state  wanted to ensure there  was at                                                                    
least one solid off-ramp.  He explained that TransCanada had                                                                    
clarified  that  the  back-in-right  would be  put  into  an                                                                    
eventual Firm Transportation  Services Agreement (FTSA), but                                                                    
not  into  the Precedent  Agreement  that  would govern  the                                                                    
relationship  with TransCanada  until  the end  of 2015.  He                                                                    
furthered that  the end  of 2015  was the  key point  in the                                                                    
contractual  relationship with  TransCanada where  there was                                                                    
one clean off-ramp; it was the  one time the state could opt                                                                    
to  sever  the  relationship without  incurring  an  ongoing                                                                    
commitment.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Tsafos relayed that the  consultants planned to walk the                                                                    
committee through their process  in approaching the question                                                                    
[related   to  the   partnership   with  TransCanada].   The                                                                    
consultants  had  worked  to   develop  a  report  on  their                                                                    
assessment of Governor Walker's  proposal and saw their role                                                                    
as conducting  due diligence on  behalf of  the legislature.                                                                    
He  relayed  that they  had  worked  with Black  and  Veatch                                                                    
[financial consultant to the state]  to understand its model                                                                    
and  assumptions.   He  relayed  that  enalytica   was  very                                                                    
comfortable  with the  Black and  Veatch  numbers. He  noted                                                                    
that enalytica  did not try  to replicate the  numbers given                                                                    
time constraints. He relayed that  enalytica had a number of                                                                    
conversations and  an in person  meeting with the  Black and                                                                    
Veatch team to discuss  its numbers. Additionally, enalytica                                                                    
had a good conversation with  DNR to understand its concerns                                                                    
and how  the department viewed  the proposal. He  noted that                                                                    
he  and  Mr.   Mayer  had  been  present  for   all  of  the                                                                    
legislative hearings on the topic.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
10:26:09 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Tsafos  communicated that enalytica largely  agreed with                                                                    
substantive case  that had been made  by the administration.                                                                    
He relayed  the intent to  run through all of  the different                                                                    
areas that made sense to  enalytica. He noted that the state                                                                    
did  not  seem  to  have  many  compelling  alternatives  to                                                                    
approving  the  administration's  proposal  because  of  the                                                                    
impact on the  December 4 [2015] vote and what  it meant for                                                                    
the budget. The  presentation would focus on  two things: 1)                                                                    
offering   context  and   clarification  on   some  of   the                                                                    
statements made  by the administration,  particularly around                                                                    
the financial  merits of the  TransCanada buyout; and  2) to                                                                    
share  some  of  enalytica's  views on  who  would  take  on                                                                    
responsibilities that had been performed by TransCanada.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
10:27:37 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Tsafos  highlighted  slide  3,  "Where  We  Agree  with                                                                    
Administration and Where Not":                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     Where we agree with administration statements                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
          The State of Alaska (SOA) will pay TransCanada                                                                        
          (TC) no matter what                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
          Under failure case, terminating TC relationship                                                                       
          now much cheaper than terminating later                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Tsafos elaborated that under  a project failure scenario                                                                    
it would  be very painful to  write a check for  hundreds of                                                                    
millions  of  dollars (possibly  $1  billion)  for a  failed                                                                    
project and  the state would  be paying  interest throughout                                                                    
that time. He continued to address slide 3:                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
          SOA retains risk, but TC retains most decision                                                                        
          making (TC's only risk is deterioration of SOA                                                                        
          credit)                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
          SOA credit rating will be hit regardless of                                                                           
          whether TC is in the project or not                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
          SOA has several financing options-no need to                                                                          
          panic about having higher cash calls                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Tsafos  added that it  was typical at the  current early                                                                    
stage to not  have a detailed financial plan.  He noted that                                                                    
financing  typically   occurred  at  the  FEED   [Front  End                                                                    
Engineering  and  Design]  stage.  Sometimes  financing  was                                                                    
closed even  after FID, provided there  had been discussions                                                                    
with  the bank  and there  was comfort  with the  financing.                                                                    
There was nothing about the  absence of a detailed financial                                                                    
plan that was  concerning to enalytica at  the current time.                                                                    
He continued to address slide 3:                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
          This  is the  only  clean off-ramp  that SOA  has;                                                                    
          failure to  pass this bill  means harder  to sever                                                                    
          ties with TC                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Tsafos  expounded that  the state  would no  longer have                                                                    
the opportunity  to step  away from  TransCanada in  a clean                                                                    
way  if  it  signed  an  FTSA  (due  to  the  back-in-rights                                                                    
provision). He continued to speak to slide 3:                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
          Not  having Alaska  Gasline Inducement  Act (AGIA)                                                                    
          makes a big difference in SOA calculations                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Tsafos recalled  that for many legislators,  it had been                                                                    
important  to  avoid  the  possibility  of  treble  damages,                                                                    
litigation, and arguments. In addition  to ensuring that the                                                                    
state could leverage the work  that had been done under AGIA                                                                    
(for which it had paid  a substantial portion). He addressed                                                                    
the  last   point  on  which   enalytica  agreed   with  the                                                                    
administration:                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
          Non-alignment  in  voting  and  non-visibility  of                                                                    
          information  undermine  original  case for  TC  in                                                                    
          AKLNG                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Tsafos qualified  that enalytica  was not  part of  the                                                                    
project  negotiations   and  could   not  say   how  quickly                                                                    
TransCanada   would  respond;   however,   there  had   been                                                                    
testimony by  the administration that had  addressed some of                                                                    
the  issues. He  discussed  that in  theory TransCanada  was                                                                    
supposed to  be the state's  agent in the  project; however,                                                                    
the original case was undermined  if the company was less of                                                                    
an agent  and more like a  party the state had  to negotiate                                                                    
with. He  addressed two areas where  enalytica differed from                                                                    
the administration (slide 3):                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     Where we differ from or wish to supplement                                                                                 
     administration statements                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
          The   strictly   financial   case   for   severing                                                                    
          relationship with  TC is not as  compelling as has                                                                    
          been argued                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
          Decision should focus on strategic, not financial                                                                     
          considerations: expansion plans and AK LNG vision                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Tsafos elaborated  that  enalytica  believed the  state                                                                    
should not  limit its  considerations to  the idea  that the                                                                    
state had two sources of  financing (i.e. TransCanada or the                                                                    
market) and which was cheaper,  but it should consider other                                                                    
tangibles and  intangibles that  TransCanada brought  to the                                                                    
relationship and how the state  may replace the company once                                                                    
it was gone.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
10:31:36 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Senator Dunleavy remarked on Mr.  Tsafos' testimony that the                                                                    
financial  implications  for the  state  would  not be  that                                                                    
significant. He  explained that the committee  had heard for                                                                    
the past week  that the state would realize a  savings up to                                                                    
$400 million. He  asked Mr. Tsafos if he  concurred with the                                                                    
figure.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Tsafos  replied  that  Mr.   Mayer  would  address  the                                                                    
question in several slides.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Mayer addressed slide 4  titled "Is the Financial Upside                                                                    
Truly  Compelling?" The  slide  addressed the  first of  two                                                                    
claims in the argument put forward by the administration:                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     "Under all scenarios of State credit rating downgrade                                                                      
     down to A-A3, the State cost of debt remains below the                                                                     
     TC cost of capital."                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Mayer pointed  to the image of a chart  presented by the                                                                    
administration on  the left of  slide 4. The  chart included                                                                    
two  red bars  representing  the  TransCanada interest  rate                                                                    
financing  cost and  gray  bars  representing the  borrowing                                                                    
rate the state may achieve  under a series of credit ratings                                                                    
from   AAA    to   A-(based   on   data    from   consultant                                                                    
FirstSouthwest). He  planned to  address each of  the claims                                                                    
in detail.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
10:34:37 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Senator Bishop queried  the price of gas that  had been used                                                                    
to determine  the $400 million  in potential savings  to the                                                                    
state. He asked  if a benchmark of $100 per  barrel or other                                                                    
had been used.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Mayer  replied  that  there   would  be  a  slide  that                                                                    
addressed  the specific  question. He  stated that  the core                                                                    
variables  looked   at  the  cost   of  debt   in  different                                                                    
scenarios, rather  than the cost  of gas. He  explained that                                                                    
the discussion  was primarily related  to financing  for the                                                                    
state's  infrastructure  rather  than anything  to  do  with                                                                    
revenues the project would generate,  which were the same in                                                                    
both cases.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Tsafos added  that Black  and Veatch  numbers showed  a                                                                    
scenario with and without TransCanada.  He noted that all of                                                                    
the  market  assumptions  were  the  same  for  both  cases.                                                                    
Whatever  oil and  gas  price the  analysis  assumed in  the                                                                    
TransCanada  scenario  had  also   been  used  in  the  non-                                                                    
TransCanada scenario. He believed  Black and Veatch had used                                                                    
a long-term oil price assumption of $80 per barrel.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
10:36:08 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Mayer  considered the  state's  cost  of debt  with  or                                                                    
without  TransCanada  (slide  5).   A  table  on  the  slide                                                                    
presented  numbers   from  a  FirstSouthwest   analysis.  He                                                                    
pointed  out  that  the  figures in  the  interest  rate  on                                                                    
taxable bonds column  were the same as the gray  bars on the                                                                    
previous  slide for  each of  the credit  ratings shown.  He                                                                    
noted  that there  were  some  additional details  enalytica                                                                    
believed  were pertinent  in  thinking  through the  state's                                                                    
likely  cost of  debt, particularly  if the  state opted  to                                                                    
raise most of  the capital through debt  rather than savings                                                                    
and equity and if it was  primarily done through debt on the                                                                    
state's  balance sheet  versus  project  financing or  other                                                                    
