Legislature(2015 - 2016)ANCH LIO AUDITORIUM

06/29/2016 10:00 AM Senate RESOURCES

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Audio Topic
10:01:21 AM Start
10:04:00 AM Aklng Update
10:06:13 AM Project Manager
11:36:18 AM State Gas Team
03:48:46 PM Fiscal Team
05:06:39 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
-- Testimony <Invitation Only> --
-- Teleconference <Listen Only> --
+ Joint with House Resources TELECONFERENCED
AK LNG Update:
AK LNG Project Manager Steve Butt
AK LNG State Gas Team
AK LNG Fiscal Team
                    ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE                                                                                  
                         JOINT MEETING                                                                                        
              SENATE RESOURCES STANDING COMMITTEE                                                                             
               HOUSE RESOURCES STANDING COMMITTEE                                                                             
            Anchorage Legislative Information Office                                                                          
                         June 29, 2016                                                                                          
                           10:01 a.m.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
SENATE RESOURCES                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
 Senator Cathy Giessel, Chair                                                                                                   
 Senator Mia Costello, Vice Chair                                                                                               
 Senator John Coghill - via teleconference                                                                                      
 Senator Peter Micciche                                                                                                         
 Senator Bill Stoltze                                                                                                           
 Senator Bill Wielechowski                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
HOUSE RESOURCES                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
 Representative Benjamin Nageak, Co-Chair                                                                                       
 Representative David Talerico, Co-Chair                                                                                        
 Representative Mike Hawker, Vice Chair - via teleconference                                                                    
 Representative Bob Herron                                                                                                      
 Representative Craig Johnson                                                                                                   
 Representative Kurt Olson                                                                                                      
 Representative Paul Seaton                                                                                                     
 Representative Andy Josephson                                                                                                  
 Representative Geran Tarr                                                                                                      
 Representative Mike Chenault                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SENATE RESOURCES                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
 Senator Bert Stedman                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
HOUSE RESOURCES                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
All members present                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
OTHER LEGISLATORS PRESENT                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Senator Mike Dunleavy                                                                                                           
Senator Anna MacKinnon                                                                                                          
Representative David Guttenberg                                                                                                 
Representative Dan Saddler                                                                                                      
Representative Charisse Millett                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
COMMITTEE CALENDAR                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
AKLNG PROJECT UPDATE                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
      - HEARD                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
No previous action to record                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
WITNESS REGISTER                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
STEVE BUTT, Project Manager                                                                                                     
Alaska LNG, LLC (AKLNG)                                                                                                         
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Provided updates on the Alaska LNG Project.                                                               
                                                                                                                                
KEVIN MEYER, President                                                                                                          
Alaska Gasline Development Corporation (AGDC)                                                                                   
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Provided updates on the Alaska LNG Project.                                                               
                                                                                                                                
DAVID VAN TUYL, Alaska Regional Manager                                                                                         
BP                                                                                                                              
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Commented on the Alaska LNG Project.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
DARREN MEZNARICH, Project Integration Manager                                                                                   
Alaska North Slope (ANS) Gas                                                                                                    
ConocoPhillips                                                                                                                  
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Commented on the Alaska LNG Project.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
BILL McMAHON, Senior Commercial Advisor                                                                                         
ExxonMobil                                                                                                                      
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Commented on the Alaska LNG Project.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
ACTION NARRATIVE                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
10:01:21 AM                                                                                                                   
CO-CHAIR CATHY  GIESSEL called  the joint  meeting of  the Senate                                                             
and House  Resources Standing Committees  to order at  10:01 a.m.                                                               
Present  at  the  call  to   order  were  Senators  Wielechowski,                                                               
Coghill,  Costello,  Stoltze,  Micciche,  Co-Chair  Giessel,  and                                                               
Representatives Tarr,  Olson, Josephson, Johnson,  Herron, Tilton                                                               
Seaton,  Chenault,   Co-Chair  Nageak,  and   Co-Chair  Talerico.                                                               
Representative Hawker joined the meeting by teleconference.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Senators  MacKinnon  and  Dunleavy  were also  present,  as  were                                                               
Representatives  Guttenberg,  Saddler,  Millett and  Hawker  (via                                                               
teleconference).                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
^AKLNG UPDATE                                                                                                                   
                          AKLNG UPDATE                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
10:04:00 AM                                                                                                                   
CO-CHAIR GIESSEL announced that the  only order of business would                                                               
be an update on Alaska liquefied  natural gas (LNG). She said the                                                               
last public update was in  September in Palmer, Alaska, with over                                                               
80 people listening online.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR NAGEAK introduced the members of the House.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR GIESSEL said this meeting is  to learn the status of the                                                               
Alaska  LNG (AKLNG)  integrated  project, which  is described  in                                                               
Senate  Bill 138  passed  [by the  Alaska  State Legislature]  in                                                               
2014. The  project will convey  natural gas from the  North Slope                                                               
for residents of Alaska and for  selling in the world market. She                                                               
stated that  the Alaska Constitution  requires the state  to make                                                               
its  resources  available for  maximum  use  consistent with  the                                                               
public  interest  and for  the  legislature  to provide  for  the                                                               
utilization, development,  and conservation of  natural resources                                                               
for the maximum  benefit of its people. She  noted that documents                                                               
from the meeting and a  project summary written by Larry Persily,                                                               
former  federal  pipeline  coordinator,   are  available  on  the                                                               
legislative website, BASIS, at akleg.gov under "daily schedule."                                                                
                                                                                                                                
^Project Manager                                                                                                                
                     AKLNG PROJECT MANAGER                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
10:06:13 AM                                                                                                                   
STEVE  BUTT, Project  Manager, Alaska  LNG LLC,  Anchorage, noted                                                               
that the Alaska  LNG (AKLNG) project is tied to  SB 138. The work                                                               
he  is  presenting is  on  behalf  of the  100-person  integrated                                                               
project  team, and  he will  show  what progress  they have  made                                                               
since January. He said the AKLNG  team has been able to cut costs                                                               
and  progress  key  deliverables  around  regulatory  and  design                                                               
issues,  and he  will show  what the  team and  the "hundreds  of                                                               
contractors" have done.  He turned to page 2  of his presentation                                                               
and said  most folks understand  the project really well,  but he                                                               
explained that  the LNG project  is intended to be  an integrated                                                               
natural gas project  to provide gas for export  and for Alaskans,                                                               
using the  economies of  scale. It will  connect to  major source                                                               
fields, Prudhoe  Bay and Point  Thompson, on the North  Slope and                                                               
will have  significant infrastructure, primarily a  gas treatment                                                               
plant, a pipeline,  and a liquefaction facility.  This project is                                                               
unique because  it is  the first time  that the  four fundamental                                                               
parties who  own the gas  rights on  the North Slope  are working                                                               
together. The  producers purchased the  right to produce  the gas                                                               
in the late 1960s,  but the state owns the gas  in the ground and                                                               
has title  to the royalty  upon its production, he  explained. He                                                               
said that  the four parties  have been working together  under SB
138; therefore,  the project  has a chance  to have  little value                                                               
leakage and few commercial transactions with other parties.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT added  that this project will provide  about 2.4 billion                                                               
cubic feet  (BCF) per day of  gas for export, which  is ten times                                                               
the amount  of gas that the  State of Alaska uses,  and it equals                                                               
the amount of  gas that Canada or Germany use.  Alaska uses about                                                               
250 million cubic  feet (MCF) a day, but the  system has capacity                                                               
for about 500 MCF a day for instate use.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
10:10:13 AM                                                                                                                   
MR.  BUTT stated  that as  Alaska grows,  that capacity  is built                                                               
into the  AKLNG system. He added  that the system has  some great                                                               
advantages:  it is  close  to  the market;  there  is economy  of                                                               
scale;  and  Alaska's  cold environment  makes  gas  plants  more                                                               
efficient,  so AKLNG  productivity will  peak when  market demand                                                               
peaks, which is  a great advantage over projects  in the southern                                                               
hemisphere. Those advantages are  offset by some real challenges,                                                               
including the  amount of CO2  that will be handled.  The pipeline                                                               
will be  longer than  any other LNG  project pipeline,  he added,                                                               
and another  challenge is that the  gas is very lean,  which is a                                                               
mixed blessing.  Prudhoe Bay [operators]  have used the  gas that                                                               
they have produced,  about 7-9 BCF per day, by  reinjecting it to                                                               
extend oil production.  The gas has been taken out  of the ground                                                               
and  put back  in  the  ground more  than  three  times, and  the                                                               
liquids have  already been  removed and sold  for the  benefit of                                                               
the parties,  he explained. Alaska  LNG has a leaner  stream that                                                               
has to handle a lot of CO2, and that creates some challenges.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
10:12:22 AM                                                                                                                   
MR.  BUTT said  AKLNG  personnel feel  good  about the  project's                                                               
safety  culture. There  have been  no  recordable incidents  this                                                               
year, none  in 2015, and  one in  2014, and being  safe underpins                                                               
everything  his  team does.  He  said  AKLNG spent  $460  million                                                               
through the  end of May and  another $107 million on  the concept                                                               
design. The concept  [stage] is "What do we want  to build? How's                                                               
that going to look?" Pre-FEED  [Preliminary Front End Engineering                                                               
Design] is where the team gets  more detailed and specific in the                                                               
design work,  and then it  moves into  other phases in  the gated                                                               
process. By the  time the Pre-FEED deliverables  are completed in                                                               
the fourth quarter,  an excess of $500 million will  be spent, so                                                               
the expenditures will be over $600 million.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
10:14:21 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. BUTT  said the design work  is about 91 percent  complete. He                                                               
said, "We have  what are called Pre-FEED  deliverables, which are                                                               
the agreements  that we said  needed to be defined  to understand                                                               
what  would  be required  to  build  a  project this  large,"  he                                                               
stated. There  are 82 Pre-FEED deliverables,  which are documents                                                               
regarding "how  would you  build this, how  you would  handle the                                                               
logistics,  how would  you  operate this,  how  would you  handle                                                               
people."  For  all  of  the  critical  questions,  there  are  82                                                               
deliverables, and  each deliverable is  a large document,  and 65                                                               
of  them are  complete and  about 91  percent of  the engineering                                                               
work underneath those deliverables is  complete. He said there is                                                               
more work in finishing the cost and schedule estimates.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
10:15:20 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. BUTT said an important  milestone was hit when the integrated                                                               
project  design  was finished  and  it  was determined  that  the                                                               
project  can be  run at  a global  efficiency standard,  which is                                                               
about 95 percent. That is  really important, he said, because the                                                               
system  is  so large  and  complex  with  hundreds of  pieces  of                                                               
equipment that  all have  to be  maintained in  different cycles.                                                               
Over a  30-year period, it  is important that  maintenance cycles                                                               
and all  the work  will never  be in  conflict. The  whole system                                                               
works as  a chain,  and if  any piece does  not work,  the system                                                               
does not work,  he noted. So every element has  to be understood,                                                               
down  to each  individual pump,  regarding when  and how  long it                                                               
will  be down  for maintenance.  He  stated that  the project  is                                                               
avoiding waking up  one day and finding out  a compressor station                                                               
somewhere in  the pipeline needs  to come  down, and it  holds up                                                               
operations. "What  we do is  we find out  ways to match  all that                                                               
up,"  he  explained.  In  September   he  had  talked  about  the                                                               
milestone where  the team was  able to balance the  entire system                                                               
with  three gas  treatment trains  and three  LNG trains,  so the                                                               
system can  be worked on in  a "very balanced manner."  That work                                                               
has evolved  in confirming that  the system  can run at  least 95                                                               
percent of  the time,  he added. That  is extremely  important in                                                               
the LNG  business, because  LNG buyers put  their economy  in the                                                               
hands  of the  sellers, he  said, and  if they  don't get  energy                                                               
reliably, their lights  go out. "We've been able  to confirm that                                                               
we can design  a system here in Alaska to  export LNG and provide                                                               
gas to  Alaskans in  an extremely reliable  manner, and  that's a                                                               
recent breakthrough  that we've  accomplished since  January," he                                                               
said.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
10:17:11 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. BUTT said the pipeline  design is completed. In January, work                                                               
was still  being finished and there  was a question where  he had                                                               
been asked  by one of  the joint venture participants  to revisit                                                               
the size  and make sure  it was  appropriate for the  concerns of                                                               
all parties. It  is an important example of  how the participants                                                               
can work  together, he added, because  they all have to  share in                                                               
each other's  concerns and address  them efficiently. One  of the                                                               
participants wanted to  know if the pipeline was  the right size,                                                               
so the team dedicated about $22  million and about five months of                                                               
work to revisit the hydraulics  and sizing, "and we confirmed the                                                               
42-inch  basis as  the  most efficient,"  because  it lowers  the                                                               
cost, provides the capacity, and it provides for expandability.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
10:18:18 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. BUTT said the team is trying  to finish all of the field work                                                               
for the  resource reports,  which are part  of the  FERC [Federal                                                               
Energy  Regulatory  Commission]  environmental  impact  statement                                                               
process.  It is  a  pre-filing  process, and  the  "Draft 1s"  or                                                               
"pencil versions" were  filed in 2015. The project  will now file                                                               
the "pen  versions," which are  much more detailed, he  said. The                                                               
FERC resource reports, numbers 1 and  10, have been filed and are                                                               
available  on the  FERC  website,  he said,  and  they are  great                                                               
reading. Reports  2-9, 11,  and 13  need to  be finished,  and he                                                               
expects they will be done in July or August.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT said it is important  to remember that the project needs                                                               
to  compete with  all other  LNG projects;  buyers only  want the                                                               
utility value  of gas. Competitiveness  is measured by  the "cost                                                               
of  supply,"   where  the  capital  and   operating  expenses  of                                                               
delivering LNG to  a buyer is divided by the  amount of LNG. That                                                               
is the  way the market  judges the project's  competitiveness, he                                                               
said. He reiterated that, as the  lead party in the joint venture                                                               
agreement, it has committed to  complete all 82 deliverables. The                                                               
final 17  are under a  schedule to  be completed between  now and                                                               
the first of September, "so we  think by September we should have                                                               
that work done, including all the cost and schedule estimates."                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
10:21:02 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. BUTT explained that the pipeline  is only about 25 percent of                                                               
the  cost,  the LNG  plant  is  about  50  percent, and  the  gas                                                               
treatment plant is 25 percent.  The most critical message is cost                                                               
of supply,  he said. "If  we can't  be competitive, if  you can't                                                               
make money on  every molecule of LNG we sell  or every dollar per                                                               
million BTUs,  if you're losing  money on a unit-cost  basis, one                                                               
of the old economic maxims is: if  you lose money on a unit cost-                                                               
basis,  don't make  up for  it on  volume." The  project is  very                                                               
large, so  it has  to be effective  and competitive,  "and that's                                                               
our critical challenge."  It is complicated by the  change in the                                                               
market from  two years  ago when  LNG was  selling at  double the                                                               
price of today. He said  the project has made tremendous progress                                                               
on  costs, driving  them  to  the lower  end  of  the team's  $45                                                               
billion  to $65  billion range;  however, "we  haven't cut  it in                                                               
half, so  competitively, we  have some  real challenges  ahead of                                                               
us," and that is what AKLNG is focused on.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
10:22:34 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. BUTT  said the questions  are if the  risk can be  driven low                                                               
enough  that the  return is  commensurate with  that risk  and if                                                               
costs can  get low enough to  be competitive. He noted  that $600                                                               
million has been spent to date  through Pre-FEED, but "we have to                                                               
remember" that  FEED exceeds $1  billion and the project  will be                                                               
well in excess of $40 billion.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR GIESSEL recognized  Representatives Guttenberg, Saddler,                                                               
and Tuck.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT  explained  that  the LNG  plant  is  now  dramatically                                                               
different from  what it was  in the  concept phase. The  team has                                                               
modified  the  liquefaction  technology  and  advanced  a  system                                                               
design that will be very effective.  He pointed to a photo in the                                                               
upper right [of page 4  of his presentation], which shows exactly                                                               
how  the plant  will be  built. However,  the image  does not  do                                                               
justice to the work that his  team has done. Referring to the two                                                               
LNG  tanks,  he  said  they  were seven  times  larger  than  the                                                               
existing  tanks in  Nikiski, Alaska.  Two Boeing  787s would  fit                                                               
into each  tank, he said, and  that shows how enormous  the plant                                                               
will be.  "It's a world-scale  20-MTA plant, and that  economy of                                                               
scale is really important, because  that's one of the things that                                                               
drives efficiency  in the  LNG business,"  he stated.  "The first                                                               
molecule we create is, by far,  the most expensive; it has to pay                                                               
for all  the infrastructure to  get it there." The  last molecule                                                               
is the cheapest, he added.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
10:25:24 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. BUTT  said the  team has  done a  tremendous job  driving out                                                               
costs.  The bottom  left of  page 4  lists the  things that  have                                                               
really  driven costs  out of  the system,  he noted.  It includes                                                               
different ways to  use power systems, and each  "module" gets put                                                               
together like Legos. He pointed  to a color-coded picture of when                                                               
each  system  would be  built  and  said  the design  allows  the                                                               
project to  start manufacturing  LNG with just  a portion  of the                                                               
plant built. He said it  is called simultaneous operations, which                                                               
means that the project can  generate revenue as early as possible                                                               
to help  the project  be competitive. He  referred to  the marine                                                               
design in Cook Inlet  and said, "We all know the  Cook Inlet is a                                                               
very  challenging body  of water  to work."  It has  some of  the                                                               
largest tidal changes in the world,  and the tides are strong, he                                                               
noted. Also,  there are important "species  characteristics," and                                                               
it has all  been considered in the design, including  a jetty and                                                               
trestle system that he is  confident will work effectively. It is                                                               
positioned outside of critical habitat areas, he stated.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
10:26:54 AM                                                                                                                   
MR.  BUTT said  the  team has  also  done extensive  geotechnical                                                               
work. These plants are very  heavy, weighing 250,000 tons, and it                                                               
needs to be  determined that the ground will not  move under that                                                               
weight. The LNG  tanks are incredibly heavy when  full, and after                                                               
tens  of millions  of dollars'  worth of  analysis, it  was found                                                               
that  the soils  are excellent.  "We feel  really good  about the                                                               
design work  we've done and the  way we've been able  to position                                                               
that site  so that  it can  be successful,"  he stated.  He added                                                               
that there  has been sea floor  mapping for tens of  thousands of                                                               
acres.  Boreholes were  drilled to  sample the  earth, and  AKLNG                                                               
feels very good  about its ability to build the  facility at that                                                               
site. As to  the pipeline, a big achievement  was getting closure                                                               
on the pipeline  size. Being 42 inches lowers  execution risk, he                                                               
said,  because it  needs a  narrower and  shallower trench.  Less                                                               
trucks are needed,  because one truck can carry  only two 48-inch                                                               
joints of  pipe, but it  can carry  three 42-inch pipes,  and all                                                               
that translates  to hundreds  of millions  of dollars  saved. The                                                               
most  impressive work  has  been finishing  all  of the  material                                                               
testing on the  42-inch system, he said, and it  has been done in                                                               
conjunction  with the  regulators.  It has  confirmed that  AKLNG                                                               
needs 300  miles less of  "strained-based design," which  is much                                                               
heavier  pipe to  handle loads  where the  ground might  move. He                                                               
explained that between the Brooks  Range and the Alaska Range the                                                               
ground moves  from the changes in  temperatures, and strain-based                                                               
pipe can handle  that. Through a lot of great  work with FERC and                                                               
PHMSA (Pipeline  and Hazardous Materials  Safety Administration),                                                               
which is  the federal regulator  of the pipeline, AKLNG  has been                                                               
able to change the amount of  strain-based pipe it needs and come                                                               
up with a model that satisfies all of the regulators.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
10:29:17 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. BUTT  said AKLNG  has also extended  that into  the execution                                                               
phase, and he  showed a map with  potential compressor locations.                                                               
As  AKLNG understands  the system  better, it  is able  to remove                                                               
redundancy, he  said. It is  important to handle  the compression                                                               
properly and to keep  the gas and the soils around  the pipe at a                                                               
constant temperature so  the pipe never moves.  The [Trans Alaska                                                               
Pipeline] is 65 percent above ground,  and about 60 to 65 percent                                                               
of  the AKLNG  will  be  below ground,  he  noted.  The route  is                                                               
confirmed and  "we know  exactly where each  of the  pieces would                                                               
work." The sea floor modeling  is finished, so the AKLNG pipeline                                                               
team knows the best way to cross  the inlet [shown on page 5] but                                                               
still needs to  work on optimization of the  construction and the                                                               
compressor station-"we think we'll get done."                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
10:31:57 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. BUTT  stated that the  gas treatment  plant is always  one of                                                               
most important and complex elements  of the system. All engineers                                                               
know what a strange gas CO2  is; it behaves differently than most                                                               
fluids. When CO2  is under pressure, it becomes a  liquid. It can                                                               
freeze at minus 50 degrees  Fahrenheit. It is difficult to handle                                                               
as a  fluid, it is  a greenhouse gas,  and it has  no hydrocarbon                                                               
value. Removing  the CO2 is  important, and Prudhoe Bay  has 11.5                                                               
to 12  percent CO2, one of  the highest levels in  world. He said                                                               
that there  is only  one LNG plant  operating with  anywhere near                                                               
that  level of  CO2,  and it  is in  Western  Australia. The  CO2                                                               
should not  be vented even  though some other projects  have done                                                               
so. The amount  from this project would be  enormous: 450 million                                                               
cubic feet a day of just CO2,  twice the amount of gas the entire                                                               
state uses,  or trillions  of cans of  Coca-Cola every  day. "The                                                               
amount of  CO2 is staggering,"  he emphasized, so to  manage that                                                               
has always been  an important challenge. The  gas treatment plant                                                               
team has made tremendous progress;  they have worked very closely                                                               
with the Prudhoe Bay operator to  confirm that the site works and                                                               
it can be connected to the existing infrastructure.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
10:34:38 AM                                                                                                                   
MR.  BUTT  showed a  photo  of  the plant  on  page  6. The  work                                                               
required a high level of  integration with Prudhoe Bay people, he                                                               
said, and they  have been excellent to work with.  He stated that                                                               
"they've helped  us really understand  what would happen  to that                                                               
CO2 when it's put  back in the ground at Prudhoe  Bay, which is a                                                               
huge challenge,  and it's been  a huge  success for this  team to                                                               
figure out  how to handle this  much CO2." Each year,  when there                                                               
