Legislature(2001 - 2002)

03/14/2001 03:58 PM Senate RES

Audio Topic
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
                     ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE                                                                                   
                    SENATE RESOURCES COMMITTEE                                                                                
                          March 14, 2001                                                                                        
                              3:58 pm                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Senator John Torgerson, Chair                                                                                                   
Senator Drue Pearce, Vice Chair                                                                                                 
Senator Rick Halford                                                                                                            
Senator Pete Kelly                                                                                                              
Senator Kim Elton                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Senator Robin Taylor                                                                                                            
Senator Georgianna Lincoln                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
COMMITTEE CALENDAR                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                              
Presentation  on  Alcan  Highway  Gas  Pipeline  route  by  Mr.  Ken                                                            
Thompson, President, Pacific Rim Leadership Development                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
ACTION NARRATIVE                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
TAPE 01-20, SIDE A                                                                                                            
Number 001                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                              
CHAIRMAN  JOHN  TORGERSON  called  the  Senate  Resources  Committee                                                          
meeting to  order at 3:58  pm. and announced  a presentation  on the                                                            
Alcan Highway Gas Pipeline route.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR. KEN  THOMPSON, President,  Pacific Rim  Leadership Development,                                                             
explained that  Pacific Rim is a consulting firm he  started when he                                                            
moved back to  Anchorage to provide Alaskan businesses,  nonprofits,                                                            
and  churches  with  leadership  advice  on  setting  direction  and                                                            
strategy for  the future and how to  build good executive  teams. He                                                            
is working  with 10 companies in Alaska.  He does not do  consulting                                                            
with any of the major producers.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
"I do  have a  passion  for commercializing  North  Slope gas,"  Mr.                                                            
Thompson said. He believes  that gas prices will level at some point                                                            
above $3 and that  would make it commercial to the  Lower 48. In his                                                            
last two  years at  ARCO he was  executive vice  president of  their                                                            
Asia Pacific region  in charge of their companies  in Alaska, China,                                                            
Malaysia,  Thailand and Indonesia.  He was  also head of global  gas                                                            
marketing  for ARCO. He was  also appointed  by, then, Secretary  of                                                            
Energy Richardson  as one of two Americans  to assist Asian  nations                                                            
in  forging   and  formulating  natural   gas  policies   and  power                                                            
generation  policies, as well as in  South America. He wanted,  as a                                                            
citizen, to step forward  and assist Alaska offering his consulting,                                                            
experience  and advice to the House  and Senate. He would  waive his                                                            
fee over the next  few years, because he thought it  was, "important                                                            
to get off on the right foot as Alaskans."                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. THOMPSON introduced  his concept of a "Gas Business  Vision" for                                                            
Alaska. He thought the  state should have a broader vision than just                                                            
the individual  projects and do things right in the  first few years                                                            
to make sure they create  broader opportunities and multiple markets                                                            
in the future.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     It's  important to  realize the producers  are completing                                                                  
     their studies  to create a vision from their perspective.                                                                  
     I think  the state  should also proactively  complete  its                                                                 
     separate  studies and  create a vision  that's best  long-                                                                 
     term for Alaskans. I advise  the state would make mistakes                                                                 
     while  waiting for the producers  to finish. While we  may                                                                 
     have a lot  of details we do have to wait to do,  based on                                                                 
     what their final conclusion  is, there are many things the                                                                 
     state   could   do   proactively   regardless   of   their                                                                 
     recommendations.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
He said it's important  to realize that the state and producers will                                                            
differ  in their perspectives.  The  producers must  look at  what's                                                            
best from a discounted  present value or rates of return. They ought                                                            
to focus on that  or their boards should run them  off. On the other                                                            
hand,  the  state needs  to  focus  on 50  years  of socio-economic                                                             
benefit  to  the state.  He  thought  with planning  the  state  and                                                            
industry could  come together in the next few years  with a win-win.                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. THOMPSON recommended:                                                                                                       