options.  The  FirstSouthwest   analysis  assumed  that  the                                                                    
primary  driver  of  credit rating  was  the  proportion  of                                                                    
unrestricted  general fund  (UGF) that  would be  devoted to                                                                    
debt service.  The analysis had  found that the  state could                                                                    
maintain its  AAA credit  rating up until  the point  that 5                                                                    
percent  of  the  state's  UGF revenue  was  spent  in  debt                                                                    
service; beyond that threshold the  state could begin to see                                                                    
credit  downgrades. He  elaborated  that at  a debt  service                                                                    
limit of  up to 8  percent the  state could retain  a credit                                                                    
rating  of AA+;  with  a  debt service  limit  of  up to  10                                                                    
percent  the state  could  retain  a AA  rating;  with a  12                                                                    
percent  debt service  limit the  state could  retain a  AA-                                                                    
rating;  and with  a debt  service  limit of  20 percent  it                                                                    
could  retain  an A  credit  rating.  He discussed  how  the                                                                    
numbers related  to the amount  of new debt the  state could                                                                    
issue.  He provided  a hypothetical  scenario where  in 2017                                                                    
the state conducted one enormous bond issuance.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
10:39:20 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Mayer remarked that  the FirstSouthwest analysis assumed                                                                    
the DOR forecast on state  revenues through the 2020s, which                                                                    
included a return  to oil prices of $110 per  barrel by 2020                                                                    
and revenues  returning to around  $4.2 billion  [per year];                                                                    
the  forecast projected  the figures  would remain  flat for                                                                    
the 20  years following 2020.  He shared that  enalytica had                                                                    
reengineered  the  model  and  had come  up  with  the  same                                                                    
figures.  Additionally,  it  had looked  at  scenarios  with                                                                    
declining revenue out into the  future. He explained that in                                                                    
a  scenario  with declining  revenue  the  maximum debt  the                                                                    
state  could borrow  at an  A credit  rating would  decrease                                                                    
from the $15 billion to  between $10 billion to $13 billion.                                                                    
He stated that broadly  speaking, the presentations from the                                                                    
administration  showed the  expected capital  commitment for                                                                    
the project  at around  $14 billion to  $15 billion  for the                                                                    
state. He remarked  that the cost was  effectually true with                                                                    
or without TransCanada's involvement.  He reiterated that if                                                                    
the  state  paid for  the  project  with one  large  general                                                                    
obligation bond  it could  have an A  credit rating  with an                                                                    
interest rate of 5.34 percent (based on data on slide 5).                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Mayer  referred back to the  gray bar chart on  the left                                                                    
of slide 4. He stated  that the comparison was accurate, but                                                                    
the  lower  bars shown  on  the  chart  would be  much  more                                                                    
relevant if the state opted  to pay for the project entirely                                                                    
on its balance sheet. He  noted that cost represented by the                                                                    
lower  bars  was  less  than the  cost  of  capital  through                                                                    
TransCanada, but  not substantially lower. For  that reason,                                                                    
enalytica  agreed that  there was  financial upside,  but it                                                                    
may be less compelling than  the full range of possibilities                                                                    
that had been presented.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair MacKinnon communicated to  the public that the full                                                                    
report and the meeting documents were online.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Mayer  addressed  the  second  of  two  claims  in  the                                                                    
argument  put forward  by the  administration (the  chart on                                                                    
the right of slide 4):                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     "The State could potentially achieve up to $400                                                                            
     million incremental annual cash flows, based on the                                                                        
     State's expected lower cost of capital."                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Mayer  turned to slide 6  to elaborate on the  claim. He                                                                    
stated  that it  was  important to  understand that  without                                                                    
rounding  up the  cost of  annual savings  presented by  the                                                                    
administration were  actually $360  million instead  of $400                                                                    
million.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
10:42:31 AM                                                                                                                   
AT EASE                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
10:42:48 AM                                                                                                                   
RECONVENED                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Mayer continued  to look at slide 6,  which included two                                                                    
cash flow  charts from a  Black and Veatch  presentation. He                                                                    
pointed  out that  the right  hand  side of  the cash  flows                                                                    
showed an increased benefit of  up to $400 million per year.                                                                    
He  explained  that   the  blue  line  on   the  left  chart                                                                    
represented   the  project   without  TransCanada   and  was                                                                    
substantially  lower  because  it assumed  the  state  would                                                                    
finance the project with 70  percent debt/30 percent equity.                                                                    
He  detailed under  the 70/30  scenario the  state would  be                                                                    
responsible  for   30  percent   of  the  $7   billion  that                                                                    
TransCanada would  have paid; 30  percent of $7  billion was                                                                    
approximately  $2  billion.  Without TransCanada  the  state                                                                    
would be responsible for an  additional $2 billion in equity                                                                    
outlays and  a substantial  portion of  the $360  million in                                                                    
annual returns would simply be  a function of the $2 billion                                                                    
the state invested up front.  He stated that the net present                                                                    
value (NPV)  of the  future cash  flows depended  largely on                                                                    
the  discount   rate  used.  Enalytica   strongly  suggested                                                                    
applying a  commercial discount rate  when the  state looked                                                                    
at any commercial investment. He  noted that for the current                                                                    
discussion  there were  easier  ways of  doing the  analysis                                                                    
without getting into discount rates.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Kelly asked  Mr. Mayer  to clarify  his statements                                                                    
without  any qualifiers.  Mr. Mayer  replied  that the  $360                                                                    
million  in annual  benefits was  a result  of investing  an                                                                    
extra  $2 billion  up front.  He stated  that when  thinking                                                                    
about the  overall value,  it was not  possible to  focus on                                                                    
one leg  without thinking  about the other  leg. One  way to                                                                    
look at  the situation was  to try  to determine an  NPV for                                                                    
the time  value of money;  it would only be  slightly higher                                                                    
than zero at a commercial  rate of return. He believed there                                                                    
was a better way, which was  to think instead about the rest                                                                    
of the  numbers shown on  the Black and Veatch  graph (slide                                                                    
6).  The baseline  was  the $360  million,  while the  other                                                                    
numbers   used  a   scenario  where   the  entire   cost  of                                                                    
TransCanada's  participation was  replaced with  100 percent                                                                    
debt. He  explained that with  100 percent debt  there would                                                                    
be no additional equity to  put in upfront. The chart showed                                                                    
the  assumption on  the cost  of  capital for  the state  in                                                                    
raising funds that would lead  to each of the numbers. Under                                                                    
Black and Veatch's  numbers if the state could  raise all of                                                                    
the required capital  at a 4 percent interest  rate it would                                                                    
save  $260  million  per  year   (as  opposed  to  the  $360                                                                    
million); whereas, savings would  reduce to $130 million per                                                                    
year at a 5.5 percent  interest rate. He concluded that from                                                                    
a purely financial standpoint the  state would be better off                                                                    
without TransCanada. However,  he recommended being cautious                                                                    
when thinking  about how large  the financial  benefit would                                                                    
be.  Additionally, he  recommended thinking  more about  the                                                                    
numbers on  the right hand bars  (on the chart shown  on the                                                                    
right)  than  the left  hand  bars.  He  noted that  it  was                                                                    
particularly the case when digging  further into some of the                                                                    
assumptions.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
10:47:22 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Mayer referred back to the  left chart on slide 4 titled                                                                    
"TC  Cost  of Capital  vs.  State  Debt Interest  Rate."  He                                                                    
stated that  the red bars  represented the  TransCanada cost                                                                    
of  capital   at  6.1   percent  up   until  a   year  after                                                                    
construction, and  5.8 percent  from that point  forward. He                                                                    
noted that  the shift was  a function  of the change  in the                                                                    
capital structure  from 70/30 debt  to equity to  75/25 debt                                                                    
to  equity.  The  numbers were  lower  than  the  previously                                                                    
presented  "headline"  numbers  of   7.1  percent  and  6.75                                                                    
percent. He explained that the  difference was driven by the                                                                    
variance in  the 30-year Treasury  rate, which  could change                                                                    
until  pinned down  at FID.  He explained  that in  the past                                                                    
year  the 30-year  Treasury  note had  dropped  by about  95                                                                    
basis  points  (almost  1  percent).  For  example,  if  the                                                                    
relative cost  of capital to  the state  without TransCanada                                                                    
was 5.3  to 5.5 percent compared  to a rate of  5.8 percent,                                                                    
there  would  only  be  a half  a  percentage  point  spread                                                                    
regardless of the 30-year Treasury rate.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon  surmised  that the  administration  had                                                                    
provided a  "best case"  scenario, which  enalytica believed                                                                    
may be  slightly optimistic; however,  it was still  fair to                                                                    
say that there was upside  from a financial perspective. She                                                                    
asked if  her statements were  fair. Mr. Mayer  believed her                                                                    
statements were very fair.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair   Kelly  asked   for  verification   that  if   the                                                                    
transaction was  viewed purely as financial,  the difference                                                                    
between using TransCanada as equity  and the rates the state                                                                    
could obtain on  its own by financing the  entire portion of                                                                    
TransCanada's participation would be fairly small.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Mayer  agreed, but noted  that it depended how  the term                                                                    
"fairly small" was defined.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon  stressed  that   $30  million  or  $130                                                                    
million was a substantial amount  of money, which could fund                                                                    
the Department  of Education and Early  Development for many                                                                    
years.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Kelly made  a remark about hundreds  of billions of                                                                    
dollars of  sales over  years and  an amount  being somewhat                                                                    
diminished  in  comparison  [note:  beginning  of  statement                                                                    
indecipherable].                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
10:51:22 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Micciche surmised that  if the decision was based                                                                    
purely economically, buying out  TransCanada and shifting to                                                                    
state control  over the 25  percent was likely  positive. He                                                                    
assumed  that factoring  in the  benefit of  eliminating the                                                                    
conflict between the state and  TransCanada added to the net                                                                    
positive although in a less financially concrete way.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Mayer  broadly agreed with the  statements. He discussed                                                                    
that the prior administration's  argument that had been made                                                                    