are ice-free  lanes, some section  of the plant would  be brought                                                               
in, he explained. The first  year, everything colored blue on his                                                               
diagram, like  the modules for process  equipment, utilities, and                                                               
the flare, would  be brought in. In the second  year, "we'd bring                                                               
in the first  train to treat the  gas, and we'd be  able to begin                                                               
filling the  pipeline with just  that first train." He  said that                                                               
the beauty  of this system is  that AKLNG may be  able to operate                                                               
three LNG  trains with  two GTP [gas  treatment plant]  trains in                                                               
the  early  days when  CO2  levels  are  lower, which  helps  the                                                               
project  be more  competitive. "So  that  what you  build on  the                                                               
North Slope is aligned and  completely balanced with what's built                                                               
in the Cook  Inlet," he added. There is work  ahead on optimizing                                                               
the  size and  design of  the gas  treatment plant.  The Pre-FEED                                                               
basis is much  larger (as shown on page 6)  than the current one,                                                               
and about 40,000 tons of equipment were cut out.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
10:37:09 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. BUTT said  that is a huge breakthrough. The  plant dwarfs any                                                               
existing facility on  the North Slope, and the  vessels to remove                                                               
the CO2  from the gas are  105-feet tall. "So, we  worked through                                                               
all of those challenges, and we  figured out ways to do that with                                                               
machinery and  electrical optimizations to really  keep our costs                                                               
down," he  stated. It  is a  very complex  system with  about 700                                                               
miles of pipe and cable inside the plant.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
10:38:10 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR  MICCICHE said  there is  more crossover  between typical                                                               
Pre-FEED and early FEED, and he asked what the advantage was.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT replied  that normal Pre-FEED can be  less detailed, but                                                               
AKLNG had  to go deeper in  order to inform the  resource reports                                                               
for FERC.  Once the commitments are  made to FERC, AKLNG  did not                                                               
want to  move the gas  treatment plant.  "We wouldn't want  to be                                                               
uncertain in  our ability to reinject  all of the CO2  in Prudhoe                                                               
Bay,  because  that  is a  dramatically  different  environmental                                                               
impact," he explained.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
10:39:20 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR COSTELLO asked  what was learned by  studying the 48-inch                                                               
line and if it delayed the Pre-FEED timeline.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT answered  that the  pipeline  team spent  four or  five                                                               
months  on the  hydraulics, which  cost $42  million, and  "we're                                                               
always learning."  The challenge was  to keep that team  on track                                                               
with all of  the other teams, he added. The  team is catching up,                                                               
but it  did a  tremendous job  - all  during the  transition with                                                               
TransCanada, which entailed personnel changes.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
10:40:52 AM                                                                                                                   
CO-CHAIR GIESSEL  asked if  the Alaska  Oil and  Gas Conservation                                                               
Commission (AOGCC)  had to authorize  reinjecting the CO2  and if                                                               
it did so in October.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT said  yes,  and  it was  a  real  milestone. There  was                                                               
excellent support from the AOGCC, he added.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  NAGEAK   remarked  that   with  regard   to  optimizing                                                               
resources, there is some land and  resources to the west of where                                                               
the project  will be, and  he wants to  make sure people  in that                                                               
area will  have the  opportunity to work  with this  project "and                                                               
other things in the future."                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
10:42:53 AM                                                                                                                   
MR.  BUTT   thanked  the   Native  corporations,   villages,  and                                                               
communities for  all the support.  The project team has  had some                                                               
great conversation  with the people  of Ahtna [Inc.],  and "their                                                               
ideas were better than ours."                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
10:43:50 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. BUTT said that each of  the elements of the project have been                                                               
done "somewhere," but no entity  has done something of this scale                                                               
altogether.  There is  a gas  plant in  the Middle  East that  is                                                               
almost as big, but there is  no processing plant of this scope on                                                               
the North Slope. There are  800 miles of pipelines elsewhere, but                                                               
this  42-inch  pipeline  is  unique because  it  is  thicker  and                                                               
heavier  than any  other pipeline.  Pipelines  vary in  thickness                                                               
because of the fluid and the  pressure that is handled. This pipe                                                               
will hold gas at 2,100 PSI [pound-force per square inch].                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT  noted that  there  was  hundreds of  skilled  laborers                                                               
available,  but  the  company   needs  thousands.  Peak  load-the                                                               
construction  phase-will have  a workforce  of up  to 12,000,  he                                                               
said. If  the number of trucks  loaded with the needed  pipe were                                                               
strung  end-to-end,  it  would  stretch  from  Anchorage  to  Los                                                               
Angeles, he  explained, and the  project will need  about 190,000                                                               
gallons of fuel.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
10:47:21 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. BUTT said the fabrication costs  have been driven down by 40-                                                               
45  percent. Referring  to page  8 of  his presentation,  he said                                                               
scheduling  includes contingency  analysis  and schedule  reserve                                                               
review. The "critical  path" is made up of  those activities that                                                               
cannot  be  recovered  if  they  "slip."  In  this  project,  the                                                               
critical path  is the regulatory  work. Anything built  to export                                                               
LNG becomes a  "connected action to FERC." He  said that anything                                                               
used  to  source   gas  to  the  facility  is   under  a  similar                                                               
environment  review  process  to  meet  the  standard  of  "least                                                               
environmentally damaging practicable alternative."                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
10:49:58 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. BUTT  explained that  on the  schedule diagram,  the critical                                                               
path is colored  red. Somewhere at the end of  2016 there will be                                                               
a decision on  whether to go to the next  stage, because once the                                                               
draft 1  resource reports are  filed, draft 2 reports  are filed,                                                               
and then  the application  is filed.  The FERC  will then  have a                                                               
public  process  to  confirm that  the  environmental  impact  is                                                               
smaller than  the potential  socio-economic benefits.  There will                                                               
be a decision  in 2016/2017 that goes back  to the applicants-the                                                               
parent  companies-who  will  decide whether  that  FERC  document                                                               
should be filed, he  said. In the middle of page  8, "you can see                                                               
we'll kind of get to the end  of 2016 with our Pre-FEED work." He                                                               
is confident  that the  deliverables will  be done  in September,                                                               
draft resource reports  will be done in July and  August, and the                                                               
work scope  under the  existing work program  and budget  will be                                                               
completed in 2016.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
10:51:24 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. BUTT said  there will then have to be  a conversation on what                                                               
the regulatory  uncertainty looks like  and what happens  next. A                                                               
project of this  magnitude takes about a year to  get ready to do                                                               
FEED, reestablish  all of the  people involved, get the  basis of                                                               
the contracting done, and find  out from the contractors how much                                                               
money they  need to do  the work.  Between Pre-FEED and  FEED the                                                               
project  goes  from  "process flow  diagrams"  to  very  detailed                                                               
drawings,   which  will   then   go  into   ATC  (Authorized   To                                                               
Construction)  drawings. Then  there will  be a  final investment                                                               
decision-and then the initiation of execution.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
10:53:28 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. BUTT  said execution  will take four  to five  years, because                                                               
the gas treatment plant needs to  get the modules through the sea                                                               
lane to  the North  Slope. Once  the gas  is available,  the pipe                                                               
should be  ready and at  least one LNG  train should be  ready to                                                               
liquefy it for  export. He said start-up takes up  to a year, but                                                               
getting things going is harder than keeping them running.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
10:55:05 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR  COSTELLO asked  about the  status of  a labor  study and                                                               
specific jobs  Alaskans can prepare  for. She asked if  there are                                                               
labor strategies that the partners are looking at.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT said  AKLNG has had conversations  with the commissioner                                                               
of  [Alaska Department  of Labor  and  Workforce Development]  on                                                               
"capability building." He  wants to make sure  that Alaskans have                                                               
the jobs  with long-term operations impacts;  "training people to                                                               
run welding machines on a  project that has a three-year lifespan                                                               
is not  as powerful as training  people who can run  that machine                                                               
for 30 years." A big concern  is that crafts skills like welders,                                                               
electricians, and pipefitters are  difficult to source. They also                                                               
need skills with heavy equipment  and trucking and people to feed                                                               
and house staff.  There is direct labor (welder  for example) and                                                               
indirect labor (a person who  supports that welder), and there is                                                               
at  least a  one-to-one ratio  of those  types. He  spoke of  the                                                               
cooks and the  hundreds of pounds of eggs  and other consumables.                                                               
Working  with  the  commissioner,  he  said,  he  would  like  to                                                               
"differentiate  those jobs,  build capability  for the  long-term                                                               
jobs here  in Alaska,  look for  the right  ways to  source craft                                                               
labor, and then use other places to fill the rest."                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COSTELLO asked about the report.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT replied  that  the  labor study  is  complete, but  the                                                               
resource report  on labor is  not done, but  it will be  given to                                                               
FERC who makes it public.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
10:58:33 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. BUTT said  AKLNG is finishing Phase 2 of  the archaeology and                                                               
culture resource  work. Archaeologists report discoveries  to the                                                               
state  historical   preservation  office,  and  the   project  is                                                               
rerouted. The work should be done  by late August, he stated. The                                                               
contractors provide good support, and  ACOM got the global safety                                                               
award from their corporation. He said  there is a team working in                                                               
the  AKLNG office  on resource  reports 2-9,  which includes  the                                                               
labor  information.  Also,  the  company  is  doing  "stakeholder                                                               
input," which means going out  to the communities and asking what                                                               
Alaskans  think  of  the  project.   There  have  been  excellent                                                               
interactions  and  consultations  with the  Native  regional  and                                                               
village corporations and good turnout  at the meetings. There are                                                               
questions  and  skepticism  as to  providing  jobs.  "We  respect                                                               
that," he  stated, "and  we give them  the information  we've got                                                               
and always try  to be as clear  as we can." He  pointed to photos                                                               
on page 10  of his presentation and said this  process is through                                                               
FERC, and they do a great job.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
11:01:07 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR DUNLEAVY asked, "Are we are  still on target for the Pre-                                                               
FEED wrap-up and the FEED decision?"                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT answered  that Pre-FEED  deliverables will  be done  in                                                               
September,  and  the Pre-FEED  joint  agreement  expires in  June                                                               
2017.  As the  lead party,  [his team]  will put  forward a  work                                                               
program and  budget in  2017, and  if the  parties decide  not to                                                               
support it, the existing budget expires at the end of 2016.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MICCICHE  said the road  realignment is in  his district,                                                               
and  the  community  is  concerned  since it  is  the  artery  of                                                               
transportation on the  Spur Highway. "If there is a  delay in the                                                               
project, does the road remain  a priority issue for the community                                                               
to consider?"                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT said,  yes,  the  Kenai Spur  Highway  and a  potential                                                               
reroute is  one of the  most critical  elements of the  LNG plant                                                               
design. Defining  the reroute needs  to be a public  process, and                                                               
that cannot happen until the  design work for each alternative is                                                               
complete. The  team is spending about  $1 million to look  at all                                                               
options for each aspect of the work,  and AKLNG wants to do it in                                                               
conjunction  with the  Alaska Department  of Transportation,  who                                                               
has  been helpful  and thoroughly  involved.  When AKLNG  decides                                                               
what is best, it will go to the community, he said.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
11:04:04 AM                                                                                                                   
CO-CHAIR GIESSEL noted that AKLNG  is purchasing land for the LNG                                                               
plant.  She  asked about  the  status  of  the purchase  and  the                                                               
response from the community.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT  replied that  the "project" works  with the  AKLNG LLC.                                                               
"The land that  gets purchased and is targeted  is worked through                                                               
the project,  but the project  doesn't buy the land.  The limited                                                               
liability company buys the land  and owns the land." He explained                                                               
that  the  company  was  open  to all  four  JVA  (Joint  Venture                                                               
Agreement) participants, but, at the  time, only three were ready                                                               
to join, and  it was critical to obtain the  DOE [U.S. Department                                                               
of  Energy] export  authorization.  The  DOE authorization  needs                                                               
three  things:  access to  the  supply,  technical capability  to                                                               
execute the project,  and a physical place to do  the work. There                                                               
was  a time,  he said,  when the  DOE was  inundated with  people                                                               
requesting export  authorization who  had no gas,  experience, or                                                               
physical resources. To be successful,  AKLNG made sure it had the                                                               
land, and it  received export authorization in  record time. "But                                                               
the land  is owned  by the  LLC; we  have well  in excess  of 600                                                               
acres." The number  one principle when buying land is  to be fair                                                               
and  durable  and  use  no  coercion.  For  the  most  part,  the                                                               
community is supportive, he said.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  GIESSEL asked  if the  State of  Alaska is  one of  the                                                               
entities that owns the land.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT said no.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HAWKER  asked if  Mr. Butt  said that  the sponsor                                                               
companies  have been  in charge  of FERC  and DOE  compliance and                                                               
applications. He asked  how much the state has  been involved and                                                               
if Alaska is a party to the reports and processes.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT  said it was  great to hear  his voice, and  "my heart's                                                               
there with  you." The state  is one  of the six  applicants under                                                               
the  FERC  docket,  which  are the  four  JVA  participants,  the                                                               
Department  of Natural  Resources  (DNR), and  the Department  of                                                               
Revenue (DOR). Applicants  change all the time,  but the existing                                                               
structure is those six applicants.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
11:09:08 AM                                                                                                                   
REPRESENTATIVE HAWKER  asked if the state  is fully participatory                                                               
with the compliance work.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT said yes, state  representatives are always present when                                                               
meeting with DOE  and FERC. They are always in  the room when the                                                               
project reviews  resource reports, he  added. They are  very much                                                               
part of the  process. He referred to page 11  of his presentation                                                               
and  stressed  the  importance  of  discipline  for  such  a  big                                                               
project;  "don't make  mistakes  when you're  spending  a lot  of                                                               
money." He said  the project spent about $30 million  per year in                                                               
the concept phase  and will spend about $30 million  a day in the                                                               
execution phase.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
11:11:55 AM                                                                                                                   
MR.  BUTT  said misalignment  can  burn  through money,  but  the                                                               
project is in  Pre-FEED now, and there are  five requirements for                                                               
a FEED decision.  The first is a viable technical  option, and in                                                               
2011 there  was a lot  of uncertainty  on the ability  to execute                                                               
the project,  especially with  regards to  the high  CO2 content,                                                               
the  length of  the  gasline,  and the  construction  of the  LNG                                                               
plant. "Our  certainty and comfort with  technical challenges and                                                               
viability  is much  higher," he  stated.  Getting key  commercial                                                               
agreements is  the second  requirement, and  that remains  a real                                                               
challenge. The  third requirement,  government support,  is still                                                               
an open issue. He said  the fourth requirement is permitting, and                                                               
some companies  have spent  billions of dollars  in the  hopes of                                                               
getting  a  permit  but  have   none.  The  fifth  is  commercial                                                               
viability, and this  is the most important. "Can you  get cost of                                                               
supply  low enough  that  on  a daily  basis  you  can beat  your                                                               
competition?"                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
11:15:11 AM                                                                                                                   
MR.  BUTT summarized  and  said there  is a  great  team, but  it                                                               
always comes down to alignment, risk, and cost.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
11:16:34 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY  said  the  legislature will  be  the  ones  to                                                               
appropriate  funds. He  asked his  confidence  that this  project                                                               
will move forward.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT answered that, at the  right time, the known resource on                                                               
the North Slope  will be developed, but the market  has gone down                                                               
by 50 to 60 percent. "It's  a really heavy lift," especially with                                                               
the uncertainties in the regulatory  environment, and today might                                                               
not be the day to pursue this project.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
11:18:16 AM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR DUNLEAVY asked if this will move forward.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT  said he doesn't  know what  he doesn't know.  Under the                                                               
JVA there is a Pre-FEED notice,  and at the end of the completion                                                               
of the deliverables, all parties  have 120 days (after September)                                                               
to decide  if they want to  move forward. "I don't  know what all                                                               
the parties will do."                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
11:19:17 AM                                                                                                                   
REPRESENTATIVE TARR  noted that  the legislature funded  the 2016                                                               
work plan, and she asked about the 2017 work plan.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT answered  that all  four participants  have funded  the                                                               
2016 work program  and budget. What happens in 2017  is not going                                                               
to be known  until November, because the work  program and budget                                                               
will be  filed with the participants  on October 1. This  July 1,                                                               
the project will put out a  draft budget. All the parties look at                                                               
the draft and  discuss it, and then there will  be a final budget                                                               
in October.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SADDLER  asked if  potential changes  of ownership                                                               
and structure  caused Mr.  Butt to  "pull any  punches or  not do                                                               
work you  should have done," and  what the shelf life  is of work                                                               
done to date.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
11:21:06 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. BUTT  said some products  have a  very long shelf  life, like                                                               
the  geotechnical work.  The resource  reports on  socio-economic                                                               
benefits  and  community impacts  have  very  short shelf  lives.                                                               
Regarding project  structure changes, he  said he does  not think                                                               
he pulled any  punches. There is a lot of  uncertainty ahead. All                                                               
of the parties have options, he said.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HERRON said there will  be pieces of Pre-FEED that                                                               
will  have a  short shelf  life, and  Mr. Butt  had testified  at                                                               
another time  that the  shelf life  would be  about one  year. He                                                               
asked for a couple of examples.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT said  the best example of short  shelf life deliverables                                                               
are  the community  impacts,  because  communities change.  Soils                                                               
don't change, he explained.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
11:24:17 AM                                                                                                                   
REPRESENTATIVE CHENAULT said he  represents a community that will                                                               
be vastly  affected by this  project. One issue is  rerouting the                                                               
current  road  around  the  facility,  and  numerous  people  are                                                               
concerned about where that is on the schedule.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT  answered that  the team is  doing one  million dollars'                                                               
worth of design work. There are  eight different ways to move the                                                               
highway, and each  has different impacts. He wants to  do all the                                                               
analyses in conjunction  with FERC in order to not  "get in front                                                               
of our  headlights on where the  road would be," so  that will be                                                               
done at the end of the year at the earliest.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SEATON  asked if having commercial  agreements and                                                               
commercial  viability are  requirements  needed  for the  project                                                               
decision, or do individual partners [make that determination].                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT answered  that  those  items are  owned  by the  parent                                                               
companies and  the applicants. The project  team facilitates work                                                               
to  support  that,  but  that  analysis  really  belongs  to  the                                                               
individuals, and  each must decide  if the risk and  return makes                                                               
sense. It  is the  same as the  commercial agreements,  he added,                                                               
because  they are  about making  sure  that risk  and return  are                                                               
allocated in a manner that the parties consider equitable.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SEATON said  there has not been  resolution on the                                                               
upstream work  within Pt. Thomson.  Are those questions  that the                                                               
state should address to the individual partners?                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT said yes.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR GIESSEL said people on  her committee have talked to Mr.                                                               
Butt  often, but  the public  may be  getting more  interested in                                                               
this  projects, so  she asked  him to  explain his  experience in                                                               
managing projects of this magnitude.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
11:29:48 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. BUTT  answered that this is  the first project of  this scope                                                               
that he  has ever  managed, and  there are  no other  projects of                                                               
this scope. He related that he  has been with ExxonMobil for over                                                               
30  years  and   has  been  involved  in   projects  in  multiple                                                               
countries.  In Venezuela,  he  was involved  in  building a  long                                                               
pipeline and a big treatment  plant, and in Angola and Equatorial                                                               
Guinea, he was involved in  large offshore processing facilities.                                                               
In  Qatar,  he  was  involved  in  the  startup  of  the  world's                                                               
currently largest gas treating plant. He listed others.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  GIESSEL  noted that  he  oversees  the current  project                                                               
team, who are  specialists. Is anyone from AGDC a  lead on any of                                                               
those teams?                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT said, not at this  time, but AGDC had the opportunity to                                                               
staff team  members. In May or  June of 2014, "we  looked at some                                                               
staffing slides  and talked about  "how do  we do this"  and "our                                                               
core   principles  best-player   play,"  so   each  of   the  JVA                                                               
participants  put up  people  for roles."  There  were about  135                                                               
people  at  the  peak,  and they  mostly  came  from  ExxonMobil.                                                               
ConocoPhillips contributed  about 25, TransCanada  provided about                                                               
15, and BP provided about 10.  They all did an excellent job. The                                                               
composition and size of the  team changes as the deliverables are                                                               
completed.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
11:32:04 AM                                                                                                                   
REPRESENTATIVE TARR asked who replaced the TransCanada staff.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. BUTT answered  that there were 12 TransCanada  people at time                                                               
of demobilization in June, but  most of their jobs were complete.                                                               
Other staff just transitioned up,  he added. A project always has                                                               
transition, because  it needs the best  person to do the  job. It                                                               
was a smooth  transition, he said, and  TransCanada was dedicated                                                               
and handled the transition well.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SADDLER  noted  that   low  prices  have  created                                                               
challenges around the  world. He asked if the  "changed market is                                                               
offering Alaska's project  an opportunity it might  not have had-                                                               
lower labor costs, more availability of professional capacity?"                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BUTT  answered  that  there has  some  "softening,"  but  as                                                               
natural gas has become cheaper,  the work has shifted. People who                                                               
used  to  be  building  plants  to make  gas  available  are  now                                                               
building  plants to  use cheap  gas, he  said. The  shift in  the                                                               
market  has helped  drive down  costs, but  it is  not consistent                                                               
with the shift in the value of the commodity.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
^State gas team                                                                                                                 
                         STATE GAS TEAM                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
11:36:18 AM                                                                                                                   
CO-CHAIR GIESSEL  announced that the  next presenter will  be the                                                               
state  gas  team,  which  is   made  up  of  four  entities:  The                                                               
Department of  Natural Resources, the Department  of Revenue, the                                                               
Attorney   General,   and    the   Alaska   Gasline   Development                                                               
Corporation. The  team was formed  to stand  in for the  state on                                                               
this project.  Speaking on behalf of  the entire gas team  is the                                                               
new president of AGDC, Mr. Kevin Meyer.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
11:37:59 AM                                                                                                                   
At ease                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
11:40:35 AM                                                                                                                   
KEVIN  MEYER, President,  Alaska Gasline  Development Corporation                                                               
(AGDC), Anchorage,  noted that his  presentation was  prepared by                                                               