   · Gas pipeline traversing Alaska - LNG might not be viable now,                                                              
     but it could  be in the future. If you accept  the gas business                                                            
     route, the  northern route is a non-starter.  That would not be                                                            
     best  for Alaskans. He  said we want  multiple markets  for our                                                            
     gas.  The northern  route would  hold Alaskans  hostage to  one                                                            
     market.  Access or the  potential for  access in the future  to                                                            
     multiple  markets, when  you go to negotiate  terms and  price,                                                            
     you  get  better  deals   if  that  buyer  thinks  you  can  go                                                            
     elsewhere.  If the state takes  the northern route,  the buyers                                                            
     will be in the Lower 48 only.                                                                                              
   · "Natural gas hub" near Fairbanks or Delta Junction. The gas                                                                
     hub is physical,  but more importantly, there  is a contractual                                                            
     principle  element   of  gas  trading  that  is  not  currently                                                            
     existing  in Alaska that needs to be finalized  in the next few                                                            
     years.                                                                                                                     
        o On the physical facilities, "Imagine a hub, a system of                                                               
          manifolds  and valves near Fairbanks or Delta Junction and                                                            
          from  that pipelines could converge."  He could envision a                                                            
          small  natural gas liquids plant near Fairbanks that could                                                            
          manufacture  propane  and butane  off gas  and ship  those                                                            
          products  to interior villages very much like what is done                                                            
          with  diesel  today.  The  propane  butane would  be  much                                                            
          cleaner  fuel for those villages. He also  envisioned from                                                            
          that  hub another trunk line into Anchorage  that could be                                                            
          power  generation for Anchorage and residential  home use.                                                            
          This  will  be  even more  critical  in  10 years  if  the                                                            
          industry  is not successful in its exploration  effort for                                                            
          more   natural  gas  in   Cook  Inlet.  He  envisioned   a                                                            
          fertilizer  plant that could ship urea  to China, which is                                                            
          closer  to Alaska than Indonesia, which  does that now. He                                                            
          envisioned   a  gas-to-liquids   plant  in  Anchorage   or                                                            
          Fairbanks  sending  clean  diesel to  the  west coast.  He                                                            
          noted  that cleaner technology for gas-to-liquids fuels is                                                            
          progressing.                                                                                                          
        o He strongly suggested before gas flows, the state should                                                              
          get  the contractual system down, which is clear rules and                                                            
          regulation  for  the  rights  of gas  access  and  netback                                                            
          pricing.  Those  rules are  not clear in  Alaska, yet.  He                                                            
          thought  Alaskans should  be able to buy gas at  a hub for                                                            
          $1 if  that's what it's selling for in Chicago, adjusted a                                                            
          little   bit  for   volumes.  Right   now  there   are  no                                                            
          regulations  and rules in place to govern that. A supplier                                                            
          right  now would  be in a  position to  offer diesel  to a                                                            
          community  for only a few cents less than it would take to                                                            
          ship  it up, but that would still be a lot more than a hub                                                            
          price.  He reiterated that Alaskans should  have access to                                                            
          gas at the netback pricing.                                                                                           
        o Another thing that's not clear is the rights of other                                                                 
          people  and other  pipelines to tap  into whether it  be a                                                            
          hub  or a spur line. He used an example  in 1994 when ARCO                                                            
          discovered   a satellite  field  near  Prudhoe  Bay.  They                                                            
          wanted  access into the Prudhoe Bay processing facilities,                                                            
          because  the  field was  too small  to  construct its  own                                                            
          facilities.  It  took them  five years  to gain access  to                                                            
          those  facilities,  because some  of the owners  differed.                                                            
          Only  during the merger were clear rules  set for facility                                                            
          access on the North Slope.                                                                                            
   · The state should retain its 12.5 percent royalty share of gas                                                              
     "in kind".  Leases allow for  the state to allow the  producers                                                            
     to  sell the gas  and send the  state a  royalty check,  but he                                                            
     favored keeping the  gas and marketing it ourselves. Initially,                                                            