two years earlier  was that TransCanada and  the state would                                                                    
be highly  aligned, that the  state would have  an expansion                                                                    
oriented partner, and there was  a strong strategic interest                                                                    
regardless of the financials. However,  if one believed that                                                                    
in the past two years  the state had occasionally been faced                                                                    
with  negotiating   against  TransCanada  as   a  commercial                                                                    
partner   rather  than   being  truly   aligned,  it   would                                                                    
substantially change  the strategic  calculus as  to whether                                                                    
there was significant  value to the state in  making sure it                                                                    
had control of its full voting share.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Mayer returned  to slide 6. He referred  to the scenario                                                                    
where the state  would pay for the  project entirely through                                                                    
general obligation debt as a  more cautionary benchmark. The                                                                    
TransCanada  cost  of  capital  would  be  6.75  percent  as                                                                    
indicated in  the MOU without  taking into account  the rate                                                                    
tracker.  He continued  that the  conversation would  not be                                                                    
about $130 million at a 5.5  rate; it may be necessary to go                                                                    
up a  full percentage  point to take  into account  that the                                                                    
rate tracker  had not  been taken into  account in  terms of                                                                    
comparing like  with like; at  that point the  savings would                                                                    
be closer to $90 million.  Additionally, it was important to                                                                    
think about that under  the previous TransCanada agreements,                                                                    
the state  had the equity option  to buy back in  40 percent                                                                    
of what had  been handed over to TransCanada;  if that right                                                                    
was  exercised, the  numbers could  be close  to halved.  He                                                                    
stated that  if the state  and TransCanada really  wanted to                                                                    
make  the  relationship work  and  the  state was  concerned                                                                    
about  financing costs  there were  also ways  to bring  the                                                                    
numbers  down   further  by  executing  the   equity  option                                                                    
agreement. He  noted it was  a strategic  consideration, but                                                                    
it  appeared there  were many  reasons why  things were  not                                                                    
working out from the strategic standpoint.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
10:55:10 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Tsafos remarked that the  financial aspects would not be                                                                    
included   in  the   remainder  of   the  presentation.   He                                                                    
highlighted slide  7 titled "TC  Inflection Points  Opens up                                                                    
Broader Questions."  He remarked that some  of the questions                                                                    
were directly  related to TransCanada  and others  were more                                                                    
tangentially related.  He explained  that the  list included                                                                    
questions to ask as the process moved forward.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Tsafos  stated that the  entire process of SB  138 built                                                                    
around the idea  that the project would not  work unless the                                                                    
producers and the state were  aligned and there was one area                                                                    
where the producers  and the state would not  be aligned. He                                                                    
explained that  the producers wanted to  commercialize their                                                                    
resource; whereas  the state had  some broader  interests in                                                                    
making sure the infrastructure could  be utilized to open up                                                                    
the  basin  for  new  companies  to find  oil  and  gas.  He                                                                    
furthered  that  the  area involved  a  fundamental  tension                                                                    
between  the producers  and the  state, which  had been  the                                                                    
area  where TransCanada  would have  the  state's back.  The                                                                    
plan  had been  that TransCanada  would sit  in the  project                                                                    
meetings and would  be thinking how to get  more gas flowing                                                                    
through  the pipe.  Throughout the  negotiations TransCanada                                                                    
would  be on  the  lookout  to ensure  the  project was  not                                                                    
designed in ways  that would limit the  ability of expansion                                                                    
and increased gas flow. He  noted that because enalytica had                                                                    
not  been  in  the  negotiations,  they  did  not  know  how                                                                    
accurate  the  theory  was. Absent  TransCanada,  the  state                                                                    
would  be  on its  own  and  would  have  to take  over  the                                                                    
responsibility; it  would have to protect  its own interests                                                                    
in  areas  where  it  was  inherently  misaligned  from  the                                                                    
producers.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
10:58:37 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Senator Bishop  asked for verification that  AGDC would take                                                                    
on  the responsibility.  Mr. Tsafos  replied  that based  on                                                                    
testimony,  enalytica's  understanding  was that  the  share                                                                    
belonging to TransCanada  would go to AGDC;  however, it was                                                                    
not fully  clear to enalytica  who the counter  parties were                                                                    
in all of  the agreements. He imagined that  the state would                                                                    
more broadly be looking out  for the interests, but in terms                                                                    
of  the party,  much  of the  responsibility  would fall  to                                                                    
AGDC.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Tsafos continued  to discuss slide 7.  He discussed that                                                                    
protecting  the  state's  interests would  require  multiple                                                                    
people all the  way from "the general to  the foot soldier."                                                                    
He explained  that it  would be necessary  for the  state to                                                                    
review  every  decision  to ensure  the  protection  of  the                                                                    
state's  interests. One  of the  things  that had  concerned                                                                    
enalytica was that thus far AGDC  did not have a presence on                                                                    
the  135-person project  management team,  which was  making                                                                    
daily  decisions. He  stated that  the issue  was concerning                                                                    
because  the state  needed to  make sure  to match  the big-                                                                    
picture strategic vision with  the day-to-day decisions made                                                                    
at  the  lower levels  that  would  have  an impact  on  how                                                                    
expandable  the pipe  would be  and  how much  more gas  the                                                                    
infrastructure  could withstand.  He  communicated that  the                                                                    
state would best protect its  interests if there was a clear                                                                    
cohesion   between   the   highest  level   and   everything                                                                    
underneath.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Tsafos stated  that enalytica  believed  the issue  was                                                                    
crucial  specifically related  to  the expansion  capability                                                                    
and ensuring  that the  pipe would be  full; there  were two                                                                    
ways  enalytica  thought  about  the  state  protecting  its                                                                    
interest in that regard. The  first focus was on the present                                                                    
day; it was  necessary for the state to  get the engineering                                                                    
and  governance  structures  correct   to  ensure  that  the                                                                    
pipeline was  as expandable as  possible. He  discussed that                                                                    
the HOA  allowed any party  to expand the  infrastructure on                                                                    
its own as  long as the action did not  adversely impact the                                                                    
other parties. He observed that  while the provision sounded                                                                    
good,  the  devil was  in  the  details -  specifically,  he                                                                    
questioned what it  meant to not adversely  impact the other                                                                    
parties. He  questioned how expansions would  be governed if                                                                    
one of  the producers  made another  discovery on  the North                                                                    
Slope, whether the state would  have the unilateral right to                                                                    
take up  all of the expansion  capacity or not, and  how the                                                                    
additional   compression  cost   and  fuel   use  would   be                                                                    
allocated.  There were  currently  a  significant number  of                                                                    
design  and   governance  questions  that   would  determine                                                                    
whether in 2026 an explorer could put gas in the pipe.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Tsafos  discussed that  the  second  focus was  on  the                                                                    
future. He  relayed that  when gas was  flowing in  2026 the                                                                    
state would  need someone  to talk  to every  single company                                                                    
finding oil  and gas in  the state to determine  whether the                                                                    
gas could  be put  through the  pipe. The  individuals would                                                                    
need  to determine  regulatory,  commercial, financing,  and                                                                    
tariff components in  order to get gas through  the pipe. In                                                                    
theory  TransCanada  would   have  held  the  responsibility                                                                    
during  the operational  phase.  He was  not suggesting  the                                                                    
state needed  to hire  the individuals  in the  present day,                                                                    
but  the concept  was one  of the  implications to  consider                                                                    
without TransCanada.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
11:03:13 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Senator Dunleavy  reasoned that  there would always  be some                                                                    
misalignment,   because  the   sovereign   party  wanted   a                                                                    
continual flow  of gas sold  at a high price.  This required                                                                    
the addition  of more gas  over time,  which may be  at odds                                                                    
with some of  the current lease holders. He  wondered if the                                                                    
state was on  track, or if there were some  "red flags" that                                                                    
should be  considered. He queried a  comparison with similar                                                                    
projects throughout the  world. He asked if  the project was                                                                    
headed in the right direction.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Tsafos  replied that  comparing  the  project to  other                                                                    
parts  of  the  world  was  difficult,  because  Alaska  was                                                                    
uniquely situated.  He addressed maximizing gas  through the                                                                    
pipe.  He  noted  that many  locations  with  long-term  LNG                                                                    
projects had  national oil companies serving  the role; they                                                                    
owned   the  asset   and   resources   and  were   sometimes                                                                    
contractually  or  constitutionally   entitled  to  the  gas                                                                    
regardless of who produced it.  He remarked that some of the                                                                    
questions would  be answered throughout the  normal business                                                                    
process. He pointed to Malaysia,  Bernai, or Indonesia where                                                                    
the original  gas source had  been depleted and there  was a                                                                    
process  through   which  new   suppliers  had   access.  He                                                                    
furthered  that Alaska  could not  necessarily count  on the                                                                    
regulatory structure for protection  because the project was                                                                    
export oriented  and it was  not clear the state  would have                                                                    
the  Federal   Energy  Regulatory   Commission  implementing                                                                    
supporting structures, which would  differ than other places                                                                    
where countries faced the same  challenges. He stressed that                                                                    
the broad structure  that Alaska was pursuing  made sense in                                                                    
terms of  the governance  and the serious  exploration about                                                                    
the  cost  and  benefits  of a  48-inch  pipe.  However,  he                                                                    
emphasized that the  devil was in the  details. He explained                                                                    
that  the state  needed  to understand  how every  decision,                                                                    
contract, and  piece of equipment  would impact  its ability                                                                    
to expand the  infrastructure in the future (10  to 20 years                                                                    
out). He remarked that TransCanada  had been responsible for                                                                    
the work on the state's  behalf [which would change with the                                                                    
company's departure from the project].  He noted it would be                                                                    
useful  to  understand  how the  state  would  backfill  the                                                                    
capacity [previously  filled by TransCanada].  He reiterated                                                                    
that he  was not  concerned about the  big picture,  but the                                                                    
devil was in the details.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Senator Dunleavy  referred to discussions  about TransCanada                                                                    