AGDC under his direction. He gave  an outline of what he plans to                                                               
discuss and noted that he is new  to AGDC. He said he started two                                                               
weeks ago  on June  15; however,  he had  a consulting  role with                                                               
AGDC for  a couple  of months.  He said  he has  35 years  in the                                                               
international gas  and energy industry,  mostly with  natural gas                                                               
and  pipelines. He  started in  the  industry with  a very  large                                                               
pipeline company,  owned by America  Natural Resources  (ANR) and                                                               
its pipeline  company. It was  when the industry went  through an                                                               
unbundling  and  a  deregulation  period, and  pipelines  in  the                                                               
United  States went  from buyers  and sellers  of natural  gas to                                                               
transporters of natural gas, he noted.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER  said that  at  ANR,  "we  were very  instrumental  in                                                               
helping shape the  open-access transport regime that  is in place                                                               
in the country today." The regime  has been adopted by the world,                                                               
as well,  and it is a  good framework to have  a pipeline serving                                                               
others-those who  either buy gas or  sell gas. He stated  that he                                                               
is  very  comfortable in  that  arena,  and  that is  the  common                                                               
structure  for a  pipeline,  where a  pipeline  company owns  the                                                               
pipeline,  as  opposed  to a  producer-owned  pipeline,  like  in                                                               
Alaska. He  said he then  worked 13  years for CMS  Energy, which                                                               
was  a  holding  company  formed  to  hold  a  large  utility  in                                                               
Michigan. The  utility was  getting crushed  under the  weight of                                                               
the  failed nuclear  plant.  Some  people from  ANR  went to  CMS                                                               
Energy and formed the holding  company and developed a nonutility                                                               
side,  but  because of  all  of  the  debt  at the  utility,  the                                                               
nonutility side had no capacity  to borrow money or guarantee any                                                               
debt, so  all of the  projects had to  be done on  a non-recourse                                                               
project finance basis.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
11:45:20 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. MEYER  said the  company eventually  owned the  largest power                                                               
plants   on  three   continents:  North   America,  Africa,   and                                                               
Australia. "We  also built the  highest pipeline in the  world at                                                               
the time,"  which was the Atacama,  and it crossed the  Andes. In                                                               
1998,  CMS bought  the Panhandle  Company, and  it came  with the                                                               
Lake  Charles LNG  facility, which  was one  of the  original LNG                                                               
import facilities  built in  the U.S.  He said  he then  moved to                                                               
Cheniere as  president of Cheniere  LNG. "We built …  the largest                                                               
import terminal in  the Western Hemisphere," he  said. It started                                                               
as a very  small entity, but it persevered, and  it developed and                                                               
secured two very good customers,  which led to the financing that                                                               
allowed the company  to double the size of  the facility-at risk,                                                               
which was  not a good  decision. Today Cheniere is  developing an                                                               
export project  at Sabine  Pass. When that  facility is  done, it                                                               
will  be about  50 percent  larger  than the  AKLNG plant.  After                                                               
leaving  Cheniere, he  was  out on  his own,  and  he started  on                                                               
global biofuel. At that time  he thought the world had approached                                                               
"peak  oil,"  but everyone  had  underestimated  "the shale,"  he                                                               
said. Then the financial crisis  happened in 2008/2009, and there                                                               
was  little  interest  in startups  and  biofuel,  including  his                                                               
African  biofuels project.  That  was when  he  heard about  this                                                               
opportunity in Alaska,  and he had heard about  the project since                                                               
his first day  in the industry and had watched  it go through its                                                               
many  phases. He  is excited  for this  opportunity to  move this                                                               
project across the goal line.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
11:48:41 AM                                                                                                                   
CHAIR  GIESSEL said  there  may be  questions  about Mr.  Meyer's                                                               
resume from the members.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  STOLTZE  asked about  Mr.  Meyer  following the  [AKLNG]                                                               
project his  entire career, so he  asked him for "a  critique and                                                               
analysis of the  high and low points"  throughout Alaska's entire                                                               
gasline effort.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER said  that by  coming from  a pipeline  background, it                                                               
puzzles him  why this project  has been so difficult  to achieve.                                                               
Although  it  is not  the  biggest  or  highest pipeline  or  the                                                               
largest LNG  plant, it is  a big project altogether.  Through the                                                               
years,  it has  had fits  and starts  and originally  was a  pipe                                                               
through  Canada to  the U.S,  which would  not have  been a  good                                                               
move. By  looking at  it as an  infrastructure project,  he asks,                                                               
"How do  we de-risk it?  How do  we get customers  involved?" The                                                               
LNG industry,  in the last six  to eight years, went  through its                                                               
largest demand pull in its  history, he noted. Every project that                                                               
had been on  the board, got constructed and got  into service, so                                                               
why not this one?  He said he was in Alaska in  2011 looking at a                                                               
small-scale  LNG project  as a  means to  increase the  Southeast                                                               
Alaska market  for the benefit  of the Cook Inlet  producers. One                                                               
of the problems in Cook Inlet, he  said, is the lack of demand if                                                               
gas is  found, so he looked  at a smaller scale  project. As part                                                               
of his  strategic plan  document, he noted  the need  to consider                                                               
what happens  with the  small plant when  the LNG  pipeline comes                                                               
in. "I was  sort of laughed at by these  producers, saying 'Well,                                                               
that pipeline's never going to get built.'"                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  said he disagreed-it  is a very viable  project-but he                                                               
developed  a  plan that  worked  with  or without  the  pipeline.                                                               
Recently,  he  has spoken  with  some  engineering companies  who                                                               
shake their  heads asking why  this project is  so difficult-it's                                                               
not a difficult construction project, but  it has a lot of moving                                                               
parts. He explained  that, generally, the steel  and concrete are                                                               
easy; it  is the paperwork  that is  difficult, and that  is true                                                               
for this project. He  said he is hoping to figure  out how to get                                                               
the  paperwork done,  including  the  commercial, technical,  and                                                               
construction  paperwork. It  is important  to recognize  that the                                                               
project is  high cost today and  that it missed a  small window a                                                               
few years back. Right now it is  high cost, so the focus needs to                                                               
be on  how to  get the  costs down, he  added, and  the technical                                                               
team has done outstanding work by  beating the costs down, and he                                                               
has been told that there is still more room to go down.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
11:53:52 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. MEYER  said now it  is the time to  look at other  costs, and                                                               
that includes  financing, taxes,  and other  aspects. He  said he                                                               
has always been  puzzled that the pipeline is  not advancing more                                                               
rapidly. He said he is anxious  to assess if "we can do something                                                               
differently that actually gets this project on track."                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR STOLTZE  said maybe his  expectations were too  high, and                                                               
asked him his  view on what the mistakes have  been, "where we've                                                               
just thrown  money into a  pit hole,  or where we've  gotten some                                                               
value from it and how it  builds on to where you're looking ahead                                                               
right now."                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  said the work done  to date has significant  value and                                                               
shows  that this  project can  be done.  The cost  parameters are                                                               
getting  narrower in  terms of  its  risk of  variability. It  is                                                               
clear that  the cost is  a bit high to  clear the market,  so the                                                               
project is slowing  down. Now we need to figure  out what else we                                                               
need to do. He  is not suggesting that the work  done to date was                                                               
a mistake; it's  very good work. The costs need  to come down, so                                                               
it is time to look at  costs other than those of construction, he                                                               
stated.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR STOLTZE  said he expected  more detail and  more clinical                                                               
analysis. Getting  a penny out  of a  dollar is value,  [but not]                                                               
comparative value. He  asked Mr. Meyer about the  virtues of sole                                                               
state ownership or of having a significant majority role.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
11:57:37 AM                                                                                                                   
MR. MEYER  said he intends  to address that in  his presentation,                                                               
and he told  Senator Stoltze to feel  free to let him  know if he                                                               
has not made it  clear, but he noted that this  is in a formative                                                               
stage, and it is about what  can be done differently to keep this                                                               
project on track.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR STOLTZE said,  "I tried to narrow it to  one comment: the                                                               
AGIA  [Alaska Gasline  Inducement  Act] TransCanada."  If it  has                                                               
value, "are we talking Greek  currency or are we talking deutsche                                                               
marks and  American dollar value?"  He said  he is trying  to get                                                               
some perspective,  "even on a  broader more-even a little  bit of                                                               
subjectivity."  He added  that he  is just  trying to  know where                                                               
[Alaska] is going with this new  step. He said that Mr. Meyer did                                                               
not have  a lot criticism  for everything,  so it all  had value.                                                               
So, he  said, he  is not going  to be as  active in  this process                                                               
except as  a citizen and a  stakeholder. "I'd like to  know where                                                               
the pro from Dover wants to take us," he added.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
11:59:10 AM                                                                                                                   
MR.  MEYER said  he  is  not intimately  familiar  with the  AGIA                                                               
project,  but a  line through  Canada  to the  Lower 48  probably                                                               
would have been a mistake, given  gas prices today. The shale gas                                                               
production in  the U.S. caught  a lot  of people by  surprise, he                                                               
explained. It is a shift  in the E&P [exploration and production]                                                               
industry by  shifting the focus  to the production side.  He said                                                               
that  the  amount  of  production  out  of  shale  has  astounded                                                               
everyone. A few  years ago he was asserting that  the country was                                                               
running out  of gas, and "right  under our feet we  have not only                                                               
have  found  gas  but,  by  golly, we  found  the  third  largest                                                               
producing country  in the  world in  this shale."  Decisions made                                                               
several years ago may have been  reasonable in that time, but the                                                               
outcome  may have  been quite  bad. "When  I say  I followed  the                                                               
[AKLNG] project over my career, I've  known about it … it doesn't                                                               
mean I intimately followed every decision," he clarified.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
12:01:14 PM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR  STOLTZE   said  he  will  lower   his  expectations-"the                                                               
interview  process is  over. You've  already got  the job,  and I                                                               
guess we're looking for more candor."                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HAWKER asked who Mr.  Meyer worked with in 2011 on                                                               
Alaska gas, and what his previous consulting role was with AGDC.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
12:02:02 PM                                                                                                                   
MR. MEYER said in  2011 he was on his own as  L&G America, and he                                                               
came  to Alaska  under  the banner  of LNG  Alaska  and met  with                                                               
Buccaneer [Energy Ltd.],  a small Cook Inlet producer.  He gave a                                                               
presentation to the Senate Resource  Committee and talked about a                                                               
small-scale LNG program  for the Southeast Alaska  market, and he                                                               
offered an initiative to get  gas to Fairbanks. He explained that                                                               
he looked at  high horsepower markets for LNG as  a fuel, such as                                                               
the  marine market,  which is  converting to  LNG. He  noted that                                                               
Tote  [Maritime] is  converting its  ships to  LNG, two  of which                                                               
serve  Tacoma  and Alaska.  He  had  hoped  to provide  LNG  from                                                               
Alaska,  but there  was none  available, so  TOTE elected  to get                                                               
their  LNG  in Tacoma.  He  said  he  thought the  Alaska  Marine                                                               
Highway ferries  were ideal  for using LNG,  and he  promoted the                                                               
potential  export markets.  He said  he consulted  with AGDC  for                                                               
about two months "prior to the June 15th date."                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
12:04:42 PM                                                                                                                   
REPRESENTATIVE HAWKER asked what he did at AGDC.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER said  he had  not  been appointed,  but he  was in  an                                                               
unofficial capacity  helping understand where AGDC  was, starting                                                               
to see  about developing  a strategy that  puts the  project more                                                               
into  a traditional  infrastructure  context, and  "that type  of                                                               
thing."                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HAWKER asked who hired him.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER said AGDC.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  HAWKER  noted that  Mr.  Meyer  talked about  the                                                               
traditional infrastructure  framework and that he  said he shaped                                                               
the open-access framework  in his earlier career that  is now the                                                               
standard of service in the  world today. "Congratulations on your                                                               
fatherhood there."  He asked if  Mr. Meyer is  prejudiced against                                                               
producer participation and pipeline ownership.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
12:06:31 PM                                                                                                                   
MR.  MEYER  said he  did  not  single-handily shape  [open-access                                                               
transportation regime], but America  Natural Resources was one of                                                               
the  major  companies   in  the  U.S.  helping   shape  it.  That                                                               
transition went on  for a number of years, and  the regime set up                                                               
by  FERC is  the model  today in  the world.  He said  he is  not                                                               
prejudiced  against producer-owned  [pipelines]. An  equity-based                                                               
model, when  all of  the participants  contribute their  share of                                                               
the project,  works very  well in  certain regimes.  It certainly                                                               
works well  for the  project participants  if the  project clears                                                               
the  market, as  it  gives them  more control,  but  he does  not                                                               
necessarily   support   it   for   a   major   gas   transmission                                                               
infrastructure in a state like  Alaska. If the pipeline is built,                                                               
it becomes the way to  open the North for additional exploration-                                                               
it's not  just a way to  monetize Prudhoe Bay and  Pt. Thomson. A                                                               
pipeline will significantly lower  the barrier to developed North                                                               
Slope reserves.  Today there are  very high barriers;  if someone                                                               
finds  gas, they  are somewhat  stuck, he  explained. Since  this                                                               
will  be  such  a  significant transportation  corridor  for  the                                                               
state, "I think the state will  be well-served to have … somewhat                                                               
of an open access regime," which  does not mean going all the way                                                               
to a  FERC Section  7, which is  full FERC  regulatory authority,                                                               
but it does mean providing  capacity for newcomers. "I don't have                                                               
a bias  against a producer-owned  or an equity-based  model," but                                                               
if costs  are high  and times are  tight, the  equity-based model                                                               
has  a higher  hurdle to  leap, because  the equity  participants                                                               
generally have  a higher cost  of capital than  an infrastructure                                                               
investor.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
12:09:42 PM                                                                                                                   
REPRESENTATIVE HAWKER  asked what  structure Mr. Meyers  is going                                                               
to move this project to and what is the authority for that.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
12:10:24 PM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR MICCICHE said he does  not want to sound confrontational,                                                               
but  he  asked who  he  was  working  for  when he  received  the                                                               
industry's "LNG Company of the Year" award.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER said that was on behalf of Cheniere.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MICCICHE said he does not  subscribe to the "build it now                                                               
or die"  mentality, and Mr.  Meyer was  cavalier in saying  it is                                                               
just  a paperwork  issue.  Alaskans cannot  afford  a mistake  of                                                               
holding  the bag  on  a  $45-60 billion  project,  and Mr.  Meyer                                                               
received  that award  for building  North  America's largest  LNG                                                               
receiving  terminal. He  asked how  many cargos  the Sabine  Pass                                                               
terminal received.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER said  cargos were very small, and  Cheniere secured two                                                               
long-term  customer commitments,  one with  Chevron and  one with                                                               
Total.  They were  20-year, corporate-guaranteed  commitments for                                                               
about  $125 million  per year  each, regardless  of whether  they                                                               
shipped   a  cargo,   he   told  the   committee.   That  is   an                                                               
infrastructure  project-financed  type  of investment  where  the                                                               
developer secured two long-term  customers. He explained that the                                                               
customers have  the right  to use the  terminal or  the pipeline,                                                               
but  they have  no obligation  to use  it. It  is almost  like an                                                               
option,  and the  company  was paid  regardless  of whether  they                                                               
shipped the cargo.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MICCICHE  said he thinks  that his  point is that  of the                                                               
$20 billion  in infrastructure, "we underestimated  the amount of                                                               
supply that  the U.S. would  produce immediately  upon completion                                                               
of  those  facilities."  It  sounds like  the  project  had  some                                                               
protections, he  said, with  a "take or  pay." Eventually,  if no                                                               
one  takes,  Senator  Micciche  said  he  would  not  call  it  a                                                               
successful  project.  It   sounds  to  him  like   Mr.  Meyer  is                                                               
celebrating a severe  underestimation of what the  needs would be                                                               
on  imports.  A  lot  of  people  do  that;  there  were  several                                                               
facilities built that  will never be used unless  they are turned                                                               
around  for liquefaction.  He said  he wants  to recognize  those                                                               
fundamental  mistakes in  the evaluation  of AKLNG  going forward                                                               
and not make them.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
12:14:38 PM                                                                                                                   
MR. MEYER said  he agrees. It is not build-or-die,  and it is not                                                               
build-it-and-they-will-come.  He  said  if  this  system  is  not                                                               
contracted for  its capacity,  it will  not be  built. "I  am not                                                               
suggesting this gets built at risk."                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SADDLER welcomed  Mr.  Meyer. He  asked what  his                                                               
charge is  from Governor  Walker, and why  Mr. Meyer  is shifting                                                               
the project structure.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
12:16:08 PM                                                                                                                   
MR. MEYER said  Governor Walker wants to get  this project moving                                                               
in  a  sound  manner,  without  an undue  burden  on  the  state.                                                               
Currently,  it is  slowing down-if  not  coming to  a crawl.  "Is                                                               
there an  opportunity to pick  up the pace,  and let's see  if we                                                               
can hit the next market window,"  which Mr. Meyer believes may be                                                               
the  mid-2020s. It  is  the  same project,  but  there  may be  a                                                               
different structure  that may lend  itself to  federal tax-exempt                                                               
financing, for  example, like infrastructure financing.  He wants                                                               
a change that all parties can agree  on. He stated that he is not                                                               
coming  with the  exact game  plan, but  some concepts.  "What we                                                               
know  is,  something  has  to  be a  little  different,"  and  he                                                               
believes  there  are  things  that will  make  the  project  more                                                               
attractive, and  there will collaboration with  the producers. He                                                               
has more detail in his presentation, he noted.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MACKINNON asked if Mr.  Meyer sees himself as working for                                                               
Governor Walker or the AGDC board.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER said the AGDC board.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  MACKINNON said  Mr.  Meyer's  AGDC employment  agreement                                                               
discusses  his  previous  ownership interests  and  [allows  for]                                                               
"reasonable activities associated with  the transfer or windup of                                                               
activities." Pursuant to the Alaska  Executive Branch Ethics Act,                                                               
outside  activities will  be subject  to review  and approval  to                                                               
ensure they  are not in  conflict with  the duties owed  to AGDC.                                                               
She  asked  about  his  ownership  interest  in  that  particular                                                               
project and how he sees that  transition, and it appears that Mr.                                                               
Meyer may be continuing to seek outside employment.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
12:20:49 PM                                                                                                                   
MR.  MEYER  noted  that  the   small-scale  LNG  project  had  an                                                               
arrangement  with Cheniere  to get  supply from  the Sabine  Pass                                                               
facility, and  the focus was  domestic, high  horsepower activity                                                               
in  the Gulf  Coast.  "We  also initiated  the  development of  a                                                               
receipt  terminal in  Panama," he  added. He  said his  agreement                                                               
with AGDC  is that he must  step out of that  entity within three                                                               
months. The  major part  of the activity  was with  Cheniere, and                                                               
his main support was from the  Chair of Cheniere, but the company                                                               
has undergone some  changes, "so we've decided to  back away from                                                               
that arrangement.  Cheniere was going to  put in a truck  rack at                                                               
Sabine; they had  filed for that, but they've  now withdrawn that                                                               
just  recently."  That relationship  is  ending  on its  own,  he                                                               
added.  Regarding  the  Panama facility,  "we're  in  discussions                                                               
right now with  somebody to take that." He said  that he does not                                                               
anticipate any  activity at Amasia  LNG America that he  would be                                                               
involved in.  There is no  contemplation for other  activity, but                                                               
his understanding  is that while he  is employed by AGDC  he will                                                               
not engage in  other activity. Subsequent to his  employ at AGDC,                                                               
he is restricted from engaging  in any large-scale LNG facilities                                                               
in Alaska, he  said, but there is an allowance  for a small-scale                                                               
facility, like what he worked on in 2011.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
12:23:13 PM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR MACKINNON asked what interests  he will maintain in other                                                               
companies  and she  said  that  on page  2,  the document  reads:                                                               
"subject to  the Alaska  executive branch  ethics Act,  the board                                                               
does not object  to the president serving on  civic or charitable                                                               
boards  or committees  or  managing  personal investments."  That                                                               
statement raised a  flag for her and she wants  to publicly raise                                                               
the question  of "how we're  resolving your interest."  She asked                                                               
if Mr.  Meyer will  become a  silent partner  or if  someone else                                                               
will control the LLC.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER  said that  clause  is  not  intended to  involve  LNG                                                               
activity-just  his personal  stock accounts,  not LNG  America or                                                               
its holding company. "We're in  discussions now with a partner to                                                               
take  the Panama  project,  and that  will be  it."  He does  not                                                               
intend  to engage  in activities  under  LNG America  in the  LNG                                                               
arena,  he stated.  His  understanding  is that  he  will not  be                                                               
engaging in LNG activities while at AGDC.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  MACKINNON asked  if there  is  a specific  way that  Mr.                                                               
Meyer is defining a small-scale project.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER surmised  that she  was referring  to the  non-compete                                                               
[clause]  for post-employment  after ADGC,  and he  believes that                                                               
small-scale is defined in there as less than 2 million tons.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
12:25:38 PM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR MACKINNON said she is  pressing the issue because on page                                                               
5  of  the  employment  contract, there  is  an  "inference  with                                                               
relationships," and, "I just hadn't  read one that said director,                                                               
copartner,  or  any  other individual  representative  capacity."                                                               
Referring  to AGDC's  master service  agreement contract,  16083,                                                               
between Mr. Meyer and AGDC, she  said she has read the amendments                                                               
and  reviewed the  dates of  the amendments.  It does  not appear                                                               
that Mr.  Meyer was  under contract  when she  met him  in March.                                                               
"You're  not new  to the  job,"  she said,  "you've been  working                                                               
since  April for  the AGDC  in some  capacity." She  asked if  he                                                               
attended  the [18th  International Conference  and Exhibition  on                                                               
Liquefied Natural Gas] in Perth on behalf of AGDC.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER said yes.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  MACKINNON asked  if there  is  a report  or briefing  of                                                               
benefits obtained.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  said he  did not  prepare a formal  report, but  he is                                                               
including some of what he learned in a strategic plan document.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MACKINNON  asked about  "MFA 16083  Amendment 1  for this                                                               
representation of AGDC at this  conferences in Australia. We were                                                               
looking at  information about the  Canadian project,  Pacific Rim                                                               
LNG  projects,   Gorgon,  [unclear],  and  other   Asian  Pacific                                                               
theater," she said.  She asked if those LNG  projects are similar                                                               
to what he described as the common ownership structure.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
12:29:46 PM                                                                                                                   
MR. MEYER said  that what is common to him  is an infrastructure-                                                               
type finance  project, and producers  would say that  the equity-                                                               
based model  is common; the  two sides  of the industry  are very                                                               
different, and they do things  very differently. He noted that he                                                               
is not  very familiar with  the Russian project. Gorgon,  the big                                                               
Australian project, was equity-based.  The Canadian project has a                                                               
mix of  infrastructure-based financing projects, and  he believes                                                               
there  are  also  projects  intended  to  be  equity-based  being                                                               
developed by "some of the majors."                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR GIESSEL said  Mr. Meyer visited her office  on March 30,                                                               
"and yet  as I look  at your  contracts, it actually  began March                                                               