     that market  would be the Lower 48, but the state  can hire and                                                            
     contract  with  companies  such as  Enron Trading  or  Williams                                                            
     Energy  Trading.  "We  need to  iron  out gas  price  valuation                                                            
     methodology  up front and when we market our  gas, we will know                                                            
      what true market value is in the market. He explained:                                                                    
          If  a  producer  is  selling  gas  in  Chicago  at  a                                                                 
          certain  price and the state is able to  have our gas                                                                 
          marketing  company get a higher price,  the producers                                                                 
          must  pay,  under the  leases  at Prudhoe  Bay,  that                                                                 
          higher   market  valuation.   The  leases  stipulate                                                                  
          "actual  proceeds or market  valuation" whichever  is                                                                 
          higher.  In the past on  oil, Alaska has never  had a                                                                 
          clear  way  to determine  that market  valuation.  On                                                                 
          gas,  because of its liquidity  and the large amount                                                                  
          of  gas trading,  we  do have a  way on  gas, but  we                                                                 
          need  to clarify  that up  front and we  can help  do                                                                 
          that  by selling  our share  of gas.  Also, when  the                                                                 
          state  retains its  share of gas,  I think that  will                                                                 
          better  facilitate instate gas use. For  example, the                                                                 
          state  currently  uses about 115  million cubic  feet                                                                 
          of  gas per  day (MCFD).  The state's  share at  12.5                                                                 
          percent  at 2 BCFD would  be roughly 250 MCFD and  if                                                                 
          the  gas pipeline  ramps up  to 4 BCFD,  it would  be                                                                 
          double  that. The state's share would  be much larger                                                                 
          than  current use and we  can expand gas industry  in                                                                 
          our state.                                                                                                            
   · The State of Alaskan companies invest at least 12.5 percent                                                                
     share  in the gas pipeline  from the Slope  to the hub  and hub                                                            
     facilities.  He feels  the role of government  is to provide  a                                                            
     positive  business climate  and wouldn't  normally recommend  a                                                            
     state  or government  investing in a  business venture  such as                                                            
     this.  But  in  this  case,  the  state has  had  20  years  of                                                            
     discrepancies  and  lawsuits  with TAPS  owners  over cost  and                                                            
     tariffs.  "I think Alaska on  the gas pipeline needs  a seat at                                                            
     the table." He recommended  investment just from the hub to the                                                            
     North Slope and he  has heard some estimates of $2 - $3 billion                                                            
     gross  making the state's share  about $250 - $400 million.  He                                                            
     thought  that  was doable,  if  the state  wanted  to use  that                                                            
     alternative. If the  government decided not to invest, at least                                                            
     it  could stipulate  that  Alaskan companies  and corporations                                                             
     with boards  in Alaska be able  to purchase and invest  in that                                                            
     12.5 percent  that would move  the state's share of  gas. "That                                                            
     way  we have  people at  the table  that are  Alaskans and  the                                                            
     decisions  in boardrooms would be here and not  just boardrooms                                                            
     in Bartlesville, Houston, or London.                                                                                       
   · The final recommendation is that the state formulates policies                                                             
     and  regulations  for  clear  and  transparent   valuation  and                                                            
     pricing  to resolve  up front  and prevent  lawsuits that  have                                                            
     happened on oil.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Page four of his presentation illustrates what could happen in                                                                  
Alaska with the trading hub concept, particularly with principles                                                               
for trading.  In the  future, investors  could choose  to have  spur                                                            
lines instead  of the physical hub, but we need to  have the trading                                                            
principles  and regulations for trading  to make sure there's  clear                                                            
access rules  and clear valuation  rules. It illustrates  that there                                                            
could be multiple markets over the next 50-years.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Number 1200                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. THOMPSON said that the state does not need to do all of the                                                                 
suggestions on page five in one year, but they all happen daily in                                                              
gas basins around the world. They are:                                                                                          
   · 2001: Make a resolution supporting principles of a natural gas                                                             
     business in Alaska in conjunction with a Lower 48 gas line -                                                               