secondees  continuing to  provide  work on  the project.  He                                                                    
surmised it would be the  expertise the state should have as                                                                    
it continued through the process.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Mayer replied  that it  was important  to keep  in mind                                                                    
that  current  TransCanada  secondees would  remain  on  the                                                                    
project  until   May  2016.  The  additional   provision  of                                                                    
secondees was a  continuity solution for the  next 6 months,                                                                    
but it  was not a  long-term solution to the  problem. There                                                                    
was a serious  need for the state to determine  how it would                                                                    
fill the gap in the future.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Dunleavy surmised  that the  question would  be how                                                                    
the state  obtained the expertise, whether  on an individual                                                                    
basis or  by bringing another  outfit to fill the  role. Mr.                                                                    
Tsafos  replied that  the state  could either  hire internal                                                                    
capacity directly or through contracting  or the state could                                                                    
find a different partner.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon  noted  that there  was  a  supplemental                                                                    
request, which  would allow  DOL to seek  some of  the early                                                                    
negotiations  through legal  contracting.  She believed  the                                                                    
work fell under  the $10 million request. She  noted she was                                                                    
not certain  the funds were  for the specific  work referred                                                                    
to  by Senator  Dunleavy in  regards to  expansion, but  the                                                                    
administration  did  see the  need  to  bring on  additional                                                                    
experts at present.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Dunleavy referenced  testimony provided  to another                                                                    
legislative committee  by enalytica that every  now and then                                                                    
the company  saw or heard  things that left  them scratching                                                                    
their heads. He asked for further detail on the comment.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Mayer recalled  that the  question had  been about  the                                                                    
overall  progress of  the project  and whether  the original                                                                    
vision of AKLNG  had been maintained. He  had responded that                                                                    
enalytica had developed  an increasingly cooperative working                                                                    
relationship   with  some   of   the  new   administration's                                                                    
departments (DNR and DOR in  particular). He elaborated that                                                                    
enalytica had  steadily become  closer and  more comfortable                                                                    
with  how the  state was  progressing, the  capacity it  was                                                                    
building   up,  and   the  approach   it  was   taking  into                                                                    
negotiations.  He relayed  that enalytica  had less  contact                                                                    
communication with AGDC  in terms of how it  was building up                                                                    
its capability. He elaborated that  enalytica was working to                                                                    
build the  relationship to understand  AGDC's plans  and how                                                                    
it planned to  fill some of the gaps. He  continued that all                                                                    
of  the  interaction   with  the  state  gas   team  at  the                                                                    
departmental level had given  enalytica significant faith in                                                                    
its approach. He  stated that every now  and then statements                                                                    
had been  made at  a higher  political level  that enalytica                                                                    
was unsure  how they related  to the progress being  made in                                                                    
moving forward under the HOA.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon asked  if a  specific  example was  when                                                                    
Attorney    General    Craig    Richards    had    discussed                                                                    
confidentiality  and  had  asserted to  the  Senate  Finance                                                                    
Committee  that   he  was   able  to   receive  confidential                                                                    
information  and  that  he had  not  signed  a  confidential                                                                    
agreement,  but could  not share  the  information with  the                                                                    
committee.  She remarked  that she  had been  scratching her                                                                    
head [over the statements].                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Tsafos believed the best way  to explain was to refer to                                                                    
slide 7  [Alice in  Wonderland image  and quote  included on                                                                    
the   slide].  He   referenced  testifying   before  another                                                                    
legislative committee in April.  He addressed that the state                                                                    
had been  going down one  path and then some  statements had                                                                    
been made that  made it seem like a different  path had been                                                                    
taken.  He  believed it  was  particularly  relevant in  the                                                                    
context  of  TransCanada  being   out  of  the  project.  He                                                                    
elaborated that a  project in which gas  was possibly bought                                                                    
from  producers  at  the  wellhead   was  a  very  different                                                                    
project.  He  relayed  that  the  last  two  slides  of  the                                                                    
presentation would  address the issue. He  explained that it                                                                    
was  a major  adjustment to  the structure  of the  project.                                                                    
Even though  there were parts  of the structure  that seemed                                                                    
to  be  going   ahead  in  a  clear   direction  there  were                                                                    
occasional  statements that  seemed to  suggest a  different                                                                    
endpoint  or   a  slight  variation  to   the  endpoint.  He                                                                    
explained that  it was  not necessarily good  or bad  if the                                                                    
project  reached  a point  where  two  parties withdrew  and                                                                    
suddenly the state was buying gas  at the wellhead and had a                                                                    
much bigger  share of  the infrastructure,  but it  would no                                                                    
longer be the same project.  He believed it was important to                                                                    
think about the end points  and how they affect decisions at                                                                    
present. He  noted that the  comment referred to  by Senator                                                                    
Dunleavy  and   Co-Chair  MacKinnon  was   not  specifically                                                                    
attributed to confidentiality.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
11:13:44 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair MacKinnon wondered how  the structure worked within                                                                    
confidentiality for  transparency and an  effective business                                                                    
environment.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Micciche  stated that considering the  royalty in                                                                    
kind  (RIK) principles  associated with  the project,  there                                                                    
was no  value in production  taxes and royalty.  He observed                                                                    
that  as  a  25  percent  owner, the  value  was  likely  in                                                                    
specified  AKLNG  volumes.  He  saw  a  potential  financial                                                                    
conflict for  the state. He  wondered how careful  the state                                                                    
had to  be to ensure  the expansion commercial case  did not                                                                    
directly compete  with the value of  foundational RIK export                                                                    
volumes.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Kelly asked  Vice-Chair Micciche  to rephrase  the                                                                    
question.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Mayer restated the question  and responded. He addressed                                                                    
that  the state  had  two  sets of  interests:  1) making  a                                                                    
commercial  assessment of  the project  that was  similar to                                                                    
the assessment  made by  the producers  in terms  of wanting                                                                    
the greatest possible  rate of return on  the investment; 2)                                                                    
expanding and  opening the basin.  The question  was related                                                                    
to  how to  compare the  two objectives  to ensure  that the                                                                    
state  was not  sacrificing  one objective  by pursuing  the                                                                    
other.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Micciche  agreed with  Mr. Mayer's  rephrasing of                                                                    
the question.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Kelly  asked  for  further  clarification  on  the                                                                    
question.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Mayer explained that the  question was about how to make                                                                    
sure  the  state  did not  sacrifice  commerciality  of  the                                                                    
project  as  a  result   of  its  concerns  about  expansion                                                                    
capability in the future.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair MacKinnon  remarked that  the question was  about a                                                                    
tradeoff of benefits.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
11:16:50 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Micciche  rephrased his question. He  stated that                                                                    
in the  rush to increase  production, he wanted to  know the                                                                    
most  careful points  for the  state to  consider to  ensure                                                                    
that  expansion did  not  directly  compete against  maximum                                                                    
value to the state in the AKLNG project.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Mayer  replied that the  decision around a  42-inch pipe                                                                    
versus a  48-inch pipe  was a useful  way of  thinking about                                                                    
the project. He detailed that  there were many solid reasons                                                                    
why  the  state's  project  partners  had  made  an  initial                                                                    
assessment that the 42-inch pipe was  the way to go based on                                                                    
where the steel could come from  and how many loads of steel                                                                    
were  required. He  noted  that  the items  had  led to  the                                                                    
decision, especially in the context  of the realization that                                                                    
there  was an  additional  Point Thomson  of spare  capacity                                                                    
after 16 years  of production that would need  to be brought                                                                    
online at  some point.  Additionally, there was  some fairly                                                                    
substantial Point Thomson expansion  capacity within the 42-                                                                    
inch pipe.  He elaborated that the  administration's idea to                                                                    
look further  at the 48-inch option  acknowledged that there                                                                    
was a  tradeoff between capital expenditures  upfront versus                                                                    
future  operating  expenditures   related  to  achieving  an                                                                    
expansion. He  continued that  if the  ultimate goal  was to                                                                    
secure an extra billion cubic  feet per day of expansion, it                                                                    
could be done under both  pipe options; however, the 48-inch                                                                    
pipe  would use  much less  fuel because  it required  fewer                                                                    
compressor   stations.  There   was  a   clear  cost-benefit                                                                    
tradeoff to be made about  the value placed on the expansion                                                                    
option.  He  furthered  that  it   needed  to  be  a  deeply                                                                    
commercial and  economically rational  decision, but  it may                                                                    
be one  in which  the payoffs were  different for  the state                                                                    
and  the producers.  How the  items  were weighted  depended                                                                    
enormously on  one's assessment of the  future resource base                                                                    
on the North Slope (not  only looking at resources, but what                                                                    
was  potentially  commercial,  and what  probabilities  were                                                                    
assigned to the items).                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Mayer stated that ultimately  all of the items needed to                                                                    
be  taken into  account  in deciding  what  value the  state                                                                    
would place  on the  expansion capacity and  to look  at the                                                                    
breakeven point in the value  of fuel. He elaborated that if                                                                    
more fuel  was used  to drive more  compressors it  would be                                                                    
necessary  to determine  the price  of gas  that would  make                                                                    
everything  equal. He  noted that  the state  would be  in a                                                                    
much  better position  to make  the decision  when the  full                                                                    
work the project  was proposing to do on  the 48-inch option                                                                    
came back. He believed it  was very reasonable for the state                                                                    
to  have  different objectives  from  the  producers on  the                                                                    
issue.  He   remarked  that  if  the   state  had  different                                                                    
objectives, the objectives could  be met potentially through                                                                    
a  larger  pipe  or  through   the  state's  negotiation  on                                                                    
expansion terms. In either of  the cases the decision needed                                                                    
to be  driven by  economics and the  value of  the different                                                                    