15, and so that is a question I will ask the board members."                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COSTELLO said  the framework "for the  project that we're                                                               
talking about"  is set  out in  state law.  She asked  Mr. Meyers                                                               
what he  will do  if that vision  differs from  Governor Walker's                                                               
vision.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  answered that state  law would rule. No  question. One                                                               
of the first documents he looked  was SB 138. "I think what we're                                                               
doing is squarely  within 138." It sets the project  up, and ADGC                                                               
is  the  enabler  to  create  a  gas  treatment  plant,  upstream                                                               
pipelines,  and  an LNG  plant,  he  stated.  He  sees a  lot  of                                                               
latitude in  SB 138 for  finding the  best approach, and  AGDC is                                                               
exploring  ways  to  structure  the   project  to  make  it  more                                                               
competitive, focusing on reducing the  cost of supply in this new                                                               
market environment.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COSTELLO asked if it is  the right time to increase state                                                               
ownership, considering Alaska's budget challenges.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
12:33:01 PM                                                                                                                   
MR.  MEYER  stated  that  there  is not  a  strong  link  between                                                               
ownership  share  and  the  amount  of  funds  that  have  to  be                                                               
invested. On  an equity-base project,  that is the way  it works,                                                               
but for  an infrastructure-based project,  the state may  own 100                                                               
percent  of the  infrastructure, but  it may  only invest  a very                                                               
small  amount, because  the  majority of  funding  can come  from                                                               
large infrastructure  funds that accept  a lower rate  of return.                                                               
He stated  that if this  project is properly structured,  it will                                                               
be  very attractive.  He said  he has  told the  producer parties                                                               
they are certainly  welcome to be owners, and  this project would                                                               
love to have them, but he  believes that the project is not going                                                               
to  meet the  hurdle  returns-their  internal hurdle  returns-for                                                               
investment. However,  for an infrastructure fund,  like a pension                                                               
fund, these returns will be very  attractive. He said he wants to                                                               
clarify  that  suggestions of  increased  ownership  do not  mean                                                               
increased investment in the project by the state.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HAWKER  said he  appreciates the  discussion about                                                               
getting  out  of the  SB  138  box; however,  the  administration                                                               
engaged Lummus for an evaluation  of other state pipeline efforts                                                               
to date.  That report  was never  released and  he said  that Mr.                                                               
Meyer reviewed  it and  returned it to  Lummus for  revisions. He                                                               
asked him if he returned the report for revisions and why.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  said that the  report will  be finished this  week. He                                                               
reviewed it  and thought it  was somewhat light and  erroneous in                                                               
some of its statements. He  stated that the report indicated that                                                               
the project was  so tough, "only a major could  do it." He pushed                                                               
back  on that,  "and  you don't  have to  look  any further  than                                                               
Cheniere's Sabine Pass  project," which is a  bigger facility. He                                                               
said he  firmly believes  that the  project does  not have  to be                                                               
done by  a major,  and part  of his  passion probably  comes from                                                               
when  people said  that Cheniere  was too  small to  build a  big                                                               
terminal, "but we did it anyway."  He said he suggested to Lummus                                                               
that  it ought  to look  at an  alternative. It  is important  to                                                               
recognize that  none of the  sponsor parties  construct anything;                                                               
it  is done  by large  construction companies,  he explained.  He                                                               
said that when  he talks about the paperwork  being important, it                                                               
is  really  managing  these  large  contracts-like  a  large  EPC                                                               
[Engineering,  Procurement,   and  Construction]   contract.  The                                                               
contractor takes  a lot of  that risk, so  when it comes  time to                                                               
build  this  project, "we're  not  going  to  be out  there  with                                                               
trenches and trenching machines and  welders; we're going to hire                                                               
a very large  construction firm." He said his  pushback to Lummus                                                               
was not recognizing that other  companies can manage construction                                                               
contractors.  He added  that  he  does not  know  what the  final                                                               
report will say, and it might not be changed.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
12:38:44 PM                                                                                                                   
REPRESENTATIVE HAWKER  said some members  in this room  have been                                                               
in the legislature for 15 or  more years and have been engaged in                                                               
the details of  the state's efforts. He said that  Mr. Meyer told                                                               
him he  was intimately  familiar with "all  of our  efforts," but                                                               
then backed off of that  statement. Representative Hawker said he                                                               
is really  wondering if Mr.  Meyers is "counseling us  to realize                                                               
that all we  have done was truly mistaken," where  they have come                                                               
to understand  the importance  of the alignment  of parties  in a                                                               
complete value-chain project, "that  you're counseling that we've                                                               
really  done this  entirely wrong  from the  very beginning  and,                                                               
really,  it  is  nothing  more than  a  very  large  construction                                                               
project,   and  basically   the   markets  will   take  care   of                                                               
themselves."                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  disagreed. He  did not say  he is  intimately familiar                                                               
with every action that Alaska's taken  over the last 40 years. He                                                               
has  watched  this  project-everyone  in  the  gas  industry  has                                                               
watched  it. He  is  also not  saying that  the  current path  is                                                               
wrong. However, it should be  recognized that this project is not                                                               
going forward.  This is an attempt  to ask if the  project should                                                               
be  slowed  down or  if  something  should change.  The  producer                                                               
parties are  very willing  to work in  a collaborative  manner to                                                               
figure out how to get  costs down financially or tax structuring.                                                               
Right now the  project is in a  phase of asking what  can be done                                                               
differently. He is not suggesting, at  all, that the work done to                                                               
date was  wrong. The state has  to recognize that the  market has                                                               
changed, rather  significantly, so  there are two  choices: delay                                                               
or change.  He said he thinks  there is enough support  among the                                                               
parties to look  for something different. The path  the state has                                                               
taken was right at the time, but the market has changed.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
12:42:26 PM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR DUNLEAVY asked him to  explain how he concluded that this                                                               
project  is  not moving  forward.  He  referred to  the  previous                                                               
presenter who said the project is not even done with Pre-FEED.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER said his impression is  that this project is not moving                                                               
forward. He said  he recognizes that the decisions to  go to FEED                                                               
are  not yet  called for;  however, he  believes there  is enough                                                               
information to  recognize that the producers  have a disagreement                                                               
on the  pace of FEED. By  probing a little deeper,  one will find                                                               
that there  is not  alignment on  the parties  going to  FEED, he                                                               
said. The  timeline shown earlier  [by Steve Butt] has  a diamond                                                               
that indicates the decision to go  to FEED, and each party has to                                                               
consider whether  it is  ready. The probability  is that  it will                                                               
not proceed to FEED on the anticipated timeframe, he opined.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY  said the  law that governs  this process  is SB
138,  "so  will  you  be  coming back  to  this  legislature  for                                                               
revisions of 138?"                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER said  he does not see any necessary  revisions. He said                                                               
he sees  full collaboration, and  ideally, cooperation,  with the                                                               
producer  parties to  reduce the  cost  of supply,  which is  the                                                               
collective challenge. That is the mission ahead, he stated.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
12:45:28 PM                                                                                                                   
SENATOR DUNLEAVY suggested  that Mr. Meyer "really  dive into" SB
138, which  is the governing  law. He spoke about  confidence and                                                               
said, "There's  somebody new sitting  at your seat every  time we                                                               
have  a meeting."  He said  there is  a man,  and he  cannot even                                                               
pronounce his  name, but he said  Rigdon Boykin, and he  asked if                                                               
Mr. Boykin is still part of the [AGDC] office.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER answered no.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY said  there  are others  with  names he  cannot                                                               
pronounce that have come and gone.  He said his confidence in the                                                               
process is waning, and if SB  138 has to be modified, there needs                                                               
to  be a  discussion. If  Mr.  Meyer is  not  using SB  138 as  a                                                               
template, "I don't know what you're following."                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER responded  that  he has  read SB  138  many times;  he                                                               
didn't  write it,  but "all  of  our activities  are well  within                                                               
138." He added that he thinks  the project is getting back to its                                                               
original intent, which  was to figure out how to  get the project                                                               
done. He  said he wants  more transparency  for AGDC and  to lift                                                               
the coat  of secrecy a bit.  He said he spoke  with reporters and                                                               
was  quite  open  about  what   ADGC  is  doing,  but  there  are                                                               
confidentiality agreements  that restrict  a lot  of information,                                                               
but to the extent that he can be  open, he will be. He added that                                                               
any of his suggestions have been  squarely within SB 138, and any                                                               
deviation from it would come back to the legislature.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
12:50:46 PM                                                                                                                   
CO-CHAIR  GIESSEL  said Mr.  Meyer  is  experiencing evidence  of                                                               
highly informed  legislators who have  been working on  this type                                                               
of  a project  for  a  long time.  Confidence  and  trust are  in                                                               
question, she said.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  referred to his AGDC  objectives, listed on page  4 of                                                               
his presentation.  He said  he would  like to  operate more  as a                                                               
corporation rather than an agency.  Every decision is going to be                                                               
based  on  sound  business  principles,  which  will  make  those                                                               
decisions defensible and able to  stand up to challenges. He said                                                               
he wants more transparency with  the public, the legislature, and                                                               
the market.  This project needs  a cooperative  relationship with                                                               
producers, whether they  are partners or customers,  he said. Mr.                                                               
Meyer stated that he wants to  look at the project as a structure                                                               
for third-party  finance, meaning that  the risks of  the project                                                               
are borne by  others, and that will make it  attractive to third-                                                               
party finance.  He explained  that he  wants to  secure long-term                                                               
customer  commitments,  which  may   be  with  the  producers  as                                                               
shippers, or they  may be with an Asian utility,  for example, as                                                               
a  buyer. For  instance,  a  large utility  in  Japan could  hold                                                               
capacity in the  LNG plant, hold pipeline  capacity, and purchase                                                               
gas from  one of the producers-or  from the state or  a new party                                                               
in the state.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER said maintaining a  2023-2025 project in-service window                                                               
is  an objective  that is  important, and  the window  is largely                                                               
subject to perception. Currently,  the market is oversupplied and                                                               
the  next  demand pull  will  come  in  that window.  "Let's  get                                                               
prepared so  that we can  convey a  high degree of  confidence to                                                               
our potential new customers," he  stated. Another objective is to                                                               
expand in-state  gas availability-a mission  of SB 138  and AGDC,                                                               
which  can be  part  of this  project and  additional  to it,  he                                                               
suggested. He said he would  like to see Alaska re-established as                                                               
an LNG leader.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER  added that  AGDC  will  not  be responsible  for  the                                                               
RIK/RIV [royalty-in-kind/royalty-in-value]  election, which  is a                                                               
decision for DNR  and is outside of AGDC's purview.  He said AGDC                                                               
is  not  interested  in  assuming  any  Alaska  agency  statutory                                                               
responsibilities. He noted that state  funding and credit support                                                               
is the Department of Revenue's responsibility.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
12:55:31 PM                                                                                                                   
REPRESENTATIVE  TARR  noted  that   people  are  not  remembering                                                               
correctly  what was  in SB  138, as  opposed to  what came  after                                                               
through  various  documents and  agreements,  like  the Heads  of                                                               
Agreement and the  JVA. She understands that  SB 138 specifically                                                               
expands the power  of AGDC to determine ownership.  She asked how                                                               
other agreements would  be impacted, like the  JVA agreement that                                                               
expires in July 2017. "How  will those agreement be influenced by                                                               
potential  changes  in ownership  structure,  and  at what  point                                                               
would the legislature be made aware of those?"                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  answered that the  other agreements, the JVA  and MOU,                                                               
have  their own  lives and  sunsets. He  explained that  the main                                                               
function of  the JVA  was the  Pre-FEED deliverables,  which have                                                               
been done,  and the agreement is  coming to a close.  The parties                                                               
are now  confronted with what to  do next, and the  agreements do                                                               
not  define  the next  step.  They  do  not define  a  governance                                                               
structure for  the FERC  application, which needs  to be  kept on                                                               
track.  "New  agreements are  needed  regardless  of what  we  do                                                               
here,"  he said.  He  stated that  he  is hoping  to  come to  an                                                               
agreement  with the  producer parties  this year  to discuss  the                                                               
next phase.  To the  extent there is  an agreement  that precedes                                                               
the sunset  date in  those other agreements,  he assumes  that it                                                               
must come before  the legislature. In the spirit  of openness, he                                                               
wants members  involved. A lot  of communication will  take place                                                               
in  the  development  and  certainly  the  finalization  of  that                                                               
agreement, he explained.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  TARR  said  that  is   where  they  want  to  pay                                                               
particular  attention  to understand  any  shift  in the  current                                                               
structure. She  said she was not  sure where things stood  on the                                                               
confidentiality issues. Legislators  were not previously involved                                                               
in the development  of the JVA that  is governing decision-making                                                               
now,  and so  they  would  likely not  be  in  the upcoming  one;                                                               
however, as  funding is  related, the  legislature would  have to                                                               
pass a budget for  it. "Has that been an issue  that's come up so                                                               
far in your  tenure as to … how legislators  might be involved in                                                               
seeing that progress?"                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER said  confidentiality is  a big  issue. The  agreement                                                               
that he has signed  is one of the most restrictive  of any he has                                                               
seen. Believe it or not, he  may have even breached the agreement                                                               
by  stating  that there  is  an  agreement,  he said.  There  are                                                               
reasons for confidentiality,  but it needs to  be recognized that                                                               
the  inability  to discuss  these  big  arrangements more  openly                                                               
leaves a big knowledge gap, he  said, and that gap is filled with                                                               
the worst possible imagined outcome scenarios.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:01:53 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  MEYER said  the new  agreement is  being discussed  with the                                                               
producers  in the  same sort  of privacy;  however, a  party that                                                               
brings something to  this group can deem it  not confidential. He                                                               
maintains that  the framework, at  least, of this  concept should                                                               
be put  out there so the  legislature can see it.  "Once we start                                                               
to incorporate  producer comments into  that, it falls  back into                                                               
this cloak of confidentiality," he  stated. The window of time is                                                               
now for  talking about this  framework more openly. To  be clear,                                                               
he said,  it is a concept;  it is not a  hard-and-fast, agreed to                                                               
plan.  He  said it  would  be  a  benefit  to talk  more  openly,                                                               
particularly with the legislators.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
1:03:06 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR STOLTZE noted  that Mr. Meyer said he  is not responsible                                                               
for  state funding  or  credit  support. He  asked  if  he has  a                                                               
consultant or advisory  role, because he seems  to have distanced                                                               
himself  by emphasizing  that he  is not  responsible [for  state                                                               
funding or  credit support]. He  asked if  it will be  handled in                                                               
the governor's office.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER said  he added that bullet [in his  list of objectives]                                                               
to recognize  that the Department  of Revenue is  responsible for                                                               
state funding, because  AGDC does not have the  authority to bind                                                               
the state.  However, AGDC can  arrange third-party  finance, like                                                               
pension funds, but  if the state has to contribute  funds or make                                                               
some kind of  commitment, DOR will be responsible. He  said it is                                                               
similar to the  royalty decisions, and SB 138 does  not give AGDC                                                               
that authority, and  he clarified that AGDC will not  try to take                                                               
that authority.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  STOLTZE  referred  to   Mr.  Meyer's  salary  and  said,                                                               
"Sometimes I wonder, gosh, how much  a minute is it costing me to                                                               
ask  these questions."  He asked  if  [DOR Commissioner  Randall]                                                               
Hoffbeck,  [DOR investment  manager,  Deven]  Mitchell, and  [DOA                                                               
Director Ken] Alper  are making "these" decisions.  He said there                                                               
is a  group of  expert Alaskans,  and some  not from  Alaska, and                                                               
then  he asked,  "Do you  have no  role in  saying what's  a good                                                               
financing  package, …  and it's  going  to be  to the  governor's                                                               
office   and    his   commissioners   to   make    comments   and                                                               
recommendations on finance?" He said he is somewhat puzzled.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  answered that AGDC  very much has  a role; and  he was                                                               
referring  to  the  authority for  decision-making.  The  project                                                               
needs to  be structured  so that  it works  for everybody  in the                                                               
state. "To me, we need to  structure this project so that when it                                                               
comes time to make a decision  on whether we invest in one aspect                                                               
or another … or  whether we have to do some  kind of agreement on                                                               
credit  support  or  taxing  decision,  yes,  our  role  is  very                                                               
instrumental." He  said AGDC will  be lining out  the agreements,                                                               
identifying  the risks,  and identifying  third parties  that can                                                               
help  explain that  risk.  He explained  that  the Department  of                                                               
Revenue  will  have   its  own  set  of   models,  advisers,  and                                                               
consultants to  assess that  risk and will  not just  take AGDC's                                                               
word for  it. The corporation  will be instrumental in  trying to                                                               
get the state's role quantified,  clarified, and calculated, but,                                                               
again, he said, AGDC has no authority to bind the state.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:07:19 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR STOLTZE said  there is a statute  and a quasi-independent                                                               
body to provide more objective  information. A carpenter starting                                                               
a  quarter-inch off  will have  a crooked  roof and  an unlivable                                                               
house, he said. "If you're  off by percentage points or pennies-"                                                               
He then stated that he and  others have gone to seminars on mega-                                                               
projects, and  he would  have hoped  that there  would be  a more                                                               
assertive role for Mr. Meyer  being the voice of business reason.                                                               
He said that perhaps Mr. Meyer  is a "political guy" and yielding                                                               
to the  political side  of the  process. He  said he  has "pretty                                                               
good" confidence in  members of the board, and  he hoped "they've                                                               
hired  a guy  who's  going be  a  very objective,  independent-at                                                               
least for Alaska-and  not take orders from the body  politic on a                                                               
mega-project."  He  said  that Mr.  Meyer  has  acknowledged  the                                                               
perils of small factors destroying  the viability [of a project].                                                               
He  explained that  he has  "already adjusted  [his] expectations                                                               
from your  backing off  from how involved  you've been  in Alaska                                                               
projects now, and I  hope I don't have to back off  on how much I                                                               
suspect you, through your leadership  on this professional staff,                                                               
is  going to  look out  for Alaska's  interest and  not political                                                               
interests. I'm going to keep absorbing it."                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER asked if he could comment.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR GIESSEL  said briefly  because she  has others  lined up                                                               
with questions.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER said he was told  that AGDC does not have the authority                                                               
to  take  DOR's responsibility.  "We  do  not have  authority  on                                                               
upstream  issues; that's  DNR,"  and the  Department  of Law  has                                                               
certain legal  authority, he clarified.  He added that  AGDC will                                                               
be  very  instrumental  in  getting   the  state  to  the  proper                                                               
decisions.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:09:49 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE NAGEAK  said that whenever  natural gas or  LNG is                                                               
talked about, "everything that comes  out of everybody's mouth in                                                               
this building  and other  buildings is that  it's along  the road                                                               
system" or  places with  easy availability.  But the  places "in-                                                               
between and outside are just  an afterthought," he added, because                                                               
the cost of  doing business on the road system  is much less than                                                               
in  rural Alaska.  He noted  that he  is from  rural Alaska,  and                                                               
things are  easier for him  because it is  where the oil  and gas                                                               
come from, "and  we make a living operating our  villages and our                                                               
government  as such."  Every time  [the legislature]  talks about                                                               
projects that are going to be  available for Alaska, it is to the                                                               
areas  that are  along the  road system,  he reiterated,  because                                                               
getting all the  goods to rural Alaska is  cost prohibitive. Gas,                                                               
fuel,  food, and  other  things  cost a  lot  more. "Now  they're                                                               
talking about LNG and to the  market, and 'to the market' usually                                                               
means Outside," he added. He  stated that there is new technology                                                               
allowing  the delivery  of LNG  in  huge tanks  along rivers  and                                                               
coasts. When  the state  had a  lot of  money, things  were built                                                               
without the thought of the  costs of maintaining them. "They made                                                               
huge Taj  Mahal-types of  structures in villages,  and you  see a                                                               
lot of  people who, in  the villages,  who can't operate  some of                                                               
these  things,  and  they  send in  people  from  the  population                                                               
centers in Alaska,"  he said. Those benefits do not  really go to                                                               
people  in rural  Alaska,  he explained,  so  when talking  about                                                               
projects  such  as  this,  there   needs  to  be  discussions  on                                                               
delivering the same  thing to rural Alaska and  reducing the cost                                                               
of  doing business  there.  Otherwise, people  will  move to  the                                                               
population centers, causing school  closures and other things. If                                                               
the desire is  to keep people in rural Alaska,  "we need to start                                                               
investing and thinking  about those people when  we start talking                                                               
about these projects."                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER responded  that one of the responsibilities  of AGDC is                                                               
to provide  gas to  the state.  He said  he spent  a lot  of time                                                               
looking  at  moving  LNG  by tank-by  tank  truck.  Many  vendors                                                               
manufacture  ISO-tanks,  which  have  the same  dimensions  as  a                                                               
shipping container and are a great  way to move LNG down the road                                                               
or  by railroad.  He  noted  that many  countries  allow LNG  ISO                                                               
containers to  be used on railroad,  but the U.S. does  not allow                                                               
that  "just  yet."  He  views  that  as  a  way  to  serve  rural                                                               
communities. The best example is China.  In China, it is called a                                                               
rubber pipeline, and that means  moving gas by road (rubber being                                                               
the   wheels).  "That's   the  way   they   gasify  their   local                                                               
communities. He  said LNG is  a very safe hydrocarbon;  it's just                                                               
methane. "You  can put a tank  there; you warm it  up to vaporize                                                               
it, and  then you've  got gas  for the  community" and  for power                                                               
generation.  He said  it is  a good  way to  displace oil.  It is                                                               
cleaner,  and other  countries are  using it  that way.  It is  a                                                               
little early to look at that aspect  of it if it has to be linked                                                               
to the larger project, he stated.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
1:17:41 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE  CHENAULT said  he  has almost  forgotten what  he                                                               
wanted to  ask, because at this  rate "we'll be here  Sunday." He                                                               
said Mr. Meyer is surrounded by  good people at AGDC, but he does                                                               
not  want to  say whether  they are  on the  right track  or not.                                                               
Representative Tarr was  speaking about the ability  to work with                                                               
the legislature, which was on a  funding issue. He said he thinks                                                               
there is a piece of legislation  on the governor's desk, which is                                                               
SB 125,  which also dealt  with legislators sitting on  the board                                                               
of  AGDC  as  non-voting  members.  He  asked  what  Mr.  Meyer's                                                               
position is on that.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  answered that  he believes  that is  an issue  for the                                                               
board; however, having  legislators on the board  really will not                                                               
change his behavior one way or  the other. He repeated his pledge                                                               
to see much more communication with the legislature.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SADDLER said  the  administration  has given  the                                                               
legislature  somewhat  vague  intimations  of  what  might  be  a                                                               