     in regards to access and trading to give Alaskans a broad view                                                             
     of where the state would like to go.                                                                                       
   · 2002 - 03:                                                                                                                 
        o Regulations for clear, transparent netback pricing                                                                    
        o Rules for clear, transparent access for in-state use                                                                  
        o Rules for clear, transparent access for overseas markets                                                              
        o State finalize decision of investment in line, gas "in                                                                
          kind"                                                                                                                 
   · 2004 - 06: State attract investors for hub and/or spur lines,                                                              
     in-state distribution, city infrastructure, value added                                                                    
     processing                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
He concluded:                                                                                                                   
   · Lower 48 market appears best currently, but cyclical                                                                       
   · Northern route holds Alaska gas hostage to one cyclical market                                                             
     long-term                                                                                                                  
   · Southern route along TAPS route and Alaska highway provides                                                                
     access to future multiple markets                                                                                          
        o Alaska internal markets                                                                                               
        o Asia, West Coast U.S. - Recently, Phillips announced they                                                             
          would  team up the El Paso  Natural Gas to provide  LNG to                                                            
          Mexico  or  California.  Peru is  also looking  at LNG  to                                                            
          Mexico  and California. He said with a hub, a company like                                                            
          Yukon  Pacific doesn't  have to look  at the economics  of                                                            
          building  the lines all the way from the Slope. They could                                                            
          perhaps  build a smaller line from the hub down to Valdez,                                                            
          start  off with the smaller less expensive project, fit in                                                            
          to  some  of  the  smaller  markets  that  might  be  more                                                            
          commercial for them.                                                                                                  
   · State and Producers will see different calculations for                                                                    
     northern vs. southern routes                                                                                               
        o Producers must focus on discounted present value, rates-                                                              
          of-return                                                                                                             
        o State must focus on 50 years of socio-economic benefit to                                                             
          the state                                                                                                             
   · Find win-win solution for route traversing Alaska                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. THOMPSON reiterated  the need for establishing  a trading hub in                                                            
Alaska. He said  that some of the same companies that  are in Alaska                                                            
work with the  European Union (EU)  to formulate the European  Union                                                            
Gas Directive  that has clear rules  and regulations for  trading in                                                            
transport of  gas and power generation.  Some of the same  companies                                                            
have  trading  hubs in  the  U.K. and  he  couldn't see  why  Alaska                                                            
couldn't have that. "I think it's important."                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. THOMPSON  said that  exhibit 10  reiterates  some of the  points                                                            
made  on  the  state  retaining  12.5  percent   share.  Exhibit  11                                                            
highlights  key  points  to  consider on  the  state  investing.  He                                                            
pointed out:                                                                                                                    
     If the state did not see  fit to invest, selecting Alaskan                                                                 
     companies  through  a  bidding process  -  quality native                                                                  
     corporations,  quality Alaskan corporations, for  at least                                                                 
     12.5  percent could be  very helpful  to move the state's                                                                  
     share  of gas. It also means  there are more profits  kept                                                                 
     in state.  A plus of  the state owning  the pipeline,  you                                                                 
     get advance fees and tariffs  that are fairly constant and                                                                 
     not cyclical like the gas prices are.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR.  THOMPSON said  exhibit  12 reiterates  that  the discussion  of                                                            
valuation and pricing policies  has to take place with producers. He                                                            
truly thought  that would be a win-win situation for  both the state                                                            
and producers.  The lawsuits generated  angry feelings and  a lot of                                                            
dollars paid. This would resolve that upfront.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Exhibit 13 illustrates  that before final rules and regulations were                                                            
passed  in  the  EU   governing  the  natural  gas  business,   they                                                            
established  a set of principles  that are  very easy to  understand                                                            