cases.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
11:21:04 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Micciche  voiced his concern about  ensuring that                                                                    
the project  had the  skillset to  make sure  that expansion                                                                    
principles did  not put the  state in a position  of working                                                                    
against itself.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair   MacKinnon  remarked   that  the   Senate  Finance                                                                    
Committee greatly appreciated that  Governor Bill Walker had                                                                    
removed  the  issue  of  a reserves  tax  from  the  special                                                                    
session   agenda.  She   believed  it   appeared  that   the                                                                    
administration was  moving forward  to enter into  gas sales                                                                    
agreements at  present. She  remarked that  unfortunately no                                                                    
one  from  the  administration   was  available  during  the                                                                    
current meeting.  She wondered what analysis  should be done                                                                    
from  a financial  perspective and  on what  time line.  She                                                                    
referred  to enalytica's  response to  Vice-Chair Micciche's                                                                    
question  that  more  information  was better  so  that  the                                                                    
analysis   was  economically   driven.  She   wondered  what                                                                    
analysis should have been done in  order for the state to be                                                                    
asking for gas sales agreements  from its partners. She used                                                                    
a marathon analogy related to  pacing oneself throughout the                                                                    
race and sprinting at the end to cross the finish line.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Tsafos replied that he would  address slides 8 and 9 and                                                                    
could  then  follow  up  on   any  remaining  questions.  He                                                                    
addressed the  following question on  slide 8: "What's  in a                                                                    
Sales and  Purchase Agreement (SPA)?"  He relayed  that most                                                                    
LNG SPAs  were about 100  pages with. Enalytica  had printed                                                                    
off an SPA as an example,  which had been fully executed for                                                                    
about 2  million tons of LNG.  He noted that if  a buyer was                                                                    
purchasing gas  at the  North Slope they  would not  have to                                                                    
worry about the tanker sizes.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
11:25:15 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon asked  if it  was an  accurate that  the                                                                    
state  should not  care  about the  issue  addressed by  Mr.                                                                    
Tsafos. She  wondered if not  knowing the tanker  cost would                                                                    
impact the decision  unless someone else was  picking up 100                                                                    
percent  of the  cost.  She surmised  that  if someone  else                                                                    
picked up  the tanker cost,  they could build  luxury liners                                                                    
to haul LNG that the state  would have no influence over and                                                                    
would  have to  pay  a  tariff for.  She  thought the  state                                                                    
should care about the entire  process and cost of the entire                                                                    
transport of its product to a potential buyer.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Tsafos agreed  that  the state  should  care about  the                                                                    
entire   process.  He   noted  that   the  agreements   were                                                                    
complicated. The  state would  outline specifics  related to                                                                    
approaching ports  to receive  the gas,  who paid  for tugs,                                                                    
and other.  He stated  that when  a transaction  happened at                                                                    
the port, significant information  would be outlined related                                                                    
to the specifics of the  transaction point. He stressed that                                                                    
the state  absolutely had to  think about the  economics and                                                                    
related aspects,  but there would  be some  technical things                                                                    
it could skip.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Mayer furthered  that it  was important  to distinguish                                                                    
between what needed  to be specified in  the contract versus                                                                    
the commercial case  and everything that needed  to be taken                                                                    
into consideration  when entering  into the  negotiation and                                                                    
agreeing to the terms.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon  asked  if  it  was  fair  to  say  that                                                                    
enalytica's    presentation   included    contracts   within                                                                    
contracts or  separate rounds of negotiation  with different                                                                    
levels  of detail  for the  final agreement.  She asked  for                                                                    
verification that the state may  not need all of the details                                                                    
to make  an economic  decision for Alaska  on gas  sales and                                                                    
marketing.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Mayer  replied in the  affirmative. He noted  that there                                                                    
were  two   key  challenges  associated  with   issue  under                                                                    
discussion.  The   first  related  to  the   volume  of  the                                                                    
agreement and  all of the things  that needed specification,                                                                    
which was a  set of challenges of itself.  He expounded that                                                                    
the issue related  to the quality of the legal  team and how                                                                    
long  it took  to nail  all of  the items  down. The  second                                                                    
related  to understanding  commercial terms  and determining                                                                    
the  state's best  interest. He  furthered that  one of  the                                                                    
large  challenges associated  with  executing the  agreement                                                                    
was  understanding  the  value  of  the  gas,  the  cost  of                                                                    
bringing the  gas to market,  and what price made  sense. He                                                                    
noted  that   Mr.  Tsafos  would  elaborate   on  the  topic                                                                    
momentarily.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon  referred  to  slide  7  and  asked  the                                                                    
presenters  to go  through  TransCanada's inflection  point.                                                                    
She asked for  a further explanation of  the items enalytica                                                                    
had proposed for the committee's consideration.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
11:29:00 AM                                                                                                                   
AT EASE                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
11:39:36 AM                                                                                                                   
RECONVENED                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon looked  at  slide 7,  and  asked for  an                                                                    
explanation of each bullet. Mr.  Mayer addressed the bullets                                                                    
on slide 7.  He addressed that enalytica's  first concern in                                                                    
terms of how  the state could best protect  its interests in                                                                    
the  project was  ensuring the  state  was participating  at                                                                    
every stage of the project  (related to both big picture and                                                                    
daily  decisions). He  referred  to  the 135-person  project                                                                    
management team  that currently had no  secondees from AGDC.                                                                    
When it  came to matters  of expansion, some of  the concern                                                                    
related to the governance  level, which translated to minute                                                                    
details  such as  the  sizing  of particular  infrastructure                                                                    
components.  He  stressed  the importance  of  ensuring  the                                                                    
state was  well represented  on the project  management team                                                                    
by   people   with  a   combination   of   clear  lines   of                                                                    
communication and  accountability and who  possess technical                                                                    
and commercial insight and  understanding. He addressed that                                                                    
AKLNG  could  back-fill  TransCanada's exit,  but  enalytica                                                                    
wanted  to ensure  that the  state had  its own  capacity to                                                                    
backfill some of the positions.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Mayer addressed  the question  of how  the state  would                                                                    
ensure expansions. The slide included  a bullet stating that                                                                    
the AGDC plan to pursue  expansions was unclear. He detailed                                                                    
that the  question had been  asked during testimony  and the                                                                    
answer given  at the  time was that  the situation  would be                                                                    
similar  to  Trans-Alaska  Pipeline  System  (TAPS)  with  a                                                                    
project  company  like  the  Alyeska  Services  Company.  He                                                                    
reminded  the committee  of the  original  ideas behind  the                                                                    
HOA.  He  stated it  was  a  project  within a  project.  He                                                                    
furthered  that  under the  HOA  any  of the  parties  could                                                                    
initiate  and  pursue  an  expansion  provided  it  did  not                                                                    
negatively impact  the other parties.  The parties  were not                                                                    
in  a   position  where  everyone   needed  to   approve  an                                                                    
expansion; the  state had the  right to pursue  an expansion                                                                    
as long as it did  not negatively impact the other partners.                                                                    
He  noted that  in addition  to  the right,  the state  also                                                                    
needed to  have the  capability for expansion  including the                                                                    
technical and  commercial agreements and  understanding that                                                                    
would make it possible.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Mayer  addressed the  cost of  TransCanada's involvement                                                                    
compared  to fully  replacing the  company with  100 percent                                                                    
debt.  Enalytica   did  not  yet  believe   there  had  been                                                                    
sufficient focus on the overall  capital structure the state                                                                    
would use  to finance  its share.  He spoke  to the  idea of                                                                    
financial  leverage. He  explained  that financial  leverage                                                                    
would  reduce the  amount of  money needed  upfront, but  it                                                                    
would  increase  the  risk and  volatility  of  the  state's                                                                    
investment. He furthered that the  concept could be compared                                                                    
to either  buying a  mortgage entirely with  cash of  a bank                                                                    
account,  using  20 percent  equity,  or  using 100  percent                                                                    
financing. He  relayed that a  small portion of  equity took                                                                    
very small movements in the  price of real estate to provide                                                                    
either a  very high return or  a very low return.  He stated                                                                    
that the same principles applied  in world of using leverage                                                                    
to  finance  the AKLNG  investment.  He  discussed that  the                                                                    
administration  had  spoken  about   its  concerns  that  in                                                                    
pursuing  the  RIK  structure,  the  state  was  potentially                                                                    
exposed  to negative  net-back.  He elaborated  on the  idea                                                                    
that  under very  low LNG  price scenarios  the state  could                                                                    
potentially  not have  enough  revenue from  selling LNG  to                                                                    
cover all  of its fixed  costs of transportation.  He agreed                                                                    
that  it  was  true   in  an  environment  with  substantial                                                                    
leverage involved  in financing  the share; however,  it was                                                                    
no longer a concern if the  state had the equity on hand and                                                                    
the desire to finance its  participation with the equity. At                                                                    
that point  the concern  would be about  the rate  of return                                                                    
the investment  would achieve.  He stated  that in  the very                                                                    
worst case scenario the state  would not be under water. The                                                                    
same was  true with LNG; if  the state had built  the entire                                                                    
facility with its  own equity, prices could drop  and it may                                                                    
not make the money it  had hoped; however, there would never                                                                    
be a point  where the state would have to  pay over money to                                                                    
sell the LNG.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
11:46:36 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Mayer  continued to  detail slide 7.  He stated  that as                                                                    
long as the entire structure  was built heavily on debt, the                                                                    
risk  became greater  that  there would  be  times when  the                                                                    
state  made an  abundance of  money and  times when  it went                                                                    
into  the  negative. Enalytica  believed  it  was time  that                                                                    
people began  thinking about  the dynamics  in terms  of the                                                                    
state's   required   capital   commitment  and   about   the                                                                    
appropriate  amount  of  equity  versus debt  in  trying  to                                                                    
reduce the volatility of cash flows and risk to the state.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon   communicated  that  she   and  Senator                                                                    