potential  policy,  and then  it  is  later characterized  as  an                                                               
expression of intent. He stated that  he has heard Mr. Meyer say,                                                               
"If we  transition to  a state-led  project" and  about exploring                                                               
alternative   concepts  that   could   include  increased   state                                                               
ownership. He asked if AGDC or  Mr. Meyer already made a decision                                                               
on a  new structure, "or  is it still up  to [a] decision  in the                                                               
future, with as much kindness as I can muster."                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  said AGDC has  not made a  decision yet, but  "what we                                                               
have  is  a  concept."  This  concept has  been  floated  by  the                                                               
producers and is described in  his presentation ahead. It will be                                                               
a collaborative  process, and  there is a  framework set  out, he                                                               
stated. He has  told the producer parties that he  wants it to be                                                               
a joint document  that everybody can be happy with.  That is what                                                               
he wants,  he added, but that  does not mean it  can be achieved.                                                               
He is hopeful  that everyone will be happy with  it, and there is                                                               
nothing that tells him otherwise, but  the concept is at an early                                                               
stage, he added.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SADDLER  said  the governor  firmly  denied  that                                                               
there is any  intention to use the Alaska permanent  fund to help                                                               
finance the LNG projects. He asked Mr. Meyer for that assurance.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  said that is not  AGDC's authority at all.  There have                                                               
been no discussions about involving  the permanent fund, in fact,                                                               
he  has heard  that the  governor advises  against it.  "There is                                                               
nothing in my planning that has even hinted at that," he added.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:22:42 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE HAWKER applauded  greater legislative involvement.                                                               
He asked him  to provide any documents and  communications he has                                                               
provided to the producers describing these new concepts.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  said there  will be a  document, and  his presentation                                                               
will provide the broad framework.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HAWKER  said, "These documents with  the producers                                                               
are confidential,  and you're going  back and saying you  do want                                                               
to maintain a veil of confidentiality on them?"                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  said the  documents that AGDC  can provide,  that AGDC                                                               
has forwarded as  a concept, can be provided. "I  want to reserve                                                               
a little  bit, because our team  at AGDC doesn't want  to be held                                                               
to a specific  clause of a concept, and if  we don't achieve that                                                               
we're going  to look like we  lost something." He stated  that he                                                               
wants to provide  enough information of what they  are going for,                                                               
but  he does  not necessarily  want to  provide the  blow-by-blow                                                               
negotiating  documents.  He  reiterated that  once  the  producer                                                               
comments are incorporated, they become confidential.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HAWKER said he is  a little confused. "Is there or                                                               
is there not a written proposal to the companies?"                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER said  there is  a concept  document, and  he has  that                                                               
framework on the slides of his presentation.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
1:26:09 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE HAWKER  said frameworks are frameworks.  It sounds                                                               
like the concept  is more into specific negotiations  and he said                                                               
the  legislature would  benefit  by being  involved.  He said  he                                                               
wants the specific proposal that has been made to the producers.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER said  he has heard that request and  will take it under                                                               
advisement. His  intent is to  make enough information  public to                                                               
get the full flavor of that  framework, but he wants to reserve a                                                               
little  maneuvering room  internally, but  nothing that  would be                                                               
material from legislative review.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  GIESSEL said  she  appreciates Representative  Hawker's                                                               
question, because  committee members  have received  a copy  of a                                                               
letter that she  provided to the producer partners  and ADGC with                                                               
three questions.  The second question  was to AGDC asking  if the                                                               
board  was pursuing  a different  configuration for  the project.                                                               
The  answer  was not  provided  in  writing,  so she  is  looking                                                               
forward  to  Mr.  Meyer's  presentation if  it  will  answer  her                                                               
questions.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:27:24 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. MEYER said slide 5 is a  map of world activity, and Alaska is                                                               
not  on the  map. He  noted that  when he  entered the  industry,                                                               
Alaska LNG  was something  to be revered;  Kenai had  the largest                                                               
plant  in the  world  and Alaska  had 100  percent  of the  Asian                                                               
market. It  strikes him  as a  little sad  that Alaska  no longer                                                               
makes the government LNG map.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
1:28:56 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  MEYER said  the next  page  talks about  the project.  Steve                                                               
[Butt]  already  did a  great  job  on  that. He  emphasized  the                                                               
statement: "Alaska's  LNG project lowers  the barrier to  open up                                                               
the north for new exploration  and production." Once the pipeline                                                               
is built, it  becomes the highway for natural gas,  so he expects                                                               
more activity once  that is in place. He turned  to page 7, which                                                               
shows the  long history of  the LNG  project. It has  the typical                                                               
paradigm of  demand heats up,  project ramps up,  demand captured                                                               
by others, and project ramps down.  He said that this project has                                                               
been in a  cycle for 40-plus years, and he  suggests changing the                                                               
paradigm to  prepare in  the downturn to  capture the  upturn. He                                                               
said  to recognize  that LNG  is  a cyclical  industry, and  just                                                               
because things  are down  now, does not  mean Alaska  should slow                                                               
down  on preparing  for the  upturn. "The  upturn is  coming, but                                                               
we've got  to be there  with enough  confidence so that  when the                                                               
buyers  decide to  buy,  they  look at  us."  He  pointed to  the                                                               
historical  price chart  and its  fluctuations. He  said CMS  was                                                               
prepared in  the downturn back in  the late 1990s and  became the                                                               
largest LNG  importer in the  country. During early  2003, prices                                                               
were down, but Cheniere was preparing  for the imports, and a lot                                                               
of people  did not think  imports would  be needed, but  when the                                                               
demand  came back,  Cheniere was  there to  contract, he  stated.                                                               
During the  2009 downturn, that was  the time to prepare  for the                                                               
2010 demand pull.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER turned  to slide 9 and said Australia  is a case study.                                                               
He said  Alaska is like Australia,  stable and with a  history of                                                               
resource  exports, including  LNG, and  a small  domestic demand.                                                               
During the  2009 downturn Australia positioned  its resources for                                                               
global  competition, and  when the  demand cycle  came back,  the                                                               
country captured  a significant  share. Next year  Australia will                                                               
be the number one LNG producer in the world, he said.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY  asked if  Australia's model  is similar  to the                                                               
model in SB 138.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER answered that Australia has  a mixed model and a number                                                               
of different  projects. The  western projects  are more  like the                                                               
equity-based model  and eastern Australia has  more equity-funded                                                               
models.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  DUNLEAVY  asked  what percentage  of  the  projects  the                                                               
sovereign owns.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:33:24 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. MEYER  said he does not  know if the sovereign  owns anything                                                               
in those projects  and he does not know the  exact royalty share.                                                               
"I don't know that the  sovereign, on these future projects, took                                                               
a  role," he  said, but  on  the initial  project, the  sovereign                                                               
built the  pipeline that let  the gas be produced.  The Northwest                                                               
Shelf project  was the most  complicated project in its  time; it                                                               
was  a very  large off-shore  LNG  project, and  it had  Japanese                                                               
buyers  as  interested  parties,  but  there  was  concern  about                                                               
whether the gas would actually  be developed and produced, so the                                                               
government  stepped  in  and  built  the  "Dampier  to  Bundbury"                                                               
pipeline,  which gave  the  buyer confidence  that  gas would  be                                                               
produced. The LNG plant was then built, he said.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR DUNLEAVY asked if there is  any model in the world, other                                                               
than  places  that  have nationalized  the  industry,  where  the                                                               
producers do  not want  to produce but  the sovereign  does, like                                                               
what Alaska is looking at.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  answered that in  most places the sovereign  wants the                                                               
producers  to produce.  The level  of encouragement  or pain  may                                                               
vary.  Often a  producer will  lose its  license if  it does  not                                                               
produce, so  there is often a  significant cost of not  doing so.                                                               
In much of the developing world,  he said, the sovereign does not                                                               
have the funds to participate,  so they use royalties rather than                                                               
investments. Places  like Qatar-and Exxon can  speak to this-have                                                               
more sovereign  participation. He said  it is somewhat of  a mix.                                                               
In Norway, the  state-sponsored entity is a  significant party in                                                               
the development  of Norway's  LNG resources,  but Mr.  Meyer does                                                               
not know the exact financial structure.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
1:36:32 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. MEYER referred  to slide 10, LNG Market Changes.  He said the                                                               
LNG industry experienced its largest  demand pull in its history,                                                               
and it was  met with the largest supply response  in its history,                                                               
so the world liquefaction capacity  doubled in the past 10 years.                                                               
That has  created a soft,  oversupplied market, he said.  Some of                                                               
the  Asian  contracts have  an  oil  price  link and  have  lower                                                               
prices, but  the new market  is because of the  oversupply. High-                                                               
teen  LNG prices  have dropped  to single  digits. It  is a  bear                                                               
market, he explained. Just like  Alaskans are not afraid of bears                                                               
but  only show  a little  caution, the  "don't run  from a  bear"                                                               
saying  applies here.  Now is  not the  time to  run from  it, he                                                               
said.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER said  that  page  11, LNG  Market  Changes, shows  LNG                                                               
supply, demand,  and future forecasts. Forecasting  is difficult,                                                               
but there  is a  general feeling that  equilibrium will  occur in                                                               
the early 2020s, and there will  be a growing demand gap of about                                                               
40 to 100  million tons in the mid-2020s, but  there are over 800                                                               
million tons of projects that  want to capture that demand. There                                                               
are opportunities coming, but we  should recognize that there are                                                               
eight  times as  many projects  that  want to  capture that  same                                                               
demand. Alaska  has to get out  there and fight for  that market,                                                               
he  said. He  explained  that the  buyers  are sophisticated  and                                                               
recognize  there is  a  surplus, so  they  want more  destination                                                               
flexibility and different reopeners, and  that can make a project                                                               
more  difficult to  finance and  to make  a go-forward  decision.                                                               
Another  change   is  multiple  projects  competing   for  scarce                                                               
internal capital,  so Alaska's project  not only competes  in the                                                               
world,  but it  will  compete  with the  internal  queues of  the                                                               
producer  and  joint  venture  participants.   He  said  page  12                                                               
focusses on  Asia-Pacific demands,  and he  noted that  Alaska is                                                               
not  competing in  Europe. The  chart  shows that  there will  be                                                               
demand from  growth and demand  due to expiring  contracts, which                                                               
are within  Alaska's purview  to go after.  He noted  that Alaska                                                               
has an advantage with proximity to  the Pacific market, and we do                                                               
not have to go through a third nation to get there.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
1:41:35 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  MEYER  said  page 13  lists  Alaska's  strengths,  including                                                               
massive  proven gas  resources,  enormous undeveloped  potential,                                                               
stable   government,    installed   oil   and    gas   production                                                               
infrastructure,  and   four  decades  of  safe,   dependable  LNG                                                               
exports.  He  stressed that  the  value  of Alaska's  history  in                                                               
providing  very reliable  LNG deliveries  cannot be  understated-                                                               
most  buyers  will  be  utilities   where  reliability  is  often                                                               
superior  to  price. He  said  Alaska  has broad  local  support,                                                               
market  proximity, no  technical barriers,  low technology  risk,                                                               
and low  domestic demand.  A domestic need  will not  likely take                                                               
over the export demand, he added.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
1:43:17 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. MEYER  said there has  been excellent technical  progress. He                                                               
noted that he has worked on  FERC projects for his entire career,                                                               
and he attests to the exemplary  work done by the technical team,                                                               
as shown  on page 14.  He said  the commercial progress  is slow;                                                               
low oil prices and a soft  LNG market create challenges. He said,                                                               
"We're seeking  alternative means  to reduce  the cost  of supply                                                               
and  to conduct  FEED activities;  there is  no consensus  around                                                               
starting FEED mid-2017 as we sit here today," he stated.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  said that AGDC  sees two options.  One is to  take the                                                               
lead and find ways to reduce  the cost of delivered supply, which                                                               
can involve the  following: 1) An increase in  state ownership to                                                               
enable  a  lower  tax  cost  structure.  2)  Opening  up  project                                                               
participation   to  a   broader  market,   which  could   include                                                               
infrastructure funds or  "that type of thing."  3) Create project                                                               
momentum  in the  market to  facilitate offtake  contracts-Alaska                                                               
wants customers, he  said, good Asian utilities  in Japan, Korea,                                                               
China, and  Vietnam. It is important  for the buyer market  to be                                                               
interested  in this  project, so  when that  100 million  tons of                                                               
demand meets  up with the  800 tons  of supply, buyers  should be                                                               
looking at  Alaska LNG and saying  "that's the one we  want." The                                                               
second  option  is  to  delay  FEED  and  potentially  delay  the                                                               
project. In  summary, he  explained, AGDC needs  to figure  out a                                                               
new way or delay the FEED, "and  in my mind" that would delay the                                                               
project even though a FEED  delay decision does not automatically                                                               
delay the project, but he sees a strong link between the two.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
1:45:35 PM                                                                                                                    
CO-CHAIR  GIESSEL asked  if our  other three  partners see  these                                                               
options as well.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  said he  did not  know if they  were looking  at other                                                               
options, but they have discussed these two options with AGDC.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR GIESSEL  asked what  the state has  done to  fulfill its                                                               
responsibilities  for Pre-FEED.  Last  year, "we  actually had  a                                                               
timeline"  and  a  list  of   deliverables  that  the  state  was                                                               
responsible for,  including property  tax determinations  and RIK                                                               
[royalty-in-kind]  decisions. She  asked if  the  state would  be                                                               
paid  the value  of the  gas that  was its  royalty share,  or if                                                               
Alaska  would  take those  molecules  as  molecules of  gas.  She                                                               
inquired as to what the state has delivered during Pre-FEED.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
1:47:00 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  MEYER said  that  his  understanding is  that  there were  a                                                               
number  of  agreements  contemplated  that were  not  done.  When                                                               
agreements are not done, there  is typically blame on both sides.                                                               
They  dragged on  for quite  a while,  and he  believes that  the                                                               
agreements  mainly dealt  with  upstream issues,  but  he is  not                                                               
sure. Some  of those  have to  get done,  he explained,  but [the                                                               
parties] should  first figure out  if this  is a project  that is                                                               
competitive  in  the global  arena  and  that  it works  for  the                                                               
producer parties. He  said there should be an  agreement in place                                                               
to say  "here is how we  are going to conduct  this project, here                                                               
is how it's going to be  governed, here's how we're going to move                                                               
it forward." He  continued to say that he has  told the producers                                                               
that "if we get happy with  this agreement," and all it needs are                                                               
these several other agreements that  have to get done, "I'm going                                                               
to  be there  right with  them advocating  … that  we need  these                                                               
agreements done." Right now, he said,  he wants to put [the other                                                               
agreements] at  the end. Part of  the problem is that  those were                                                               
put  at  the  start,  and  a  lot of  time  was  spent  on  those                                                               
agreements-maybe under  a presumption that the  project was going                                                               
to move on these stage gates very  fluidly. But the state is at a                                                               
point  where it  has to  pause and  figure out  how to  make this                                                               
project  work first,  and save  the upstream  agreements-some are                                                               
out of  AGDC's purview-until the  end, "and then, by  golly, I'll                                                               
be arguing  right with them  that we need  the state to  do these                                                               
things."                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR GIESSEL  said she  really appreciates the  fact that  he is                                                               
new.  The two  [agreements]  she was  referring  to are  actually                                                               
fiscal  certainty terms,  and Mr.  Meyer has  mentioned the  word                                                               
"certainty,"  and companies  like  to have  certainty with  their                                                               
partners.  She asked  why companies  should think  a reconfigured                                                               
project won't also be changed  downstream. "We have an agreement.                                                               
We have  a plan in  place, and aren't  we reneging on  what we've                                                               
already crafted in  Senate Bill 138," where Alaska  said it would                                                               
produce some  kind of RIK  decision, which gives  [the producers]                                                               
fiscal  certainty and  a property  tax-type  decision? These  are                                                               
just  two factors,  she stated.  She  asked why  they should  see                                                               
Alaska as trustworthy and stable.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  answered that trust  has to be  earned, and it  can be                                                               
lost,  but  "trust" has  not  entered  the discussions  with  the                                                               
producer  parties relative  to the  state,  but fiscal  certainty                                                               
has. He  said he is not  sure what fiscal certainty  is, exactly,                                                               
to the  producers, and  whether it  means tax  certainty forever,                                                               
but  he is  looking  at  what other  regimes  have offered,  like                                                               
Texas, Australia, and Papua New  Guinea. "I think that having the                                                               
state  surrender   its  ability   to  change   taxes  …   is  not                                                               
constitutionally allowed,  so certain  things that  the producers                                                               
may  want may  not be  achievable," he  explained. [That  kind of                                                               
certainty] would  take a vote of  the people. "What I  do know is                                                               
if  we put  those things  first, we're  never going  to focus  on                                                               
getting  this project  to  the  point where  it  competes in  the                                                               
world,"  he  stated. He  hopes  to  get  clarity on  the  project                                                               
structure and cost,  and clarity on what the  state ownership may                                                               
do,  because having  the  state own  this  entity-even though  it                                                               
doesn't  invest  all  of  it-may   lend  itself  to  federal  tax                                                               
advantages. Right  now, he said, we  need to figure out  what the                                                               
project will cost, and he  said that information is necessary for                                                               
DNR  to  make  its  RIK  and  RIV  decisions.  There  are  large,                                                               
sensitive  issues, but  they should  be saved  until the  end. If                                                               
those issues are  all it takes to get this  project to happen, "I                                                               
will  be  advocating right  alongside  [the  producers]." But  he                                                               
wants to get  to a point where AGDC and  the producers all commit                                                               
to do  "these things" and  then he will  be arguing in  line with                                                               
the producers.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:54:31 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR MACKINNON asked  him how he can sell  gas without knowing                                                               
the cost  of supply. "How  will we  secure a contract-we  have 18                                                               
trillion, 33 trillion  cubic feet of natural gas  stranded on the                                                               
North Slope;  how do you sell  that in the market  when you don't                                                               
know the supply  costs?" It sounds like  the infrastructure costs                                                               
are coming to light, she added.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  said to look at  the things we know.  The market price                                                               
can be determined  very quickly by looking at  what the utilities                                                               
in China, Japan, and Korea are  willing to pay. The LNG market is                                                               
becoming  relatively liquid  and  transparent, and  the U.S.  LNG                                                               
contracts are basically  public, he said. So it is  easy to get a                                                               
very good  handle on the market  price, he said. So  he suggested                                                               
taking  the market  price and  the lowest  cost possible  for the                                                               
infrastructure in order  to determine the net back  price. If the                                                               
net back  price is X and  if X is  not high enough for  the state                                                               
and  the producers,  then  there will  be no  project.  It is  as                                                               
simple as that. However, if the  cost of supply can be low enough                                                               
and the market  price is not great today, but  it may improve and                                                               
it is  good enough to do  this project, "I believe  that once you                                                               
put  this project  into service,  the benefits  to the  state are                                                               
going  to be  significant and  they're  going to  go beyond  this                                                               
single  project,  because  you're  going  to  have  that  further                                                               
development." He added that we  do not have influence over market                                                               
price,  and  the  infrastructure  cost can  be  lowered  in  both                                                               
capital costs and financing costs.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
1:56:56 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR MACKINNON said, "We've had  several symposiums on natural                                                               
gas  worldwide, and  those markets  do not  align …  each one  of                                                               
those  regions  set  their  own price  and  negotiate  their  own                                                               
contracts in  very distinctive  ways." She said  she is  having a                                                               
hard time  thinking anyone will buy  gas if they do  not know the                                                               
cost of the supply. It doesn't  go backwards; there needs to be a                                                               
firm transportation  agreement to get financing,  and that cannot                                                               
be attained until the cost is  known, she explained. She said she                                                               
has  a problem  on how  one  goes to  the market  to secure  firm                                                               
transportation commitments when the upstream cost is unknown.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  replied that part  of the  challenge is to  figure out                                                               
the capital  and financing costs.  When there is a  cost estimate                                                               
it starts to get factored  into the buyers' decision process. For                                                               
instance, Alaska decides  that the cost of supply to  Kenai is X,                                                               
based on the estimated costs of  the LNG plant, pipeline, and gas                                                               
treatment plant,  and there will  be a little  variability, which                                                               
will  be gone  by  the time  construction begins-the  variability                                                               
will be pushed to construction  contractors and others. "And then                                                               
we're  going to  have to  commit as  a system"  to the  price, he                                                               
stated. The  purchaser will not  accept a price range  of between                                                               
$5 and $15  today, so they will need more  price specificity that                                                               
they take  the risk.  Prices fluctuate,  he noted,  and different                                                               
parts of  the world have  bought at different price  regimes, but                                                               
those are  starting to blend  together-the U.S. shale  supply has                                                               
been a  game changer, he  told the committee. Before  U.S. shale,                                                               
most of the  LNG supply into Asia was sold  on an oil-link basis,                                                               
so it had  variability on oil price, and with  the U.S. projects,                                                               
it is  more of a tolling  arrangement so that the  projects under                                                               
construction today,  the customer pays  a certain amount  for the                                                               
toll, LNG  facility, and  liquefaction. They buy  gas on  a Henry                                                               
Hub basis, so  the buyers take some Henry Hub  market price risk,                                                               
but they know  that the cost of the liquefaction  is certain. Mr.                                                               
Meyer said Alaska has a little bit  of an advantage in that a lot                                                               
of the cost is infrastructure cost,  "so we can actually take out                                                               
a lot  of the variability  in the mind of  the buyer by  saying a                                                               
big chunk  of your pricing  is going be  infrastructure cost-that                                                               
contract that we do  with the buyer is going to  have to fit with                                                               
the lenders and the equity investors  to make sure that it covers                                                               
the cost of the project."                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:01:46 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR MACKINNON said that does  not make economic sense to her,                                                               
so  she will  move on.  She  asked him  how a  resource owner  is                                                               
aligned with a transporter.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  said the alignment  is in the relationship,  and there                                                               
is always  a bit  of tension,  but he looks  at a  resource owner                                                               
from  a pipeline  or LNG  facility  perspective; "I  look at  the                                                               
resource owner  as a customer."  So to reframe the  question: How                                                               
does  the pipeline  company  get aligned  with  its shippers  and                                                               
customers? There is always a give  and take and a bit of tension;                                                               
the pipeline company would like to  have high rates and the state                                                               
would  like to  have low  rates, he  said, and  somewhere in  the                                                               
middle  there is  a  happy ground.  On  this particular  project,                                                               
because we are  starting with a high-cost  framework, we're going                                                               
to have  to beat  the project  down to a  relatively low  rate of                                                               
return.  The pipeline  will want  a higher  price, but  it cannot                                                               
justify  a higher  price, he  explained. The  state will  have to                                                               