and straight forward. Those EU principles are:                                                                                  
   · Gas transmission, distribution interconnected, no barriers                                                                 
   · State regulates gas business: nondiscriminatory, clear                                                                     
   · Fair and open access to the natural gas system                                                                             
   · Access to pipelines allowed under set of transparent rules. He                                                             
     noted that the are forms that protect buyers and sellers and                                                               
     the EU has that for trading of natural gas.                                                                                
   · Participants in the market will not abuse their dominant                                                                   
     position nor engage in predatory behavior                                                                                  
   · Participants have open, nondiscriminatory storage access                                                                   
   · Gas suppliers will compete freely for "eligible customers"                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. THOMPSON  summarized that the  state doesn't have to  do all the                                                            
things  at once, but  he recommended  some steps  over the next  few                                                            
years:                                                                                                                          
   · 2001: Resolution supporting principles of natural gas business                                                             
     in Alaska in conjunction with Lower 48 gas line                                                                            
   · 2002-03:                                                                                                                   
        o Regulations for clear, transparent netback pricing                                                                    
        o Rules for clear, transparent access for in-state use                                                                  
        o Rules for clear, transparent access for overseas markets                                                              
        o State finalize decision of investment in line, gas "in                                                                
          kind"                                                                                                                 
   · 2004 - 06+: State attract investors for hub and/or spur lines,                                                             
     in-state distribution, city infrastructure, value added                                                                    
     processing                                                                                                                 
   · 2007: "GAS TO CASH" for Alaska, Alaskan companies, Alaskans!!                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Number 1600                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR ELTON  commented that the producers' timeline  is the end of                                                            
this year  for trying  to decide  on a project.  "With these  issues                                                            
hanging out front,  they could make an argument that  it's difficult                                                            
for them to make  a decision when we don't know what  the rules will                                                            
be two years hence."                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. THOMPSON responded  that getting final regulations could require                                                            
complex  negotiations. He  suggested having  the principles  of fair                                                            
netback pricing  in the resolution and principles  for 2001. Knowing                                                            
netback  pricing  at a  hub  or wellhead  will  be based  on  actual                                                            
proceeds  minus  auditable  transportation   costs  and  would  give                                                            
producers  a good  feel for  their economics  as to  what to use  in                                                            
their calculations.  There are a lot  more details behind  that that                                                            
could be in the regulations made in 2002 and 03.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR ELTON  asked if the  state has an  equity investment  in the                                                            
line from  the Slope to the  hub, would we  be less subject  to less                                                            
cyclical  changes   in  gas  prices  because  we  would   always  be                                                            
collecting  a certain amount of revenue  from the transportation  of                                                            
gas. He also asked  why had Mr. Thompson strongly  suggest "at least                                                            
12.5 percent" for a state stake.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR.  THOMPSON  responded that  12.5  percent  would give  the  state                                                            
ownership that is capable  of moving all of their share of gas. That                                                            
could be important in the  future. "If the market swings down in the                                                            
Lower 48, the producers  may (and this could be a valid case, if the                                                            
prices cycle low) reduce  their flow." But if Alaska has established                                                            
with this royalty share  of gas contracts in Alaska to move its full                                                            
share,  having that  capacity  to  move the  gas without  having  to                                                            
purchase  capacity  from others  would  be wise.   The  state  could                                                            
incrementally  move  the  volumes  it sees  fit  and  sometimes  our                                                            
perspective may differ from the producers.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
He explained  that  they way TAPS  ownership  was originally  split,                                                            
each company  could move about its  equivalent. They wanted  a straw                                                            
big enough  to move their share of  oil and not have to pay  others.                                                            
He would use the same reasoning for the state.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR ELTON  asked if our position  at the table diminished  if we                                                            
only  own  a  percent  of  a  segment  and  how  do  the  regulatory                                                            
authorities handle that?                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. THOMPSON  answered, "I  think the regulations  should be  on the                                                            