Dunleavy  had recently  attended a  meeting in  Palmer where                                                                    
Rigdon Boykin [South Carolina-based  attorney serving as the                                                                    
state's lead  negotiator on the AKLNG  project] had proposed                                                                    
that the  project and its  partners could all  come together                                                                    
to finance  the project. She  wondered if that  was typical.                                                                    
She believed  that some  of the  partners were  surprised by                                                                    
the assertion.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Tsafos replied  that there were two ways  to think about                                                                    
the financing  of LNG projects.  One was to think  about the                                                                    
financing happening at the project  level where everyone was                                                                    
in it  together. Alternatively,  the financing  could happen                                                                    
differently for each  of the partners. He  provided a recent                                                                    
project in  Israel as an  example. He detailed  that project                                                                    
was very  simple; developers wanted  to develop gas  to sell                                                                    
to the Israeli market. One  of the partners had financed the                                                                    
project entirely  through equity; whereas the  other partner                                                                    
raised  project   specific  debt.  He  explained   that  the                                                                    
partners   under  the   example   had  different   financing                                                                    
approaches  for the  same project.  He noted  that the  same                                                                    
dynamic  existed for  LNG projects  in general.  He detailed                                                                    
that there would be times  with the project took on project-                                                                    
level  debt,  and  other cases  when  the  project  partners                                                                    
borrowed  against their  original claim  to the  project. He                                                                    
addressed  the concept  of the  project  within the  project                                                                    
(the idea  of each  participant holding a  share of  the gas                                                                    
and  the  infrastructure) seemed  to  be  leading towards  a                                                                    
structure where  each partner would have  its own financing.                                                                    
He  elaborated that  the partners  could  all finance  their                                                                    
portion with their own equity,  which would not be dependent                                                                    
on  another party.  To  get  to a  level  where the  project                                                                    
itself  took debt,  some changes  to  the project  structure                                                                    
would be required. Currently,  AKLNG essentially housed four                                                                    
projects that were all sharing  the same infrastructure, but                                                                    
for everyone  to financing the project  together there would                                                                    
need to be some changes to the structure.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
11:51:28 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Mayer  completed detailing slide  7. The last  points on                                                                    
the  slide pertained  to the  state's vision  for AKLNG.  He                                                                    
read  a   quote  from  the  Lewis   Carroll  novel  "Alice's                                                                    
Adventures in Wonderland":                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     "Would you tell me, please, which way I ought to go                                                                        
     from here?" "That depends a good deal on where you                                                                         
     want to get to," said the Cat.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Mayer believed  that  a  clearly articulated  strategic                                                                    
endpoint  was  currently  missing   from  making  the  large                                                                    
decisions. He elaborated that if  the strategic endpoint was                                                                    
firmly rooted in the HOA  that had been established in 2014,                                                                    
it made  it clear  to think  about what  was in  the state's                                                                    
interest.  He  furthered that  the  scenario  was all  about                                                                    
equal shares of all of the  partners and getting as close as                                                                    
possible  to  perfect  alignment between  the  partners.  He                                                                    
stated that  under the scenario TransCanada  had looked like                                                                    
an anomaly  in many ways.  On the other hand,  the strategic                                                                    
picture  began  to change  under  a  scenario that  included                                                                    
withdrawal  agreements,  the  idea  that the  state  may  be                                                                    
buying gas  at the  wellhead through a  tolling or  gas sale                                                                    
and purchase agreements that did  not originally come from a                                                                    
partner with an infrastructure  ownership. He continued that                                                                    
under the second  scenario there may be many  cases in which                                                                    
it would  be desirable for  an additional investor  (e.g. an                                                                    
independent  midstream  company)  wanted  to  undertake  the                                                                    
financial  commitment  and  risk  to move  gas  through  the                                                                    
pipeline (if  the state did  not want to  be on the  hook to                                                                    
move the gas through  the infrastructure). He concluded that                                                                    
having a  clear, strategic perspective on  where the project                                                                    
was  going  made  it  much   easier  to  make  some  of  the                                                                    
decisions.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
11:53:48 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Senator Bishop stressed that there  was a substantial amount                                                                    
of  information  for   individual  lawmakers  to  comprehend                                                                    
associated with the project. He  listed various areas of the                                                                    
project  that  lawmakers   needed  to  understand  including                                                                    
finance, legal instruments,  gas sales agreements, marketing                                                                    
agreements,  and project  management agreements.  He pointed                                                                    
to  the project  management team  that was  made up  of best                                                                    
players in  addition to AGDC's  team that he hoped  was also                                                                    
made up of  the best players. He remarked that  there was an                                                                    
overwhelming  amount of  information to  absorb to  make the                                                                    
best  decision for  the state.  He asked  if the  presenters                                                                    
agreed.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr.   Tsafos  replied   that  the   project  was   immensely                                                                    
complicated.  He  referred  to  a  project  management  team                                                                    
(headed by Steve Butts) chart  listing the regulatory bodies                                                                    
(50 to 60)  that were required to sign off  on decisions. He                                                                    
stated that AKLNG  was one of the  most complicated projects                                                                    
in history.  He stressed that one  of the pros and  cons was                                                                    
that  there were  extremely capable  partners. He  explained                                                                    
that  the  state would  always  have  to  look out  for  its                                                                    
interests  and  defending   those  interests  would  require                                                                    
substantial money, capabilities,  and expertise. He stressed                                                                    
the importance  of continuing to  examine whether  the state                                                                    
was looking  at all  of the  items at  the highest  and best                                                                    
possible level.  Additionally, the state needed  to consider                                                                    
whether there  was coordination  and alignment  between each                                                                    
of the pieces so the state  could field the best team during                                                                    
negotiations  with  some  of the  world's  most  experienced                                                                    
companies.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
11:56:46 AM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Senator Bishop  remarked that  Mr. Butts  had one  team with                                                                    
the  best player  on gas.  He  stressed that  the team  only                                                                    
dealt with  the world of  gas. Meanwhile, he was  working to                                                                    
get his head  wrapped around every aspect of  the project at                                                                    
a high  level in  order to  make the  best decision  for the                                                                    
state. He communicated that it was challenging.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair MacKinnon  directed attention back to  slide 7. She                                                                    
pointed  to the  final  point  on the  slide:  "How much  do                                                                    
withdrawal agreements raise risks for SOA."                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Mayer replied that they would address slides 8 and 9.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Tsafos turned  to slide 8. He noted that  slides 8 and 9                                                                    
had  been included  in  response to  a  request by  Co-Chair                                                                    
MacKinnon. Slide 8 included a  "textbook" sales and purchase                                                                    
agreement,  which listed  all of  the items  that should  go                                                                    
into  a  fully executed  sales  and  purchase agreement.  He                                                                    
remarked that the  items were not all  necessarily needed at                                                                    
the present moment.  He discussed how long it  would take to                                                                    
talk through the items based  on standard industry practice.                                                                    
He shared  that he  had personally worked  with a  number of                                                                    
companies that had  done due diligence on  buying or selling                                                                    
gas through  a pipeline or  LNG. For example, a  company may                                                                    
seek advice  about buying  gas in the  Lower 48.  He relayed                                                                    
that it would probably take  enalytica a couple of months to                                                                    
work through  the numbers  and scenarios  to provide  a good                                                                    
image on what the investment  may look like. After providing                                                                    
the data  there would  be a  number of  other layers  of due                                                                    
diligence. He explained that  due diligence usually happened                                                                    
before commercial negotiations  occurred. In his experience,                                                                    
it often  took 1.5 to 2  years to conduct the  due diligence                                                                    
on a project. He  explained that intermediate agreements may                                                                    
be signed  - in the  same way that  AKLNG signed the  HOA or                                                                    
MOU.  He noted  that the  legislature had  signed an  MOU in                                                                    
December 2013,  a Precedent Agreement  in June 2013,  and it                                                                    
had been preparing  to sign an FTSA at the  current time. He                                                                    
stressed that it  had taken two years from  the execution of                                                                    
the first agreement.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
12:00:57 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Tsafos  discussed   slide  9  titled  "Withdrawal-Sales                                                                    
Carries  Major Risks  for  SOA." He  prefaced  the slide  as                                                                    
their "Halloween  special" as there  were some items  on the                                                                    
slide  that could  be quite  significant  and impactful.  He                                                                    
shared a quote by Mr.  Mayer "There's two kind of agreements                                                                    
that you may  be able to sign before December  4th: one is a                                                                    
very high level agreement  that probably isn't very binding;                                                                    
and the  second is an  agreement that probably isn't  in the                                                                    
best interest of the state."  He explained that in order for                                                                    
the state  to close all  of the possible commercial  gaps in                                                                    
one  month,   it  may  need   to  make  some   very  serious                                                                    
concessions.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Tsafos addressed  a question  posed  by Co-Chair  Kelly                                                                    
from the  prior day  related to how  much the  project would                                                                    
cost. He  pointed slide  9 titled  "Withdrawal/Sales Carries                                                                    
Major Risks for SOA" and addressed the first line:                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     Economics: Buying 75 percent of AK LNG gas could cost                                                                      
     $1.4-$7.4 bn/yr (1995-2014 Henry Hub prices)                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Tsafos elaborated  that under  the  scenario the  state                                                                    
would  buy the  producers' (ExxonMobil,  ConocoPhillips, and                                                                    
BP)  gas  at  the  wellhead. He  furthered  that  under  the                                                                    
scenario  the producers  were no  longer  interested in  the                                                                    
project  and   opted  to   sell  the   gas  to   the  state.                                                                    
Additionally,  the scenario  depicted  the state  purchasing                                                                    
the gas from 1995  to 2014 at the price of  Henry Hub (a hub                                                                    
in Louisiana that set the  price for North American gas). He                                                                    
expounded that  the gas would  have cost the  state anywhere                                                                    
from $1.4 billion to $7.4  billion per year (with an average                                                                    
of about $3  billion per year, the total for  20 years would                                                                    
be $60 billion).  He explained that if the  state bought gas                                                                    
for  the next  20  years  at the  historical  prices and  it                                                                    