decide that it wants this project  done and decide the netback to                                                               
the royalty  owner and  the resource  owner or  [it will  have to                                                               
decide to not do the project].                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER, in  clarifying an  earlier remark,  said that  Alaska                                                               
will need  to know the pricing  before it gets any  customers. It                                                               
is time  to gauge customers.  Customers needing gas  in 2023-2025                                                               
will start contracting  in 2017 or 2018, and at  that time Alaska                                                               
will need  to know, with  a reasonably high degree  of certainty,                                                               
what the project will cost, he  stated. At that point the parties                                                               
enter into  a "proceeding agreement," where  there are conditions                                                               
for both  parties. If costs  do not align, customers  are allowed                                                               
out of the agreement.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:04:49 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR MACKINNON said  she is not a customer, and  the people of                                                               
Alaska are not customers, but  resource owners. "We are a partner                                                               
or participant  in the  joint venture agreement,  and there  is a                                                               
tension  between the  carrier-this is  an integrated  project-the                                                               
people  at  this  table  who voted  for  this  project  advancing                                                               
thought the people  of Alaska could derive benefit  all along the                                                               
process  as integrated  partner."  Alaskans expect  to receive  a                                                               
return on  the investment at the  gas treatment plant and  on the                                                               
pipeline. She  noted that  the pipe  is much  more stable  with a                                                               
guaranteed  rate  of return,  and  that  is why  the  legislature                                                               
engaged TransCanada.  Although TransCanada left, "we  still had a                                                               
25 percent  expectation of a  return to  the people of  Alaska on                                                               
that pipeline,  and we  expected a return  on investment  for the                                                               
hydrocarbons that  are pulled  out of the  ground." She  said her                                                               
concern is  that there  should be  a tension,  and she  is afraid                                                               
that there  will not  be a  tension between  the carrier  and the                                                               
resource  customer.  There  are  four  people  that  will  derive                                                               
benefit, and  the big ones who  are at risk are  the producers in                                                               
meeting their internal  rate of return, "which I  am probably the                                                               
least worried about-I  think they can fight  for themselves," but                                                               
if the State  of Alaska has already made a  deal with the market,                                                               
"how  do we  assure  that  Alaskans get  a  good  return for  our                                                               
money?" As  project manager, "how  are you protecting  the people                                                               
of Alaska's resource  so that we derive the  greatest benefit for                                                               
the people of Alaska?" She said  she is waiting to hear Mr. Meyer                                                               
convince  her of  the reason  to go  to the  market first  before                                                               
taking care  of the  gas sales  agreement at  the top.  She added                                                               
that  "right now  we can't  even  balance two  major fields.  Pt.                                                               
Thomson  and Prudhoe  Bay have  to come  to an  agreement on  how                                                               
we're going to move gas out  of there, otherwise we lose value on                                                               
our  oil that  is four  times more  valuable than  the gas."  She                                                               
stated that  she wants to support  a project and she  is ready to                                                               
listen, but  there should be  tension between the  resource owner                                                               
and the  transporter, because the  transporter wants  high tariff                                                               
rates and lots  of hydrocarbons moving through  the pipeline, and                                                               
"we want lots  of hydrocarbons at a low price;  those who own the                                                               
leases and  the lease-to-produce, they  want high money,  and the                                                               
market  wants  the  lowest  dollar   available.  We  seem  to  be                                                               
competing with ourselves," she said.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER said  that the project economics have to  work for all,                                                               
but one of  the important ones is the market.  "If we don't clear                                                               
the market we  won't have a project," he stated.  If we can start                                                               
with the thought  that we have to clear the  market, then we look                                                               
at the cost  of the infrastructure using other  people's money or                                                               
the  state's money,  if the  state wants  to invest.  He said  he                                                               
would welcome both the state  and the producers as investors. The                                                               
state could be  happy with the return on this  project, he added,                                                               
but  he is  not sure  that the  producers can  be happy  with the                                                               
return. The  producers do not have  to invest if the  project can                                                               
find  lower-cost capital.  He said  that the  cost of  service is                                                               
deducted from the market price, and that is the netback.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:09:06 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  MEYER stated  his  belief that  if there  is  a good  buying                                                               
customer willing to  pay market price for LNG, and  if there is a                                                               
commercially reasonable  price after  deducting the  costs, there                                                               
will  be willing  sellers: the  producers. "If  we had  that real                                                               
buyer  now," there  is  much  more incentive  to  figure out  the                                                               
balancing,  he  stated.  "How  can you  negotiate  the  price  of                                                               
supply, if you don't know the  market and you don't know the cost                                                               
of the infrastructure to get there?"  His view is the opposite of                                                               
Senator Mackinnon's view. He referred  to a study the legislature                                                               
[commissioned] by  Black and Veatch that  had $2 for GTP,  $2 for                                                               
pipe, $4 for  LNG, and $1 for shipping, which  translates to a $9                                                               
price  to Japan.  "Guess what.  The  market's $8,  so it  doesn't                                                               
matter,"  he said,  because that  will not  clear the  market. He                                                               
said not  to start with all  of those components, but  start with                                                               
Japan wanting  an $8  price of  LNG, and then  figure out  how to                                                               
meet  that  price.  It  fluctuates,  but  some  of  the  toughest                                                               
competition  comes from  the Lower  48. It  is a  tough price  to                                                               
compete with, he  stated, and it is a tough  structure to compete                                                               
with,  because it  is not  an oil-linked  price-it's a  cost-plus                                                               
price,  meaning   that  it  is   Henry  Hub  plus  the   cost  of                                                               
liquefaction and  shipping. He  noted the  Panama Canal  has been                                                               
widened  to  aid   LNG  ships,  so  the  Lower   48  is  Alaska's                                                               
competition.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:11:27 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. MEYER reminded the committee  that there are 800 million tons                                                               
of projects  that want  to come  on line, and  most are  from the                                                               
Lower 48. Therefore,  we know that we have to  reduce the cost of                                                               
this project, he said.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:12:00 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR MACKINNON said  the resource owner wants  the lowest cost                                                               
and  highest  value  to  purchase  our  gas.  She  asked  who  is                                                               
responsible for financing the project,  because if another entity                                                               
takes profits away  from the project, [it will  be] another cost.                                                               
"So is it  AGDC? Is it the  Department of Revenue? Is  it a third                                                               
party?"                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER answered  that if  it is  third party  financing, AGDC                                                               
would take  the lead  on arranging  it. If  it is  state funding,                                                               
state credit  support, or  something similar,  the accountability                                                               
will be with  DOR; although, AGDC can help to  structure it. But,                                                               
sitting here  today, we do not  know "what we would  be expecting                                                               
of  the  state  as  a  state  entity  with  regards  to  funding,                                                               
financing, credit support, or that type of thing."                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  MACKINNON  asked  if AGDC  has  statutory  authority  to                                                               
arrange third party financing.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER said  he understands  that AGDC  has the  authority to                                                               
discuss arrangements, but when it  comes to the actual funding of                                                               
the project,  it will involve  the legislature and others.  It is                                                               
not a decision that AGDC would make on its own, he added.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:14:22 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR MICCICHE  said he  is hearing  some things  that somewhat                                                               
worry him  regarding the roles  of state agencies, because  he is                                                               
not  sure that  the agencies  have been  provided the  funding to                                                               
cover those roles.  The legislature, in defense  of the framework                                                               
under  SB   138,  needs  clarification  by   legislative  or  DOL                                                               
attorneys about the authority of  AGDC to act before compromising                                                               
a  project that  currently  has alignment,  he  said. "It  almost                                                               
seems  like we're  aggressively  sinking this  alignment in  this                                                               
process." He  would like to  better understand  the legislature's                                                               
role and the authority of each department and the AGDC.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:15:52 PM                                                                                                                    
CO-CHAIR GIESSEL said  the legislature can request  that from the                                                               
Department of Law.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  said the action  plan on slide 15  emphasizes reducing                                                               
total cost  of supply. There is  alignment on that, but  it needs                                                               
to be  looked at. It is  important to the state  to maintain pace                                                               
in order to  have an opportunity to contract for  the next demand                                                               
pull,  he said.  That is  not universally  shared by  all of  the                                                               
parties, but  from AGDC's perspective,  it is very  important, he                                                               
noted. There are  multiple LNG projects chasing  the same buyers,                                                               
and  all  participants  in  this project  want  to  monetize  the                                                               
resource,  he  stated. It  is  a  significant resource  base  and                                                               
material  to the  participants to  "see something  work." So  the                                                               
summary of the  action plan, as stated in the  presentation is as                                                               
follows:                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     Work in  a collaborative manner to  explore alternative                                                                    
     concepts  intended  to  enhance  the  project's  global                                                                    
     competitiveness.   These   concepts   include   various                                                                    
     ownership  and financing  structures and  could include                                                                    
     increased  ownership of  the project  by the  State and                                                                    
     with third-party financing.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  emphasized that  AGDC does  not have  a hard  and fast                                                               
action plan,  but something has to  be developed and he  wants it                                                               
to be collaborative. The collaboration  is now in process, and he                                                               
hopes to  have something  that is really  successful and  that is                                                               
embraced by all.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:17:54 PM                                                                                                                    
CO-CHAIR GIESSEL asked what increased ownership means.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  said, different  from investment,  increased ownership                                                               
might  be the  state owning  the entity,  but a  third party  may                                                               
provide  the funding.  He said  AGDC is  still investigating  the                                                               
benefits of  that ownership,  but there  may be  some significant                                                               
federal  tax  benefits  associated with  a  state-owned  project.                                                               
Ownership does not mean funding, he clarified.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR GIESSEL asked what the tax benefit is.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  said federal income  tax on  a private project  may be                                                               
more  than  on  a  state-owned  project, but  that  needs  to  be                                                               
investigated.  There is  some hope  that a  proper structure  may                                                               
lend itself to some federal tax benefits, "but we do not know."                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:19:22 PM                                                                                                                    
CO-CHAIR  GIESSEL asked  if this  kind of  investigation actually                                                               
invites the IRS to consider  whether the income from this project                                                               
should be taxable, even if the state were to own it.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER said he would anticipate  a lessor ruling from the IRS,                                                               
and there may  be some opinions on that already  that give enough                                                               
confidence, but because of the  magnitude, "we" would most likely                                                               
have  to  have  a  lessor  ruling from  the  IRS  indicating  the                                                               
structure is not subject to a federal tax.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HAWKER said he has  a zillion questions that he is                                                               
trying  to   distill  down.  "We  just   specifically  heard  the                                                               
statement  that the  state would  own the  entity, a  third party                                                               
would fund  it, and that would  decouple the state from  the risk                                                               
of the cost of the project."  He said he was most concerned about                                                               
the risks  of ownership,  and AGDC has  presented two  choices: A                                                               
cautious and deliberate approach,  which is the current framework                                                               
but would  delay FEED, and  the other  is a much  more aggressive                                                               
approach for the state  to take the lead, and "we  end up in this                                                               
scenario  with the  state  owning the  entity."  As a  legislator                                                               
managing the  risks of the project,  construction, financing, and                                                               
resource, he said all of  the risks have been carefully evaluated                                                               
and  the state  had  postured  itself to  minimize  its risk  and                                                               
maximize its benefits,  "but I'm not hearing  anything here about                                                               
how  you want  to  change risk  position."  With ownership  comes                                                               
risk, and he asked if Alaska will take all of the risk.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:22:10 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. MEYER stated  his belief that this  project finance structure                                                               
results in reduced risk, but  it can be argued otherwise, because                                                               
there are good and bad points on both sides. Under an open-                                                                     
equity structure  where everyone  contributes their  share, there                                                               
are significant  overrun risks, and  he noted the  Gorgon project                                                               
as an  example. It went  from a $37  billion estimated cost  to a                                                               
$54  billion completion  cost, "and  it didn't  quite work  right                                                               
when it was done."  He said that is a lot of  risk. In a project-                                                               
finance structure, the  risk would have probably been  taken by a                                                               
contractor or  by some other  party, otherwise the  project would                                                               
not  have been  financed. He  said that  does not  mean that  the                                                               
project would  have gotten off  the ground with less  risk-it may                                                               
have meant  that the project  would have never  been constructed.                                                               
He said he  is not claiming that ownership  without the financing                                                               
increases  the risk-there  are many  risks in  this project.  The                                                               
risks  to Alaska  will  have to  be acceptable  at  the time  the                                                               
decisions  are  made  to  go  forward. That  date  is  the  final                                                               
investment decision (FID) date, he  said, and the state, lenders,                                                               
customers, and contractors  will all have to  be comfortable with                                                               
all of the risks.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HAWKER said risk-hedging  is a very common feature                                                               
in capital markets, but it means  the owner transfers the risk to                                                               
someone else,  and a price must  be paid to offload  the risk. He                                                               
said he  is concerned  about the cost  or compromise  coming from                                                               
the state.  "The contractor's going to  take all the risk  of $60                                                               
billion construction  project that they  do not own  the resource                                                               
that ultimately  is going to profit  from it?" He said  he really                                                               
wants  to know  what  kind of  a  hedge fund  Mr.  Meyer will  be                                                               
working with.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER  said  Representative  Hawker  has  some  really  good                                                               
points. There are costs to  giving risk to somebody; however, one                                                               
contractor will  not take all of  the risks of this  project. The                                                               
project  will  need  multiple  contractors,   and  some  will  be                                                               
prepared to  take some  risk in the  construction. There  will be                                                               
risks that contractors  will not take, he  stated, like avalanche                                                               
risk and government  stoppage. He said some risks  will be passed                                                               
to  others, some  may be  insurable, and  some might  have to  be                                                               
taken  by the  state. He  said, yes,  contractors take  risks and                                                               
charge for that. He explained  that Cheniere had no balance sheet                                                               
when the import  terminal was built, but it turned  to Bechtel to                                                               
give them a  "lump sum, turnkey number," and Cheniere  paid a lot                                                               
for it,  but had  it not,  the lending  community would  not have                                                               
funded the project. There is a  balance between the risks and who                                                               
is most likely to bare them,  he explained. Building an LNG plant                                                               
on the Kenai  Peninsula is a manageable risk,  as is constructing                                                               
a pipeline. Under  a proper structure, the costs  of moving those                                                               
risks  and the  cost of  insuring them,  basically appeasing  the                                                               
financial community, and  "you put that altogether  and we figure                                                               
out, have we got a project or do we not?"                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:28:10 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE  HAWKER   said  the  construction  risk   is  very                                                               
tangible,  but "this  project has  a complete  value change;  has                                                               
huge risk in the resource  itself, the market, the financing, and                                                               
I'm  very  concerned  that  I'm   hearing  an  approach-this  new                                                               
concept-that is  absolutely obsessed  with just  the construction                                                               
and building of  a pipeline, but not necessarily  a pipeline that                                                               
has,  as  guaranteed  as  possible  [and]  as  risk-minimized  as                                                               
possible,  commercial  viability."  He  said  he  would  be  more                                                               
comfortable  if he  could hear  about commercial  viability "from                                                               
you folks in the near future."                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
2:28:44 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. MEYER said  commercial viability is key. Without  it there is                                                               
no  project. Slide  16 addresses  equity  versus project  finance                                                               
structures.  In an  equity structure,  everybody contributes.  In                                                               
the project  finance structure, there  are project  sponsors, and                                                               
there are  third-party equity providers. Akash  Deep, a professor                                                               
at  the Harvard  Kennedy  School of  Government, defines  project                                                               
finance as one that                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
        "involves creating a separate legal and economic                                                                        
         entity with the primary role of setting up an                                                                          
     organizational  structure and  obtaining the  necessary                                                                    
     financial resources  to develop  and manage  a project.                                                                    
     The  main, and  crucial, distinction  from conventional                                                                    
     corporate  or  public   financial  structures  is  that                                                                    
     repayment to  debt and equity providers  depends solely                                                                    
     on the capacity of the  project to generate cash flows,                                                                    
     with  typically no  recourse to  the balance  sheets of                                                                    
     the sponsors or the resources of the government."                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:30:45 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  MEYER showed  a representative  structure on  slide 18.  The                                                               
"project  company"  is  a  new  entity that  would  be  the  FERC                                                               
applicant and hold  the assets and contracts.  There are off-take                                                               
contracts,  which are  significant  commercial underpinnings  for                                                               
the  project company,  he said.  The suppliers  would be  the gas                                                               
resource owner,  and there would be  government involvement, like                                                               
a  concession agreement.  The contractor  has a  very significant                                                               
role  in an  infrastructure project,  as does  the operator.  The                                                               
finance includes equity investors and lenders, he added.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:31:26 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.   MEYER  moved   to   slide  19,   showing   the  trends   in                                                               
infrastructure finance.  The slide is from  an OECD (Organization                                                               
for Economic  Cooperation and Development)  survey. The  OECD has                                                               
34 nations and did a  survey of a cross-section of infrastructure                                                               
institutional investors,  and the  survey represents  28 entities                                                               
and about  $1.5 trillion of  assets under management.  The survey                                                               
found  that infrastructure  investments are  not recognized  as a                                                               
distinct  asset  class,  infrastructure  projects  are  long-term                                                               
investments that match the long  duration of pension liabilities,                                                               
infrastructure  assets are  linked to  inflation and  could hedge                                                               
pension  funds  liability  sensibility to  increasing  inflation,                                                               
governments  have   started  to  recognize  that   they  need  to                                                               
reconsider their approach  to financing to secure  new sources of                                                               
capital   to  invest   in  infrastructure,   and  developed   and                                                               
developing  countries   are  in   effect  competing   to  attract                                                               
institutional  investors  to  infrastructure.  "And  I  say  this                                                               
project  can be  set up  to be  a very  attractive infrastructure                                                               
investment."  He  said  a  U.S.  project-LNG  in  Alaska-is  very                                                               
stable.  Instability in  Europe has  been introduced  with Brexit                                                               
[Great Britain voting  to leave the European  Union], and pension                                                               
and  infrastructure  funds  do   not  like  volatility.  Alaska's                                                               
project   has  stability,   government  support,   and  community                                                               
support. This is a good project, he stated.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:33:50 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON said SB  138 outlines AGDC's authorities                                                               
as expanded  in 2014, and he  sees broad powers that  allow it to                                                               
pursue a  different path. Regarding  the 120-day  window referred                                                               
to  by Steve  Butt,  he is  concerned that  this  project is  not                                                               
likely to  go forward. Rather  than watching it go  into dormancy                                                               
for umpteen years,  he sees that Mr. Meyer is  looking at a whole                                                               
new path, which is allowed by  SB 138, he proffered. In reference                                                               
to anxiety about  the rate of return, one of  the things that has                                                               
given him comfort  about the original plan is if  the three major                                                               
[producers]  saw  merit in  moving  forward,  then the  plan  had                                                               
merit, and  if they did not  [move forward], the plan  likely did                                                               
not  have  merit. He  asked  Mr.  Meyer  to dispel  that  general                                                               
concern of his.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER answered  that he agrees that if the  producers say the                                                               
project  has merit,  it  does have  merit-"I'm  right there  with                                                               
you." However,  if the  producers do not  think the  project will                                                               
clear their hurdle  rate at this time, it does  not mean that the                                                               
project does not have merit-it means  that it does not have merit                                                               
for  them to  invest.  "But I  can almost  guarantee  you, if  we                                                               
deliver these  folks a  gas pipeline, they're  going to  love it;                                                               
they're going to love  to use it." He said he  does not think the                                                               
investment  will move  up in  their queue  or clear  their hurdle                                                               
rate or clear their internal barriers,  but that does not mean it                                                               
is  not a  good  project. He  noted  that when  he  looks at  the                                                               
project  he does  not look  at  it as  just an  extension of  the                                                               
production unit,  he looks  at it  as a pipeline  that will  be a                                                               
very attractive  investment for pension funds  and life insurance                                                               
companies,  which have  lower  return hurdles  than  oil and  gas                                                               
companies,  especially  the   E&P  [exploration  and  production]                                                               
companies. Pipeline companies, he said,  have a much lower return                                                               
threshold, and from  a pipeline standpoint, that is  why "we" got                                                               
to be in business. "We were  willing to put in pipelines based on                                                               
contracts that  did have a  lower return,  and it was  better for                                                               
the high-return companies, the E&P  companies, to contract with a                                                               
lower-return service provider than it  was to take their capital,                                                               
which is much better spent drilling  holes than it is laying 800-                                                               
mile  pipelines."  He  strongly  agrees  that  if  the  [producer                                                               
partners] all said this is  going forward, Alaska should be right                                                               
there with them, but  if they decide that they do  not want to go                                                               
forward now, it does not make this a bad project.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
2:38:16 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  MACKINNON asked  where  Mr. Meyer  got his  presentation                                                               
slides, one  of which [is  attributed to] Harvard  Kennedy School                                                               
and one that refers to the OECD.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER said  he  stole  them off  the  Internet,  and he  can                                                               
provide the site addresses and the reference to the OECD study.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  MACKINNON  said  she  has   seen  the  study  under  the                                                               
sovereign  wealth  model,  and the  Harvard  Kennedy  School  was                                                               
quoted in those reports also.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  said, yes, it is  part of a broader  presentation, not                                                               
for Alaska. He said it  provides a description of project finance                                                               
from someone other than those at AGDC.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  MACKINNON  asked Mr.  Meyer  if  he is  purporting  that                                                               
Alaska's PERS system would be a likely candidate for investment                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER   said  it  very   well  could  be,  and   the  Native                                                               
corporations could  be very interested  in this as  an investment                                                               
and maybe should have the first opportunity.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
2:40:25 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  MEYER  showed a  slide  (page  20), titled  "Required  State                                                               
Response." Alaska needs  to be singularly focused  on moving this                                                               
project forward  in order to not  miss the next demand  cycle, he                                                               
said. Alaska has only one LNG  project and does not have multiple                                                               
projects, like  E&P projects, to compete  with; therefore, Alaska                                                               
does not have the  luxury of a queue to pick  from, "so we've got                                                               
to make this  work." To help ensure momentum, AGDC  will take the                                                               
lead on project development and  marketing, in compliance with SB
138 and  in consultation with DNR.  He said he is  not suggesting                                                               
doing anything that does not comply  with SB 138 or tries to take                                                               
authority from  any agency  that has  authority. Alaska  LNG must                                                               
have a higher  profile to compete in the global  arena, he added,                                                               
so  it  must  actively  engage  buyers,  solicit  investors,  and                                                               