whole system  and it  be in a  department that's  separate from  one                                                            
that may manage  the ownership of the line, as well  as managing the                                                            
royalty shares."                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR ELTON asked if  we only own a percent of a section, would we                                                            
still be treated as an  owner in the system for the purposes of rate                                                            
setting and the other regulatory functions.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. THOMPSON  replied that was correct.  It's hard to say  where the                                                            
producers'  studies will lead, but  they may size the line  for what                                                            
they see is the  market in the Lower 48 and not be  as interested in                                                            
the Alaskan or  Asian markets. If Alaskan's wanted  to have capacity                                                            
on  the 50  year  horizon,  Alaskan  companies  and others  have  to                                                            
recommend sizing  that pipeline in  a larger size from the  Slope to                                                            
the hub to allow for those  future possibilities. If producers don't                                                            
want to  do that,  they could fall  back on  other investors,  maybe                                                            
foreign investors  who were interested  in LNG. It is important  for                                                            
Alaska to own a part of that segment to size the future pipe.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CHAIRMAN  TORGERSON said  under that  scenario, the  state would  be                                                            
paying for the excess capacity.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. THOMPSON  replied that was correct,  but we might find  pipeline                                                            
companies  that could  also invest  in that.  It could  be that  the                                                            
reason  we're using  that  extra size,  is for  LNG  in the  future.                                                            
"Yukon Pacific  or even Japanese buyers might be interested  in that                                                            
incremental capacity."                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
CHAIRMAN   TORGERSON  asked   if  he  foresaw   problems  with   the                                                            
realignment with smaller  operators in getting access to the Prudhoe                                                            
Bay facilities, the way the law is currently written.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. THOMPSON  said the merger agreement  on the existing  production                                                            
facilities  had that  as a  key element  that resolved  much of  the                                                            
access issues.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
     While there  is still some negotiation on value,  there is                                                                 
     a clear  formula as to what rate  of return producers  are                                                                 
     allowed. If  you pay that fee that gets them that  rate of                                                                 
     return  and there is  capacity, then  a small producer  is                                                                 
     allowed into  the facility. It's very important.  Take the                                                                 
     reverse  of that.  What  are the rules  to  allow a  small                                                                 
     entrepreneur in Fairbanks  to build a spur line and create                                                                 
     their  small business  near Fairbanks?  The rules are  not                                                                 
     clear.  A producer could say  no, I've got better markets                                                                  
     south.  Whereas,  if  there  are rules  that  they  did  a                                                                 
     competitive   price  and  can  be  shown  they  have   the                                                                 
     financial  capability  and  the capacity  is  there,  they                                                                 
     ought  to  have right  to  access  the gas  and  do  their                                                                 
     project.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CHAIRMAN TORGERSON  asked if hubs  were the creature of legislation                                                             
or negotiation between companies.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR. THOMPSON  explained  that some  elements  are negotiations.  Yet                                                            
there are clear operating  rules around in the UK, the EU and in the                                                            
Lower 48.  The mechanisms  for trading in hubs  in the UK is  called                                                            
the  Natural   Gas  Trading  Arrangement,   a  very  clear   set  of                                                            
principles.  In the EU it's principles  he enumerated on  page 13, a                                                            
European Natural Gas Directive.  In the Lower 48 hubs, the rules and                                                            
legal arrangements are known.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR PEARCE  asked if the rules  at Henry Hub, for instance,  are                                                            
state or federal.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR. THOMPSON answered that  at the Henry Hub they are federal (FERC)                                                            
on  some of  the  pipelines  because of  their  crossing  interstate                                                            
lines, but most  of the rules and regulations are  state. It's clear                                                            
rules when you  know how to balance. So, if one producer  can't make                                                            
a contract  and someone else  is making up  that volume, the  gas is                                                            
balanced  later.  This would  be an  issue at  Prudhoe  Bay for  the                                                            
state, if others  cut back on production, because  we still have our                                                            
instate market.  There are  formulas for that;  trading hubs  do all                                                            
those transactions for companies in the Lower 48.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR PEARCE  asked once those rules are in effect,  who regulates                                                            
them.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. THOMPSON  answered  that  to his knowledge  in  Texas, it's  the                                                            