invested another $60 billion to  build the infrastructure on                                                                    
its own, it  would be -$120 billion by the  time the project                                                                    
became operational  in 2025 or  2026. He qualified  that the                                                                    
scenario  was  a simplistic  example  that  did not  include                                                                    
discount rates and  a multitude of other  items; however, it                                                                    
did illustrate that  the project was a  major commitment. He                                                                    
reasoned  that when  the state  thought about  entering into                                                                    
the  commitment,  it  would want  to  ensure  it  understood                                                                    
exactly what it was getting into.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Tsafos continued  to address  slide 9  that included  a                                                                    
list  of items  the  state  would need  to  sort out  before                                                                    
executing  something  resembling  a  binding  agreement.  He                                                                    
addressed the second line, which was related to liability:                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     Liability: Right to purchase could mean obligation to                                                                      
     buy; major contingent liability; options costly                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Tsafos elaborated  that if the state  agreed to purchase                                                                    
the gas it would be  a major contingent liability. He stated                                                                    
that if  the state did  not have  the liability and  a Sales                                                                    
and  Purchase  Agreement,  it  would   have  an  option.  He                                                                    
explained an option  was the right, but  not the obligation,                                                                    
which would cost more than  the right and the obligation. He                                                                    
addressed pricing on the third line:                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     Pricing: Does SOA have a thorough and detailed                                                                             
     understand of pricing/volume risk?                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Tsafos  expounded that  even from  his perspective  as a                                                                    
natural gas  analyst it was  not possible to predict  what a                                                                    
good price  for the state  would be. He emphasized  that how                                                                    
much the  project would cost,  the timeline, and  the market                                                                    
appetite for the project were  all unknown. He stressed that                                                                    
at the current  point it was very difficult to  come up with                                                                    
a price that the state  could have some certainty around. He                                                                    
addressed the concept of asymmetry on the fourth line:                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     Asymmetry: If producers are willing to commit to a set                                                                     
     price, does SOA really want to buy?                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Tsafos furthered  that the  only  reason the  producers                                                                    
would exercise  the option was  if they thought it  would be                                                                    
better than  building AKLNG.  The only  way the  state would                                                                    
have  title to  the gas  was  if the  producers thought  the                                                                    
project would not  make them money. He reasoned  that it was                                                                    
not a  very good position for  the state to be  in. He moved                                                                    
to the fifth line:                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     Title: If gas has an "option" attached to it, legal                                                                        
     title become less clear                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Tsafos  provided  a  hypothetical  example  related  to                                                                    
trying to sell  the gas in Japan. The gas  could be entitled                                                                    
by a party in Prudhoe Bay,  but the state may have an option                                                                    
to the gas.  He questioned under what  conditions the option                                                                    
would be  triggered. He addressed activation  and questioned                                                                    
if a deadline  would be imposed. For example,  the gas could                                                                    
be  lost by  December 31,  2018  if something  had not  been                                                                    
done.   He  continued   that  if   he   was  in   commercial                                                                    
negotiations  and  was  trying  to get  the  other  side  to                                                                    
commit,  the other  side  understood there  was  a big  risk                                                                    
because they may commit, but  if other things did not happen                                                                    
by the  date, the  gas would  be lost.  He reasoned  that it                                                                    
became very murky commercially.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
12:07:22 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Tsafos addressed  gas transfer on the  sixth line (slide                                                                    
9):                                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     Transfer: Where is gas transferred? In what condition                                                                      
     (e.g. what happens to CO2)?                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Tsafos  queried what would  happen to the CO2.  He noted                                                                    
that  Mr. Butts  had stated  there  was 12  percent CO2.  He                                                                    
questioned whether the state would  buy the CO2. He wondered                                                                    
if  the state  would  have  to agree  with  the Prudhoe  Bay                                                                    
operator to sell  the CO2 back. He asked how  the CO2 of the                                                                    
gas would  be priced.  Additionally, he  asked if  the state                                                                    
buy the gas clean from CO2, in  which case it would not be a                                                                    
wellhead sale.  He stressed that  there were many  things to                                                                    
think about. He pointed to "fiscals" on the eighth line:                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     Fiscals: What kind of fiscal certainty would producers                                                                     
     want to offer binding agreement?                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Tsafos  elaborated that the  state's 25  percent [share]                                                                    
was part of royalty and part of  tax as gas. He asked if the                                                                    
other  side  would agree  to  sell  to  the state  based  on                                                                    
current or  some other fiscal arrangements  (the state would                                                                    
want  to know  how  much tax  it would  pay).  The last  two                                                                    
statements on  slide 9 took a  step back. He pointed  to the                                                                    
ninth line:                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     Focus: Overly focused on failure; lower commitment;                                                                        
     opt out rather than work issues                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Tsafos elaborated on the  topic of focus. He stated that                                                                    
there  were only  24 hours  in a  day and  the question  was                                                                    
about  how the  hours were  spent. He  reasoned that  if the                                                                    
entire day was  spent trying to determine what to  do if the                                                                    
project  failed,   time  was  not  being   spent  trying  to                                                                    
determine how  to make  the project  succeed. He  provided a                                                                    
puzzle analogy.  The scenario included four  people who were                                                                    
tasked with  figuring out a  puzzle and the winner  was told                                                                    
they would receive a free  cruise. In the scenario one party                                                                    
realized  it  could  just  take  another  party's  place  by                                                                    
offering  its spot  on  the cruise.  He  explained that  one                                                                    
party  could chose  to sell  the gas  and have  someone else                                                                    
figure the  "puzzle" out. He  stated that at that  point the                                                                    
issues were  not really  being solved  when half  a person's                                                                    
thoughts  went to  figuring out  how  to get  on the  cruise                                                                    
without  solving the  puzzle. He  explained that  it created                                                                    
misalignment  when  all  of the  parties  were  not  working                                                                    
together to resolve the issues.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Tsafos agreed  that Governor  Walker had  a point.  The                                                                    
major risk for  the project was getting to a  gate that some                                                                    
people wanted  to go through  and others did  not. Enalytica                                                                    
argued that it was not clear  that dealing with the issue at                                                                    
present instead of in the  future would make the risk easier                                                                    
to handle.  He continued  that there were  two options  if a                                                                    
project reached  a stage gate  where one party did  not want                                                                    
to  proceed:  either  to  work the  issues  to  determine  a                                                                    
solution  or to  determine what  it  would take  to buy  the                                                                    
party  out. He  stated  that the  scenario  occurred in  LNG                                                                    
projects. He stressed  that later on in the  project a party                                                                    
would have much  more information on which to  wisely base a                                                                    
decision on.  For instance, if  the issue arose at  the pre-                                                                    
FEED to  FEED stage,  the state would  probably know  if the                                                                    
cost  would be  closer to  $45 billion  or $65  billion. For                                                                    
example,  there may  have been  discussions with  the market                                                                    
and the  Lazard report on  financing would be  completed. He                                                                    
emphasized  that  there  would   be  much  more  information                                                                    
available on  which to make  a decision; whereas,  trying to                                                                    
sort the  issue out at  present would  raise a host  of risk                                                                    
the state would have to  think through and comprehend before                                                                    
it could  make a  decision that it  would not  really regret                                                                    
later on.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
12:11:39 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Kelly  communicated his concern related  to the gas                                                                    
sales and withdrawal  agreements. He asked if  the gas sales                                                                    
agreements  had  to be  complete  by  the December  4,  2015                                                                    
deadline.  He asked  if Mr.  Tsafos believed  the agreements                                                                    
could be done later on.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Tsafos replied  that  what was  required  and what  the                                                                    
administration wanted  were two  different things.  He noted                                                                    
that  in  order  to  safeguard   the  state's  interest  the                                                                    
agreements could  also be done  later. He clarified  that he                                                                    
was not making a statement  on how the administration viewed                                                                    
the  need to  have the  agreement  prior to  December 4.  He                                                                    
noted  that  only the  administration  could  answer how  it                                                                    
viewed the issue.  He reiterated that the  state could still                                                                    
safeguard the  interest even if  it did  not have a  deal by                                                                    
December 4.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair   Kelly  surmised   that  the   administration  was                                                                    
insisting  on  the  completion of  the  sales  agreement  by                                                                    
December  4, 2015.  Mr. Tsafos  believed the  administration                                                                    
would  like  to  see  the   agreements  completed  prior  to                                                                    
December 4,  but he  did not  know how  important it  was to                                                                    
them.  He   added  that  the   agreements  could   still  be                                                                    
negotiated towards the end of pre-FEED.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Kelly  referred to  the presenters'  testimony that                                                                    
it could take  two years to develop a sales  agreement for a                                                                    
project like AKLNG.  He asked for verification  that a sales                                                                    
agreement had  to be  negotiated with  each of  the partners                                                                    
involved in the project.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Tsafos  agreed, but  qualified that  he was  not certain                                                                    
what the level  of understanding was at present  and how far                                                                    
apart  the two  sides  were. He  referred  to due  diligence                                                                    
companies did  in negotiating agreements.  He noted  that he                                                                    
did not  believe ExxonMobil  needed to  do a  political risk                                                                    
analysis of Alaska.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
12:14:16 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Kelly  interjected his  understanding that  many of                                                                    
the assumptions would  be done at the same  time. Mr. Tsafos                                                                    
agreed.  Co-Chair Kelly  asked for  verification that  three                                                                    
sales  agreements would  need to  be  completed. Mr.  Tsafos                                                                    
replied "that's our understanding."                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Kelly assumed each agreement  would not take a full                                                                    
two years, but he surmised  that they would take significant                                                                    
time. He  had heard  that the  administration had  not begun                                                                    
the agreements. He asked for the accuracy of the statement.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Tsafos  replied that he  could not speak exactly  to the                                                                    
status  of  the  agreements.  However,  he  believed  recent                                                                    