outmaneuver the  competition. It is important  to appreciate that                                                               
Alaska LNG, as  a project, is really not out  there in the market                                                               
today; it is  not marketing itself and has relied  on the project                                                               
sponsors  to  do  that.  He  explained  that  the  joint  venture                                                               
agreement, itself, does  not really provide for  marketing, so it                                                               
is time  to raise  the profile  and get  it in  the minds  of the                                                               
buyers that this is a real project to consider.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  MICCICHE  said   all  of  the  funding   for  AKLNG  was                                                               
appropriated  to AGDC,  so he  asked if  Mr. Meyer  is adequately                                                               
sharing  that funding  with  the state  agencies  through an  RSA                                                               
[Reimbursable Services Agreement],  or if Mr. Meyer  is making it                                                               
more difficult for the agencies  to have the talent available for                                                               
those deliverables.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER  said   he  thinks  AGDC  is  doing   both,  and  that                                                               
perspective  depends  on who  you  ask.  There  are a  couple  of                                                               
categories of expenses, and one  is for staff and contractors and                                                               
another is  for outside legal  expenses and consultants.  He said                                                               
he wants  to pay for  the employees in DOL,  DOR, and DNR  for at                                                               
least three  months and then  figure out if AGDC  can incorporate                                                               
those  people into  working together  as a  team. It  could be  a                                                               
second  structure   where  AGDC  pays  for   people  through  the                                                               
agencies,  but they  would actually  work at  AGDC, he  said. For                                                               
outside  contractors,  he  suggests  that they  be  paid  for  as                                                               
needed, and "we may need them  differently than we needed them in                                                               
the  past." There  is about  $15  million of  expenses, he  said,                                                               
"that  we  are  talking  about  in this  bucket,"  and  most  are                                                               
associated  with outside  companies. Rather  than just  shoveling                                                               
all that  money over, he assumes  that the intent of  putting the                                                               
funds into AGDC  was to shepherd and steward them,  as needed, in                                                               
the development of this project.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER   said  AGDC  will  need   legal  services,  financial                                                               
analysts, and  that type of  thing, and  those will be  funded as                                                               
needed.  There was  pushback from  the DOR  people who  said they                                                               
needed an  outside modeler,  and that was  settled by  paying for                                                               
the modeler, but he  would like AGDC to have its  own access to a                                                               
financial model. He stated that  he has never been anywhere where                                                               
the company does  not have its own financial model  of a project.                                                               
There is a  cost-of-service model developed for  the ASAP [Alaska                                                               
Stand  Alone Pipeline],  which is  inadequate  for this  project.                                                               
"What  I'd love  to  have  is one  model  that  all the  agencies                                                               
share."   He  said   that  he   understands  that   some  private                                                               
information may  have to go into  a DOR model, but  all he really                                                               
wants  is a  model structure,  so  when looking  at how  interest                                                               
rates shape  a cost curve,  for example,  AGDC will have  its own                                                               
model.  There has  been  some  angst from  some  of the  agencies                                                               
regarding funding,  but he believes  this is getting  settled. He                                                               
said he needs to be  more judicious with third party expenditures                                                               
to  focus  on this  time  of  increased austerity  and  increased                                                               
demand on  AGDC, and he  wants the resources funneled  toward the                                                               
execution endeavors.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:47:00 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR MICCICHE said  Mr. Meyer missed a  few recent discussions                                                               
about  "org  charts"  and   project  team  responsibilities.  The                                                               
alignment concerns  of his are  not only external  with partners,                                                               
it  is also  internal alignment  with some  talented departmental                                                               
folks.  He stated  that if  Mr.  Meyer is  open to  it, "I  would                                                               
certainly be  interested, if the  chair is in agreement,  you can                                                               
provide,  sort of,  as you  develop  that concept,  an org  chart                                                               
[with] some  of the expected  cost burden  and how you  intend to                                                               
share that  with the agencies."  Becoming fully  independent when                                                               
there  is internal  talent will  not  lead "us"  to a  successful                                                               
relationship,  he stated.  He said  he would  like see  how those                                                               
relationships  are going  to continue  with the  agencies he  has                                                               
grown to trust over the years. He  asked Mr. Meyer if he would be                                                               
willing to provide that information.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER said  absolutely. He is new to the  structure, but when                                                               
he  looks at  the agencies,  he sees  law, finance,  and upstream                                                               
departments, and he really wants to  draw on those people and not                                                               
duplicate workers.  There is duplication  going on that  could be                                                               
managed better,  and the way to  do that is to  bring people into                                                               
AGDC, where they  would still work for  their agencies, providing                                                               
an  open  line of  communication.  This  is  a team  project,  so                                                               
definitely he will disclose that as it gets developed, he said.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:49:41 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE OLSON asked if the  state would pay property taxes                                                               
if it was the owner [of the pipeline].                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  said he is still  getting up to speed,  but the entity                                                               
would  pay property  taxes.  Under this  kind  of structure,  the                                                               
project entity would  most likely be the payer,  because it would                                                               
hold the  assets. He  is not clear  on prior  understandings, but                                                               
this entity, in his mind, will be paying property taxes.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE OLSON asked for information in writing.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:51:27 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE HAWKER  said he is  hearing that this  new concept                                                               
has three  significant elements. If  the state owns  the project,                                                               
it  would hedge  the project  risk through  an artificial  entity                                                               
that was  set up, and  that that entity  would be managed  on the                                                               
basis of  securing financing  on a nonrecourse  basis. That  is a                                                               
wonderful thing  when you  can get  it, he  said. If  the project                                                               
utterly fails, the  state can walk away from it,  free and clear,                                                               
and the  investors all lose,  "so sad, too  bad." That is  not an                                                               
uncommon structure in  the corporate world, but  can a government                                                               
sovereign abrogate  that much risk, and  what would it do  to the                                                               
credibility  of Alaska  in all  other  matters? He  asked if  Mr.                                                               
Meyer is  setting Alaska  up for  a huge  risk in  the case  of a                                                               
failure  for  the  nonrecourse   financing  entity,  whereby  the                                                               
injured  parties  would readily  pierce  the  corporate veil  and                                                               
basically go right after the only  source of cash the state would                                                               
have, which would be the permanent fund.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  said he  believes that the  risks will  be manageable,                                                               
but AGDC  has not  quantified them. The  concerns are  valid. The                                                               
risks would have to be  identified, quantified, and acceptable to                                                               
the  state, or  there will  be no  project. The  DOL and  outside                                                               
experts will need to assess the  risks. The risks the state takes                                                               
have to be acceptable under either structure, he explained.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  HAWKER  asked if  Mr.  Meyer  has proposed  these                                                               
risks to the producer partners.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER said  he has only proposed a concept  document, and the                                                               
highlights  are   described  in  the   next  few  pages   of  his                                                               
presentation.  He said  he sort  of  suggested that  he does  not                                                               
expect the  state to take  on a disproportionate amount  of risk-                                                               
not that  this will be  risk-free. Alaska may be  investing funds                                                               
as though  it were an equity  project, which is up  to the state,                                                               
but   he   has   never   suggested  that   the   state   take   a                                                               
disproportionate amount of risk.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:55:59 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  MEYER showed  slide 21,  "Commercial Framework  Concept." He                                                               
said AGDC will  form the special purpose entity that  will be the                                                               
"project company"-the  entity that  does the activity,  holds the                                                               
assets,  is the  FERC  applicant,  and that  type  of thing.  The                                                               
project  company  will  have  a  set  of  overarching  principles                                                               
designed to  keep the  project on  track with  competitive rates,                                                               
and it  will engage competent technical  and commercial advisors.                                                               
He  said  he hopes  that  some  of  those  advisors will  be  the                                                               
producers,  but he  has  not  asked for  a  commitment, and  some                                                               
advisors will be outside of the joint venture parties.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER noted  that  AGDC aims  to  keep project  participants                                                               
together; however, producer  party roles may change  and some may                                                               
choose not to  invest in the next stage. The  parties should have                                                               
the ability  to participate  or exit with  minimal impact  to the                                                               
project's  pace, he  added. The  parties could  be owners  of the                                                               
project company if  allowed by tax laws, but they  do not have to                                                               
be,  and they  do  not  necessarily have  to  make that  decision                                                               
upfront. He wants  to leave enough leeway so if  they cannot make                                                               
a decision  to invest today, that  does not mean they  are closed                                                               
off in the future. He said  he would like some of these producers                                                               
to  be able  to have  the opportunity  to change  their decisions                                                               
down the road.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER stated  that, in this framework,  project ownership may                                                               
not  equate to  gas ownership.  "So you  may be  an owner  of the                                                               
project but  just because you're  an owner doesn't mean  you have                                                               
capacity, and,  further, not  being an owner  does not  mean that                                                               
you won't have  capacity." A shipper would be fine  and would not                                                               
need  to  have  ownership  in  this structure  in  order  to  get                                                               
capacity, he said.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER  said page  22  is  a  continuation of  the  framework                                                               
concept. The project company will  be a midstream business, so it                                                               
is not  an extension  of Prudhoe  Bay or Pt.  Thomson. It  is the                                                               
pipeline and the LNG, and it  can provide an unbundled service to                                                               
the producers,  to AGDC, and  to third  parties, he added.  So, a                                                               
utility company  in Asia  may want  to hold  capacity on  the LNG                                                               
plant but not on the pipeline,  for example, or they just want to                                                               
buy from  one of the  producers at the  tailgate of the  GTP. The                                                               
concept  is   to  have  service   agreements  that   support  the                                                               
particular segment  of the project, and  those service agreements                                                               
are entered into with credit-worthy counter parties.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:59:38 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. MEYER said  the project company will levy  transport tolls in                                                               
line  with  midstream businesses  to  clear  market and  maximize                                                               
upstream revenues,  so the tolling  structure will  be relatively                                                               
transparent and not unduly discriminatory.  There will be similar                                                               
rates  for all  as long  as there  are similar  terms, but  early                                                               
shippers may  get a better  rate, for example,  but it will  be a                                                               
transparent  toll  structure.  He  said there  is  potential  for                                                               
alternative  financing in  this  framework, such  as federal  tax                                                               
reduction options,  lower cost third-party equity  investors, and                                                               
nonrecourse  debt to  minimize financial  exposure. Referring  to                                                               
page   23,  he   said  AGDC   would  be   the  single   point  of                                                               
accountability for the  midstream portion, which is  the GTP, the                                                               
pipeline,  and  the  LNG  facility. Also,  AGDC  could  become  a                                                               
shipper, so if  DNR, for example, elects to take  royalty in kind                                                               
and agrees to sell it to  AGDC as a commercialization service, it                                                               
could  be a  shipper. Or  DNR may  want to  sell it  to an  Asian                                                               
utility, and  then they will be  the shipper, or DNR  may want to                                                               
sell it to one  of the producers or a third party.  If one of the                                                               
producers  wants  to  sell  the gas  without  being  a  transport                                                               
customer, for example,  and suggests selling the  gas together to                                                               
a buyer  that AGDC finds,  "we could be  a shipper," he  said. If                                                               
ADGC were  a shipper, it would  be treated like all  shippers, he                                                               
added, and it would not necessarily have preferential status.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
3:02:29 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  MEYER said  AGDC and  others will  market the  project as  a                                                               
service provider. He  said he wants to market the  LNG outside of                                                               
Alaska. Customers  can buy  it at  the beach at  Kenai or  in the                                                               
north as gas-"tell me  how you want to buy it,  but put Alaska in                                                               
the planning  horizon." He  turned to page  24, which  charts out                                                               
"who  does  what."  He  said  he  added  a  role  called  project                                                               
marketing, where  AGDC will  take more  responsibility. Financing                                                               
has two  options: state participation,  where DOR  is accountable                                                               
and  AGDC  will help  structure  it,  and third-party  financing,                                                               
where AGDC will take the lead.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HAWKER said, regarding  financing, he has recently                                                               
raised  questions  about  AGDC's  ability  to  finance,  and  the                                                               
statute  that basically  allows it  unlimited ability  to finance                                                               
the purchase  of product and  resell it. "We were  given absolute                                                               
assurance, at that time, that AGDC  had no intentions of … buying                                                               
and selling  of gas. That is,  becoming … the person  who, at the                                                               
end of  the day, takes  the full  take-or-pay contract for  … the                                                               
load  that a  pipe would  require." He  expressed concerned  that                                                               
this proposal contradicts everything he  has been told about this                                                               
administration's  intent to  respect the  original structures  of                                                               
AGDC, and  he understands the right  to change it, but  this is a                                                               
massive change of direction, he noted.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
3:05:24 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  MEYER told  the  committee  that before  anyone  jumps to  a                                                               
conclusion, he  would like to dispel  the idea that AGDC  will be                                                               
taking on  take-or-pay, purchase, or credit  obligations. He said                                                               
he is not  saying that AGDC would  not, he is saying  that is not                                                               
the intent,  but some  customers may want  a bundled  service. He                                                               
added  that AGDC  does  not  have the  balance  sheet to  provide                                                               
sufficient credit  support to engage  in a long-term  purchase or                                                               
even a  long-term tolling contract,  so AGDC  is not going  to be                                                               
all that attractive  to the financial community;  however, to the                                                               
extent  that  it  is  required to  help  facilitate  by  bundling                                                               
agreements on behalf of the  producers and the buyers, he expects                                                               
that AGDC will be able to do that.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  gave the example  of an  aging utility and  a producer                                                               
not wanting to  hold upstream capacity, [then] maybe  AGDC has to                                                               
step in and help,  but it will be "back to  back," he said. There                                                               
is going  to be  a limited capacity  to do that,  as it  will not                                                               
have the  balance sheet to  guarantee it. However, by  looking at                                                               
some  LNG projects  under construction  that have  more of  a LNG                                                               
sales   model,  the   LNG  sales   contract  is   the  commercial                                                               
underpinning  for the  facility-not  a tolling  contract. So,  he                                                               
explained, what  the service provider  provides is a  bundled LNG                                                               
sale delivered  at the  dock, which  is very  similar to  the way                                                               
many of  the other LNG  projects around the world  are structured                                                               
as opposed  to a simple  tolling arrangement. The  credit support                                                               
that  the  financial community  will  look  to is  that  purchase                                                               
agreement from  that large credit-worthy utility,  global trading                                                               
company, or  "what have you."  He said he  hopes he has  not left                                                               
the impression  that this is  a massive  change and that  AGDC is                                                               
going to be stepping into  big purchase or sale commitments-it is                                                               
really a  facilitator, "but we  are going  to need to  find large                                                               
credit-worthy entities to either purchase  LNG or to hold tolling                                                               
capacity."                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:08:19 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE HAWKER  said Mr.  Meyer is  clouding the  water by                                                               
describing AGDC as  a shipper, and its value  will be underpinned                                                               
by someone  else's contract to  buy. "There still has  to be-AGDC                                                               
has  to  have established  credit  with  wherever its  source  of                                                               
product  comes from,  basically its  own  gas." He  asked if  Mr.                                                               
Meyer  is intending  that  it be  backed by  the  full faith  and                                                               
credit of  the State of Alaska  out of the treasury  or permanent                                                               
fund.  At the  end of  the day,  he said,  there is  the ultimate                                                               
credit worthiness. "You look not only  at the actual value of the                                                               
product itself moving through, and  that would be the credit from                                                               
somebody else  agreeing to  pay for  the transportation,  but for                                                               
that and the  product, you always have to look  to that alternate                                                               
means  of  repayment, and  I  have  a  hard time  believing  that                                                               
contracts of this magnitude, the  ultimate sellers at this point,                                                               
would  not be  expecting a  guarantee from  the State  of Alaska,                                                               
itself, in order  for AGDC to operate in this  capacity." He said                                                               
the legislature  would require a  great deal of  time considering                                                               
this type of thing.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER  said  he  does   not  expect  AGDC  to  be  requiring                                                               
significant credit  support from the  state, because he  does not                                                               
envision AGDC stepping  into that role in a  significant way. One                                                               
thing that  AGDC will probably  have to  do is to  help aggregate                                                               
the in-state demand, because it may  be difficult for some of the                                                               
small utilities in  the state to be small shippers,  he added. As                                                               
he reads  SB 138, AGDC  has a  responsibility to be  an in-state-                                                               
demand  aggregator, and  that may  require  that it  step into  a                                                               
shipper role for that as well. He  said he does not want to leave                                                               
the impression  that AGDC  will be completely  risk free,  but he                                                               
does not  expect it to step  into big risk profiles  with respect                                                               
to the LNG export sales, he clarified.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
3:11:32 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  MEYER turned  to  slide 25  regarding  the AKLNG  completion                                                               
timeline,  and  he  said  that   AGDC  would  like  the  Pre-FEED                                                               
completed and  the FERC application  filed by 2016. The  state is                                                               
not a party to the land ownership  [for the LNG plant], and it is                                                               
the landowner  who makes  the Section 3  application to  FERC. He                                                               
added that the applicant does not  have to actually own the land,                                                               
but it has  to show it controls it. Before  the FERC process gets                                                               
moving,  "we  have to  reach  an  understanding" of  what  rights                                                               
Alaska has with regard  to the land where the LNG  plant is to be                                                               
sited.  He said  he  would  like to  see  a financial  investment                                                               
decision in  2018, because  it will  take that  much time  to put                                                               
AKLNG in  service for the  2023-2025 demand window. He  said that                                                               
he believes, although it is arguable,  that if the project is not                                                               
ready for the next demand window, it will miss it.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SADDLER said  he read  the "mega  projects book,"                                                               
and  learned that  one  of  the big  risks  is  a schedule  risk.                                                               
"Managers of the program might feel  a need to get something done                                                               
by a  date certain,  so you  can throw money  and resources  at a                                                               
project and never make the clock  run slower or faster," he said.                                                               
He  added that  he  is hearing  Mr.  Meyer say  that  one of  the                                                               
dominant  drivers   is  meeting   that  next  window   or  market                                                               
opportunity  without considering  the risk  or whether  it is  an                                                               
advantage  to the  state. He  said there  has been  a pattern  of                                                               
opacity by the administration, and  Mr. Meyer has a tall mountain                                                               
to climb  to earn the trust  of the legislature and  of Alaskans.                                                               
He said he  has long been a supporter of  a natural gas pipeline,                                                               
and  he  wants  to  be  aligned with  the  producers,  share  the                                                               
ownership risk, and  be pulling in the same  direction, he noted,                                                               
and there  is a pattern of  being in opposition to  the producers                                                               
and nudge them out of the way. "You  have a long way to go to get                                                               
my confidence [unclear],"  and he has heard a  lot of information                                                               
that causes him "great pause."                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER shared his concerns on  trust. He needs a little bit of                                                               
time to earn it,  and he has not tried to  hold anything back. He                                                               
believes that  AGDC has  been hindered by  the lack  of openness,                                                               
and he pledged  more openness. With respect to being  driven by a                                                               
schedule,  some  people  feel  that a  project  needs  to  mature                                                               
whenever  the  time  is  right,  but he  said  he  comes  from  a                                                               
pipeline/midstream background  where there was always  a customer                                                               
with a  time demand that  his project had to  hit. "I tend  to be                                                               
much more schedule-driven," he explained.  He said, "If you shoot                                                               
for  nothing, you  are sure  to hit  it," so  it is  important to                                                               
recognize that  there is  a window  to shoot for,  but he  is not                                                               
suggesting  the project  must get  built regardless,  that it  be                                                               
built at risk, or that it be  built with market. There is a short                                                               
amount of  time-maybe 18 to  24 months-to figure out  a structure                                                               
that  will  work  from  a  cost-of-supply  standpoint,  he  said.                                                               
Additionally,  the  project  must  be de-risked  so  that  it  is                                                               
acceptable to all  parties, and there is the  need to communicate                                                               
and  convince the  markets that  this project  will be  there for                                                               
them in the future as a long-term, stable supplier.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  said he understands  that schedules can lead  to risks                                                               
that should  not be taken,  and that  is not his  intention. This                                                               
project  is so  big that  no  risk will  be allowed  that is  not                                                               
reasonably  understood by  the  party taking  it.  He noted  that                                                               
there is  no real  technical risk, because  no new  technology is                                                               
needed,  but there  is some  construction risk.  Putting all  the                                                               
components together makes  it a big project, he  added, but there                                                               
is  an opportunity  to  decide to  pull out  the  stops and  work                                                               
together with  the producer  venture parties.  He stated  that he                                                               
has  not  come today  with  all  of  the  answers but  quite  the                                                               
contrary. "I come  to you today admitting that we  don't have the                                                               
answers. We  don't have them all,  but I know from  my history of                                                               
project  development and  infrastructure  development that  there                                                               
are tools that  we draw from; there are resources  outside of the                                                               
state that  we can  draw from  that will  help this  project, and                                                               
what  I'm hoping  is, with  a collaborative  working relationship                                                               
with our  producer folks  and with  you folks,  that we  can pull                                                               
enough of those tools together to make this work."                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
3:20:27 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. MEYER turned  to slide 26 regarding  budget implications, and                                                               
said  "this  is nothing  new,"  as  it  was  seen in  the  budget                                                               
process. He pointed out that right  now, it is not known which of                                                               
the parties are  in and for how  much. If the state had  to go it                                                               
alone,  which he  does not  expect, the  FERC process  would cost                                                               
much more, he noted. In summary, he provided the following:                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
         Market conditions and lack of consensus among                                                                          
     participants is leading to a project slow down.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
      AGDC can step into the lead to maintain momentum and                                                                      
         focus on cost reductions through structure and                                                                         
     financing changes.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
    Alternative   venture   structures   could   keep   all                                                                     
      participants engaged and create flexibility to allow                                                                      
     Alaska LNG to compete in the mid-2020s market window.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     AGDC will ensure the legislature is kept well-informed                                                                     
     throughout the process.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:22:52 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  COSTELLO  said Mr.  Butt  told  the committee  that  the                                                               
measure  of  competitiveness  is  the  cost  of  supply,  and  he                                                               
explained the efforts to reduce it.  You tell us that the project                                                               
is not going anywhere, but that  the two options are to delay the                                                               
project or  ownership. She asked  if the  work that Mr.  Butt has                                                               
done is not significant or warrants a change of direction.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  said his  statements do not  conflict with  Mr. Butt's                                                               
statements-they are  saying the  same thing  in a  different way.                                                               
The work  that Mr. Butt and  his team has done  is exemplary. The                                                               
resource  reports  and  other things  are  "just  beautiful."  He                                                               
stated  that  FERC probably  has  never  seen an  application  as                                                               
thorough as that. However, Mr. Butt  did point out that they need                                                               
to reduce  the cost  of supply  to get into  the next  phase. The                                                               
cost of the  project needs to be  reduced or it will  not move at                                                               
the pace that people had  expected, he explained. He offered that                                                               