Texas Railroad  Commission.  Some aspects  of the netback  valuation                                                            
are regulated by the Texas  Royalty Board. He was contacting them to                                                            
see if there were lessons that would be valuable to Alaska.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR ELTON  asked what  he meant by clear  access to gas.  Was he                                                            
talking about  just the 12.5 percent royalty gas or  any of the gas.                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. THOMPSON replied that  it could be any of the gas. If a producer                                                            
for some reason  makes a bid, it could  be for the state  gas or the                                                            
producer gas, as well.  He thought it would be more clear cut if the                                                            
state could make decisions  on gas in Alaska. "The state's not going                                                            
to pay  federal taxes on  its proceeds. They  may have an  advantage                                                            
for more sales in state that could be helpful."                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
CHAIRMAN TORGERSON  said he didn't  see how a hub would help  unless                                                            
the state built in additional capacity of line.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR.  THOMPSON responded  that  even if  there's not  any  additional                                                            
capacity and  the line is sized for  just 4 BCFD, the state's  share                                                            
is  500 MCFD.  That  could generate  additional  new  businesses  in                                                            
Alaska making  a hub. "Regardless  of the physical hub being  built,                                                            
this issue  of the contractual  and the principles  for trading  are                                                            
going to be important to be clarified before gas starts."                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
CHAIRMAN TORGERSON  asked what he was using for a  reserve number up                                                            
North.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR.  THOMPSON  answered that  he  had heard  estimates  that  proven                                                            
reserves  were in the 35  TCF range. He knows  that's there,  but he                                                            
has heard talk  of 100 TCF. Some of  the gas areas on the  Slope are                                                            
yet  to be  explored.  "Just  35 TCF  could  be  a 50-year  kind  of                                                            
business."                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  PEARCE asked  how the state  would manage  to pay for  12.5                                                            
percent or  part of a pipeline.  Why would  somebody want you  to do                                                            
that, just from the Slope to the hub.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. THOMPSON answered  that that happens in the Lower  48. Different                                                            
companies  will have  different  ownership from  a field  line  to a                                                            
junction  point.   If  the  line  splits,  they  can   do  different                                                            
interests.  It can be  structured  any way. He  reiterated that  the                                                            
segment of  at least 12.5  percent from the  Prudhoe to the  hub was                                                            
important for  the state to own for instate business.  At this early                                                            
stage, the  state could work with  producers to structure  it if the                                                            
state wants to invest.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR PEARCE asked historically how the hubs came to be.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. THOMPSON explained  that most of his experience  is in the Lower                                                            
48, but he has had nine years in Alaska.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     Back  in the 70s almost  all gas was  traded by medium  to                                                                 
     long-term  contracts and  we didn't have  the natural  gas                                                                 
     trading  that's happening now.  There were just pipelines                                                                  
     that  were  owned  by  pipeline  companies  and sometimes                                                                  
     producers  owned interest and  sometimes they didn't.  The                                                                 
     pipeline  companies  would take  gas from a  field to  the                                                                 
     market  in cities  and power  plants, etc.  As businesses                                                                  
     grew,  more fields were  discovered and  more natural  gas                                                                 
     was used  and more pipelines  were built. Hubs came  about                                                                 
     because major lines found  themselves crisscrossing and at                                                                 
     one  point, it  was realized  there  would be  a lot  more                                                                 
     flexibility  if these lines could  be interconnected  in a                                                                 
     way  that people could  supply into  that hub. They  could                                                                 
     have access  to not just the  three markets off their  one                                                                 
     line,  but  maybe  to  nine   or 10  if  the  lines   were                                                                 
     interconnected.  That  was the physical  reason for  hubs.                                                                 
     That is a  factor here, but the other purpose  of hubs was                                                                 
     the  contractual  arrangements and  setting  rules of  the                                                                 
     trading  price.  Then  you know  the  netback  prices  for                                                                 
     taxation  and royalties,  as well.  Also, at  the hub  you                                                                 
     have control of gas balancing.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
TAPE 01-20, SIDE B                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                              
CHAIRMAN TORGERSON thanked Mr. Thompson for his presentation and                                                                
adjourned the meeting at 4:45 pm.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                

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