letters from each of the  producers appeared to be something                                                                    
that  would  be seen  at  the  start  of a  negotiation.  He                                                                    
relayed that he  did not know how much back  and forth there                                                                    
had been between the producers and the administration.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair   Kelly  had   heard   "they're   nowhere  in   the                                                                    
neighborhood."  He  commented  on the  complexity  of  sales                                                                    
agreements  and believed  the  administration  seemed to  be                                                                    
insisting on  establishing the agreements by  December 4. He                                                                    
asked  if there  was a  risk that  the administration  would                                                                    
vote  against moving  forward if  the sales  agreements were                                                                    
not complete by that time.  Mr. Tsafos deferred the question                                                                    
to the administration.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Kelly wondered if the  situation was a possibility.                                                                    
Mr.  Mayer  replied  that  they   had  all  heard  the  same                                                                    
testimony from  the administration. He believed  it was safe                                                                    
to say  that a definitive  answer had not been  provided. He                                                                    
stated that  it was clear that  a vote on the  work plan and                                                                    
budget was  set to occur  on December  4 and thus  far there                                                                    
had  been no  testimony on  whether a  yes vote  would occur                                                                    
regardless of the negotiation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Kelly  questioned  whether  the  state  should  be                                                                    
"freaked out." He noted he did not need a response.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair MacKinnon remarked that  AGDC had asserted that Mr.                                                                    
Joe  Dubler [vice  president  and  chief financial  officer,                                                                    
AGDC] would cast  the vote on its behalf on  December 4. She                                                                    
wondered if  it was  a fair  assumption. Mr.  Tsafos replied                                                                    
that the state's seat on  the AKLNG Management Committee was                                                                    
held by AGDC;  its employee Mr. Dubler sat  on the committee                                                                    
and  was responsible  for voting.  He recalled  Mr. Dubler's                                                                    
testimony that his vote was directed by the board of AGDC.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
12:17:56 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair MacKinnon shared that  the legislature was awaiting                                                                    
a blueprint  on how the administration  viewed the structure                                                                    
of the project  moving forward. She asked if it  was fair to                                                                    
say that  if ExxonMobil, BP, or  ConocoPhillips were willing                                                                    
to  sell the  state's  gas that  the  legislature should  be                                                                    
highly interested in why the  producers believed selling the                                                                    
gas would be a good thing to  do at the current point in the                                                                    
project. Mr. Tsafos agreed.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Senator Bishop  believed Mr. Tsafos  had stated that  if the                                                                    
producers  were  willing to  sell  that  the state  probably                                                                    
should not buy at this time. Mr. Tsafos agreed.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Senator Bishop  asked for verification  that Mr.  Tsafos had                                                                    
sold  gas before.  Mr. Tsafos  answered that  he had  helped                                                                    
companies  conduct due  diligence to  sell gas.  He had  not                                                                    
personally bought or sold gas.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Senator  Bishop remarked  that the  presenters had  provided                                                                    
clarity on  how long it took  to conduct due diligence  on a                                                                    
purchase  sales   agreement.  He   queried  the   number  of                                                                    
individuals  needed  to  execute and  conduct  thorough  due                                                                    
diligence.  Mr.   Tsafos  replied  that  the   question  was                                                                    
difficult  to  answer precisely.  He  stated  that the  work                                                                    
would  not all  be full-time;  there could  be four  or five                                                                    
people   doing  the   economics   and  commercial   aspects.                                                                    
Additionally, lawyers  were needed.  He relayed that  it was                                                                    
not a "one  man" job, but it  was not a 20 or  30 people job                                                                    
either. There  were items  that would  probably not  be done                                                                    
under  the current  situation such  as conducting  political                                                                    
risk analyses because  the items were known.  He believed it                                                                    
could take 5 to 10 people.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Senator Bishop  wondered if that  response was based  on per                                                                    
participant. Mr. Mayer replied  that the numbers put forward                                                                    
by  Mr.   Tsafos  assumed  a   high  level   of  preexisting                                                                    
understanding  of all  of the  commercial parameters  of the                                                                    
transaction. Particularly, about what  the cost to bring the                                                                    
gas to  market actually was.  He noted that  the information                                                                    
was not currently known.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
12:21:53 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair MacKinnon  thanked the presenters. She  referred to                                                                    
a  question she  had asked  at  a press  conference the  day                                                                    
before related to  the governor's assertion that  SB 138 had                                                                    
some  fundamental flaws.  She addressed  a response  she had                                                                    
received  from Mr.  Darwin Peterson  dated October  31, 2015                                                                    
(copy on file):                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     Dear Senator MacKinnon,                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     In response to  the question you posed to  me in Senate                                                                    
     Finance  during the  hearing on  October 30th,  I offer                                                                    
     the following response:                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     When the Governor stated that  SB 138 was fundamentally                                                                    
     flawed, he  was speaking  primarily about the  issue of                                                                    
     project certainty.  He has spoken many  times about the                                                                    
     need for  adequate provisions to  ensure a  partner who                                                                    
     withdraws from  the project will  still commit  the gas                                                                    
     they control...                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  MacKinnon noted  that the  letter continued  on to                                                                    
say that  the governor's  administrative team  was complying                                                                    
with the  constraints that SB  138 had provided  in statute.                                                                    
She  appreciated  the quick  response.  She  noted that  the                                                                    
Senate  Finance Committee  was still  in  search of  further                                                                    
information on the  state's end goal and what  it was trying                                                                    
to  accomplish  outside  of   the  transaction  to  purchase                                                                    
TransCanada and approve the work plan.                                                                                          
Co-Chair  MacKinnon made  a correction  for the  record. She                                                                    
explained that  she had received  comments the  previous day                                                                    
that she thought were from  Mr. Butt regarding "bumps in the                                                                    
road" at  a Palmer  hearing. She  relayed that  the comments                                                                    
had actually been made by Dave Van Tuyl with BP.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
12:24:06 PM                                                                                                                   
AT EASE                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
12:25:46 PM                                                                                                                   
RECONVENED                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Kelly  MOVED to ADOPT the  committee substitute for                                                                    
SB 3001 Work Draft 29-GS3812\P (Martin, 10/31/15).                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair MacKinnon OBJECTED for discussion.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
LAURA PIERRE,  STAFF, SENATOR ANNA MACKINNON,  explained the                                                                    
sectional analysis (copy on file):                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     Sec. 1                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     Legislative Intent                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
          (a) that the supplemental appropriations for the                                                                      
          Departments of Law, Natural Resources, and                                                                            
          Revenue be accounted for separately                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
          (b) that the administration carry out the                                                                             
          TransCanada interest acquisition in an expedited                                                                      
          manner                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Ms.  Pierre  elaborated  that  the  goal  was  to  have  the                                                                    
transfer made  prior to December  4, 2015. She  continued to                                                                    
read the sectional analysis:                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     Sec. 2                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     Supplemental appropriation request for the Department                                                                      
     of Law for $10,100,000 for outside legal counsel                                                                           
     contracts and internal agency costs                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     Sec. 3                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     Supplemental appropriation request for the Department                                                                      
     of Natural Resources for $2,126,000 for marketing,                                                                         
     contractual services, and personal services                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     Sec. 4                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     Supplemental appropriation request for the Department                                                                      
     of Revenue for $1,381,000 for personal services and                                                                        
     travel and contractual services                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Pierre  detailed that the  amounts were the same  as the                                                                    
amount  presented   by  Pat  Pitney,  Director,   Office  of                                                                    
Management and Budget, Office of  the Governor. She read the                                                                    
remainder of the sectional analysis:                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
     Sec. 5                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     Fund Capitalization                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
          (a) $68,455,000  is appropriated from  the General                                                                    
          Fund to the Alaska  Liquefied Natural Gas (AK LNG)                                                                    
          Project  Fund to  acquire  the interest  currently                                                                    
          held by TransCanada Alaska Development Inc.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
          (b) $75,600,000  is appropriated from  the General                                                                    
          Fund to  the Alaska Liquefied Natural  Gas Project                                                                    
          Fund for  the state's share of  Preliminary Front-                                                                    
          End  Engineering and  Design  (Pre-FEED) work  for                                                                    
          the AK LNG Project                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
          (c)   Statutory    designated   program   receipts                                                                    
          received  for  reimbursement  for costs  of  field                                                                    
          work   from   the   AK  LNG   Project   Fund   are                                                                    
          appropriated to the AK LNG Project Fund                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
          (d)   Statutory    designated   program   receipts                                                                    
          received  for  reimbursement  for costs  of  field                                                                    
          work from  the In-State Natural Gas  Pipeline Fund                                                                    
          are  appropriated  to  the  In-State  Natural  Gas                                                                    
          Pipeline Fund                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     Sec. 6                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     Lapse of Appropriations                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     The appropriations made in Section 5 do not lapse                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     Sec. 7                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     Retroactivity                                                                                                              
     If sections 2-5 take effect after November 15, 2015,                                                                       
     sections 2-5 are retroactive to November 15, 2015                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
     Sec. 8 Contingency                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     The appropriation made in section 5 (b) for Pre-FEED                                                                       
     work, is contingent on adoption of a work plan and                                                                         
    budget for the AK LNG Project by December 31, 2015                                                                          
     Sec. 9 Immediate effective date                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair MacKinnon WITHDREW her OBJECTION. There being NO                                                                       
further OBJECTION, Work Draft 29-GS3812\P was ADOPTED.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SB 3001 was HEARD and HELD in committee for further                                                                             
consideration.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
12:30:39 PM                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
The meeting was adjourned at 12:30 p.m.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
SB 3001 103115 SFC,enalytica, TC in AK LNG.pdf SFIN 10/31/2015 10:00:00 AM
SB3001
SB 3001 CS SB 3001 Version -P.pdf SFIN 10/31/2015 10:00:00 AM
SB3001
SB 3001 CSSB 3001 Version - P Sectional Analysis.pdf SFIN 10/31/2015 10:00:00 AM
SB3001
SB 3001 103115 Response from Darwin Peterson.pdf SFIN 10/31/2015 10:00:00 AM
SB3001
SB 3001 10 25 15 Senate Finance Questions - Answers.pdf SFIN 10/31/2015 10:00:00 AM
SB3001