AGDC has  been part of the  technical work product, and  the work                                                               
that  it did  on the  ASAP  line was  very good-they  got an  EIS                                                               
through the  process. The whole  team has done an  amazing amount                                                               
of work  on how  to reduce the  capital cost and  how to  put the                                                               
project in  phases, so  train 1  can start  up without  having to                                                               
wait for all trains  to be done, he said. There  is more they are                                                               
doing-they are  still beating down  capital costs, but  even with                                                               
those  efforts,  there is  more  to  be  done to  clear  internal                                                               
hurdles and the market.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  said that the challenge  now is to reduce  the demands                                                               
on the balance  sheets of the producer parties and  the state and                                                               
to put the capital costs of  the project in the hands of somebody                                                               
that likes a  low infrastructure return, like  the pension funds.                                                               
"What if  we structure this  so that the  state took more  and we                                                               
took out some of the  federal taxes?" Does adjusting the property                                                               
tax or  the local  payments help,  he asked.  All of  the aspects                                                               
need to  be assessed to get  this project where it  competes in a                                                               
very  competitive  world market  for  a  long time.  The  current                                                               
effort is very collaborative, and it  is a concept that he cannot                                                               
yet determine  if it will work,  he stated. It is  worth the try,                                                               
he said, because  he firmly believes that Alaska has  a very good                                                               
project-the  LNG  project is  extremely  good  and will  be  very                                                               
attractive to the infrastructure fund  and to the market, as long                                                               
as that cost of supply is in line.  He added that he wants to see                                                               
happy producers on  one end, happy customers on the  other, and a                                                               
happy state  in the middle. "Whether  we can get there,  I do not                                                               
know, but I  know that we have  enough tools that I  think we can                                                               
make a difference and I think  we can keep this project on track,                                                               
and I want to  do that in a collaborative manner,  and I think we                                                               
can," he concluded.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
3:27:24 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR COSTELLO asked about the  first bullet that stated a lack                                                               
of consensus among participants.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER  said he was talking  about a lack of  consensus on the                                                               
FEED  decision, but  that decision  is  not required  now, so  he                                                               
cannot  say  for certain.  He  said  he  has heard  the  governor                                                               
publicly thank  the producers  for letting  Alaska know  now that                                                               
there is  a good chance  that the project  is not going  to FEED,                                                               
rather  than  waiting a  year  to  tell  us. The  forewarning  is                                                               
appreciated because the next 12 months are very critical.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  COSTELLO   expressed  concern  that  he   is  making  an                                                               
assumption based  on a press conference  about Alaska's important                                                               
mega project.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEYER responded that he is  not making an assumption based on                                                               
a press  conference. There have  been other data points  as well.                                                               
The producers are  looking forward to working  in a collaborative                                                               
manner to  help reduce the cost  of supply for this  project, and                                                               
no one  has been asked to  vote yet, so  there may be room  for a                                                               
positive FEED.  He said he  has received enough  information from                                                               
producers  and  others that  indicate  that  the project  is  not                                                               
moving quickly.  One "data  point" is  that the  major contractor                                                               
for  this  project  told  him  that the  project  is  not  moving                                                               
forward-it needs  more study, he  said. If the  major contractors                                                               
are  being told  that, it  gets out  in the  industry. He  is not                                                               
basing his perception on one press conference, he stated.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:31:03 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE TARR observed that the  governor has long stated a                                                               
preference  for   a  go-it-alone   project,  and  she   wants  to                                                               
understand where people  are "out of sync,"  "Where we're hearing                                                               
from the project  that things are still  under consideration, but                                                               
the presentation  from you, even  though it's suggested to  be in                                                               
concept form, seems a lot more  permanent." She wants to know how                                                               
to do  a cost-benefit analysis  on the  points where there  is no                                                               
consensus  to better  understand  why the  new  concept would  be                                                               
preferable  to the  existing structure,  she said.  "Many of  us"                                                               
supported  the existing  structure  initially.  She said  "people                                                               
like  Larry   Persily,"  who  worked  as   the  federal  pipeline                                                               
coordinator,  said  the  previous arrangement  "was  the  closest                                                               
we've  ever  come-that's  how  it   was  characterized."  It  was                                                               
characterized  as the  project arrangement  that had  the highest                                                               
likelihood  of success,  so  to shift  gears  into a  fundamental                                                               
overhaul of  the structure-.  She said  if other  sponsor parties                                                               
speak  positively [about  the new  structure], it  would probably                                                               
change the  reaction of  a lot  of people  around the  table. She                                                               
added that she  wants to hold back on her  position until she has                                                               
heard  all of  the information  and really  understand everyone's                                                               
position.  It  would  be  helpful  to see  the  structures  in  a                                                               
comparative way to  understand how the new concept  might lead to                                                               
success, she stated.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
3:33:52 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  MEYER  clarified  that  he  was  not  involved  in  upstream                                                               
negotiations on those arrangements,  but he understands they took                                                               
a lot of time, and some  agreements were not reached. A number of                                                               
the agreements can come later, rather  than up front. The cost of                                                               
CO2 disposal  is an  issue, for example,  but it  is unknown-"you                                                               
may get  something, you may not,"  but what is known  is that the                                                               
project has to compete in the  market, and the costs have to come                                                               
down. The  netback will determine  whether there is a  project or                                                               
not. He  said he  is sure  there were  great efforts  getting the                                                               
agreements to  the point where they  are, and he would  like that                                                               
effort to pick  up from where they left off,  but settling on one                                                               
thing up north  does not change the market price  and it does not                                                               
change the need  to reduce big chunks of costs.  He added that he                                                               
is also  anxious to hear from  the producers and is  hopeful that                                                               
they will  be receptive  to look  at alternative  structures that                                                               
will help reduce the total cost of supply.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:36:54 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE  TARR  surmised  that under  the  existing  model,                                                               
"we're trying to  get the lowest cost of supply  before we go out                                                               
and find  buyers," and what  Mr. Meyer  is suggesting is  to find                                                               
out what  the buyers  are willing  to pay  and fit  the structure                                                               
around that.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER said  maybe  it is  sort of  in  between, because  the                                                               
market price  is known  right now,  and he  would like  to assess                                                               
other  things  to  reduce  costs.  All  parties  know  there  are                                                               
different  ways to  do that,  he said.  The current  framework of                                                               
everyone just  kicking in  their share probably  is not  going to                                                               
work, and he noted that Mr.  Butt touched on that very tactfully,                                                               
but that is where we are at.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:39:36 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  MICCICHE said  that Mr.  Meyer recognizes  a fundamental                                                               
difference between the comparisons  with commodity prices in 2009                                                               
that resulted  in limited  success for  Australia and  the market                                                               
conditions of 2016.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER  asked what  the  question  is.  "Do I  recognize  the                                                               
difference between the  '09 environment and 2016?"  He went ahead                                                               
and  explained  that the  fundamental  difference  is the  shale,                                                               
which was  a true paradigm  shift. When he entered  this industry                                                               
35 years  ago, he was  told that all of  the big fields  had been                                                               
found, and the  emphasis was on exploration. Now  the emphasis is                                                               
on the  production side, because  shale development is more  of a                                                               
mining activity. The cost structure  and long-term costs are more                                                               
well-known,  and without  the exploration  component, it  is less                                                               
risky. Additionally, large  tolling plants in the  U.S. are being                                                               
built  on  a  tolling  model,  which is  like  the  model  he  is                                                               
describing, so that cost is  very predictable. He noted that oil-                                                               
linked  pricing is  changing, and  Japan who  is a  historic oil-                                                               
linked buyer is wanting something different.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MICCICHE said  he was in Tokyo for a  meeting, and he was                                                               
trying to  understand "cocktail pricing,"  and a  polite Japanese                                                               
gentleman  said,  "When oil  is  cheaper,  we buy  oil."  Senator                                                               
Micciche  noted  that Mr.  Meyer  said  to  be prepared  for  the                                                               
turnaround in the mid-2020s. He said  he assumes that the lack of                                                               
consensus has  to do with  market conditions. "If the  people who                                                               
have the  most experience in  the planet are concerned  about the                                                               
viability  of this  project,  I  think we  should  share in  that                                                               
concern." Oversupply  and the  issue of  conversion is  a serious                                                               
concern, and  when buying a vehicle  in 2008, a person  could get                                                               
floor mats and  a fancy stereo, because it was  a buyers' market,                                                               
"and I don't  think that that's going to be  a short-term impact,                                                               
so I  hope you  carry that  conservatism with as  you seem  to be                                                               
somewhat  marching  forward," he  stated.  If  the discussion  is                                                               
internal versus  external capital,  he is open,  he said,  but if                                                               
the conversation is somewhat rogue, "I remain concerned."                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:43:20 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  MEYER said  he is  not sure  [about that  comment], but  his                                                               
conversation is not rogue. He  told the committee that the market                                                               
conditions are causing misalignment  or different perceptions. In                                                               
a recent  article from Natural  Gas Week, "Market  Doldrums Knock                                                               
Alaska LNG  Further Down in Exxon  Priorities," [ExxonMobil chief                                                               
executive Rex]  Tillerson said Alaska  LNG is still  important to                                                               
ExxonMobil, but the market has  changed, consequently the company                                                               
has  to  set priorities,  and  those  priorities start  with  the                                                               
lowest cost of supply. Unfortunately  other ventures have greater                                                               
certainty  in the  near  term.  Mr. Meyer  said  that the  Alaska                                                               
project  is challenged  by alternate  projects,  but everyone  is                                                               
aligned  in  wanting  to  see  the  Alaska  project  become  more                                                               
competitive and  reduce the cost of  supply. He said it  will not                                                               
be easy, it will not be a  free market, and when demand comes up,                                                               
there are eight  times the number of projects that  are needed to                                                               
capture that  demand. Those projects are  telling their investors                                                               
that they  are going to capture  it, and he is  hoping the Alaska                                                               
project will be one of those, but "we have to fight."                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE TARR  said that she  wants to feel like  Alaska is                                                               
not forcing  a project at a  time that it should  not happen. She                                                               
said some of  the producers want to slow down,  and maybe the new                                                               
concepts will alleviate this problem, but  it is not clear to her                                                               
whether  the  state is  forcing  a  project  that should  not  go                                                               
forward  or using  new opportunities  to enhance  a project  that                                                               
should.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEYER said  he shared  that completely;  the project  should                                                               
work and not be forced. He  believes there are different tools in                                                               
the tool box that are  common in world infrastructure projects to                                                               
make it work without forcing any particular party.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
3:46:44 PM                                                                                                                    
CO-CHAIR  GIESSEL  said that  the  people  sitting at  the  table                                                               
represent the people  of Alaska, but speaking for  herself she is                                                               
concerned about  Mr. Meyer's concept  and is discouraged  to hear                                                               
there  is an  idea to  start all  over again.  "We've tried  this                                                               
project several times,  and it hasn't penciled out  and with good                                                               
reason," she stated.  There is a gas offtake  authority "from our                                                               
conservation commission,  so that's an exciting  thing. It sounds                                                               
like you  agree with  us that  the cost of  supply is  a critical                                                               
driver for  this project,"  she commented, "and  yet you  want to                                                               
drive toward  a final  investment decision  by 2018.  That's very                                                               
concerning." She said  it is a conflicting message,  but she does                                                               
appreciate him coming today.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
^Fiscal Team                                                                                                                    
                          FISCAL TEAM                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  GIESSEL said  the next  agenda item  is to  hear from  the                                                               
producers, who represent three of  the five members of the fiscal                                                               
team-the  others   are  AGDC  and   the  Department   of  Natural                                                               
Resources.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:48:46 PM                                                                                                                    
DAVID VAN TUYL,  Alaska Regional Manager, BP,  Anchorage, said he                                                               
has been working  for BP in Alaska for almost  32 years, and many                                                               
years have been  dedicated to getting gas to market.  He works on                                                               
the fiscal  team and is also  on the management committee  of the                                                               
Alaska LNG  project. He stated  that the success of  this project                                                               
is  absolutely critical  to BP's  business in  Alaska and  to the                                                               
future of Alaska. The scale of  the project is unique for BP, and                                                               
the corporation  would like to see  Alaska LNG move to  market in                                                               
the 2020s.  He said  2016 is a  challenging year,  and "currently                                                               
we're  all living  that reality."  In the  low-price environment,                                                               
there are  over a trillion  dollars' worth of projects  that have                                                               
been  shelved, he  stated.  "It's tough  out  there." The  Alaska                                                               
project is also  challenged, he added, but it is  not unusual for                                                               
LNG projects  to go through  evolutions. The good news,  he said,                                                               
is that the  Alaska project has not been shelved.  He stated that                                                               
BP and Alaska  know what it means  to face challenges-"challenges                                                               
are  nothing new  to us."  The  January 2014  Heads of  Agreement                                                               
envisioned a  path to face  challenges together. It was  also the                                                               
path that was forged by this  legislature, and BP is committed to                                                               
progressing "in an aligned way forward."                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
3:51:50 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. VAN TUYL  said the Pre-FEED phase is 91  percent completed to                                                               
deliverables,  and  BP will  have  spent  $600 million  gross  to                                                               
advance Alaska LNG once the work  is done. He estimated that FEED                                                               
will cost over  twice that amount-maybe three  times that amount.                                                               
That  kind of  commitment  deserves a  careful  evaluation and  a                                                               
thoughtful  decision before  BP commits  its resources  or before                                                               
the state  commits Alaska's resource,  he stated. He said  BP has                                                               
found that  the cost of  supply is the most  meaningful benchmark                                                               
to measure  how LNG  competes with  other projects.  He explained                                                               
that it  is the  cost at which  a project can  sell product  to a                                                               
buyer and is typically quoted  on a discounted basis. Higher-cost                                                               
projects will struggle to find  willing buyers, he said. In fact,                                                               
BP has  commissioned a study  to evaluate the  competitiveness of                                                               
Alaska LNG, and he expects  the results of the commissioned study                                                               
next month.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. VAN TUYL  told the committee that at last  month's Alaska Oil                                                               
and  Gas  Association's  conference,  Daniel  Yergin,  an  energy                                                               
consultant who  is the industry  authority, reminded  people that                                                               
the  world LNG  market has  changed dramatically.  Yergin's firm,                                                               
IHS, sees a tremendous supply of  LNG from the Gulf of Mexico, he                                                               
said. That supply  is more than 10 times the  volume of known ANS                                                               
[Alaska  North  Slope]  gas. That's  the  reality  against  which                                                               
Alaska LNG  must compete, he  explained, and even with  the great                                                               
work of Steve  Butt and the project team, "we're  not there yet."                                                               
He  said he  understands and  appreciates the  state's desire  to                                                               
move its  project ahead,  and BP  understands the  state's fiscal                                                               
need for a  new revenue source. The state is  a vitally important                                                               
co-venturer  for BP,  he  noted, but  BP does  not  want to  move                                                               
quickly into  the largest  energy project  in North  America that                                                               
will only end up losing lots of money "for all of us."                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. VAN  TUYL said  Alaska LNG must  successfully compete  in the                                                               
global marketplace. He added that  LNG is a commodity, and buyers                                                               
have many  choices as to  where they  purchase it. He  noted that                                                               
buyers want  to pay as  little as possible.  He said BP  wants to                                                               
make  a competitive  offer, and  before BP  makes an  affirmative                                                               
decision  to enter  FEED, it  will  want to  make sure  of a  few                                                               
things.  It  wants to  make  sure  that  the  cost of  supply  is                                                               
competitive,  he  explained,  and  it  wants  to  follow  project                                                               
management best practices. Once BP  has found that the project is                                                               
competitive, it  needs fiscal  and commercial  terms sufficiently                                                               
defined  to feel  confident,  and  those terms  will  need to  be                                                               
finalized, including  continuation of  FERC Section  3 regulation                                                               
of the Alaska  LNG project as what was outlined  in that Heads of                                                               
Agreement. He  added that all  of the  participating co-venturers                                                               
will  have to  commit their  share of  funding for  FEED, and  BP                                                               
envisions  that any  resulting  agreements that  have  a term  in                                                               
excess of  two years would  be made available to  the legislature                                                               
for  approval as  provided in  SB 138.  He said  some terms  will                                                               
require confidential treatment. Once  BP confirms that Alaska LNG                                                               
can be  delivered at a competitive  cost of supply, it  will want                                                               
to  move forward  quickly. "We  will all  be highly  motivated to                                                               
minimize the time  we have capital tied up  that's not generating                                                               
cash," he clarified.  Some genuinely good news, he  said, is that                                                               
the  Alaska   LNG  combined  venture  continues   to  offer  many                                                               
significant  advantages. The  Prudhoe  Bay field  is  one of  the                                                               
world's  most  prolific basins,  he  said.  In  38 years  it  has                                                               
produced over  12 billion  barrels of oil,  and he  expects there                                                               
are at least  another 2 billion barrels along with  a massive gas                                                               
resource of over  4 billion barrels of oil  equivalent. "That's a                                                               
lot to play for."                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR.  VAN  TUYL  said  that  Mr.  [Keith]  Meyer  showed  a  slide                                                               
referencing efforts since the early  1980s to get Alaska's gas to                                                               
market. He said  that he thinks it is important  to remember that                                                               
since  that time,  the Prudhoe  Bay working-interest  owners have                                                               
made  good use  of that  gas  through gas  cycling, enhanced  oil                                                               
recovery,  and other  efforts, allowing  them to  produce over  3                                                               
billion barrels of oil more than was originally expected.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:58:54 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  VAN TUYL  said  BP  continues to  focus  on  using BP's  gas                                                               
resource  to  BP's best  benefit  in  Prudhoe  Bay, and  the  Pt.                                                               
Thomson gas condensate  field has been placed  in production with                                                               
ExxonMobil  as the  operator. It  contains  a gas  resource of  a                                                               
billion  barrels of  oil equivalent,  and the  companies "sitting                                                               
before  you" have  world class  experience  in development.  They                                                               
have  successfully  built mega  LNG  projects  around the  globe-                                                               
"that's a good  resource to have," he added.  They have financial                                                               
and  technical capabilities,  he noted,  and are  essential to  a                                                               
successful LNG project. "We have  a host government that's highly                                                               
motivated to get  our Alaska gas resource to  market," he stated.                                                               
He added  that all of those  things are wonderful. He  noted that                                                               
"we're aligned on our need  to continue to look for opportunities                                                               
to reduce the cost of supply for Alaska LNG."                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. VAN  TUYL said, "We're  actively discussing  alternative ways                                                               
to continue to advance the  project" and working cooperatively to                                                               
reduce the cost of supply. He  added that BP needs the Alaska LNG                                                               
project to be successful, and  a successful project would provide                                                               
a major  step towards  commercializing oil  and gas  resources on                                                               
the North Slope and around the  state. He added that a successful                                                               
Alaska LNG project  will mean a stable revenue source  for BP for                                                               
decades  to come  and a  source of  gas for  Alaska users.  It is                                                               
worth working hard  to achieve, he added, and that  is the future                                                               
of Alaska that BP is working for.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SEATON asked  if the Wood Mackenzie  study will be                                                               
made available.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR.  VAN  TUYL  said  BP   would  certainly  intend  to  make  it                                                               
publically available.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
4:01:19 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE SEATON said  if a gas project does  not take place                                                               
in the mid-2020s, how will  the gas impact Prudhoe Bay operations                                                               
and its economics? Will it negatively impact gas handling?                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. VAN  TUYL answered  that the  timing of a  major gas  sale at                                                               
Prudhoe Bay  is an  outcome and  is not a  target that  BP shoots                                                               
for,  but  once  BP  identifies a  viable  project  with  partner                                                               
support and  regulatory approval,  it will maximize  the resource                                                               
offtake  from Prudhoe  Bay. If  the project  were delayed,  BP is                                                               
going to  continue to  work to optimize  the resource,  and there                                                               
may be an impact, "but we don't see that today," he explained.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
4:03:21 PM                                                                                                                    
DARREN MEZNARICH,  Project Integration  Manager for  Alaska North                                                               
Slope  (ANS) Gas,  ConocoPhillips,  Anchorage, said  his team  is                                                               
responsible  for  integrating   the  technical,  commercial,  and                                                               
marketing  aspects   of  the  project  for   ConocoPhillips.  Its                                                               
objective is  to monetize ANS  gas resources,  and ConocoPhillips                                                               
remains  committed to  the completion  of the  pre-FEED technical                                                               
deliverables  in 2016,  "but we  have to  be realistic  about the                                                               
project  in   the  current   price  environment."   The  industry                                                               
continues to  face weak oil  prices that  have not been  seen for                                                               
more than a  decade and weak global natural gas  prices that have                                                               
not been  seen for  15 years  or more. He  said this  has created                                                               
challenges to  the industry as  it deals with  greatly diminished                                                               
revenues  from  their producing  assets.  He  noted testimony  in                                                               
January,  showing that  AKLNG project  faces economic  headwinds,                                                               
and low oil  and gas prices have depressed Asia  LNG prices by 60                                                               
percent since  2014. The global  LNG market is  oversupplied, and                                                               
analysts believe  the LNG  market will  remain under  pressure as                                                               
projects in Australia  and the Lower 48 come on  line and ramp up                                                               
to  full production,  he explained.  He said  that ConocoPhillips                                                               
expects the market  to strengthen at some point,  but that timing                                                               
is difficult to  predict. Additionally, the AKLNG  project is not                                                               
ready  for  a  FEED  decision, and  components  of  a  successful                                                               
project ready for  FEED stage gate will  include demonstrated gas                                                               
resource,  reliable fiscal  terms, and  sufficient resolution  of                                                               
commercial  and technical  issues  that result  in a  competitive                                                               
cost of supply and acceptable risk.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEZNARICH  said ConocoPhillips  is unlikely  to be  ready for                                                               
FEED decision in 2017, but it  is open to evaluating any credible                                                               
option and willing  to hear more about the  approach described by                                                               
AGDC's  Keith Meyer  today. The  opportunity  to improve  project                                                               
competiveness is  beneficial to all, he  said, and ConocoPhillips                                                               
will   not  stand   in  the   way   of  a   project  should   the                                                               
administration, legislature,  and others want to  proceed without                                                               
it. "We  will make our  gas available on  commercially reasonable                                                               
and mutually  agreeable terms," he said.  ConocoPhillips signed a                                                               
gas availability agreement  with the state in  December 2015, and                                                               
it  has  since had  preliminary  discussions  with the  state  to                                                               
progress  terms  by  which  ConocoPhillips  would  make  its  gas                                                               
available.  He  said  he  has  reviewed  the  list  of  questions                                                               
supplied by the chair and would be pleased to address them.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
4:06:35 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE TARR  said she appreciated his  specificity on not                                                               
being ready for  a FEED decision in 2017 and  his interest in the                                                               
new  concept  described  by  AGDC.  She  asked  how  to  approach                                                               
ConocoPhillips in the potential transition to a new arrangement.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEZNARICH  answered that he  had heard about the  new concept                                                               
only recently,  so ConocoPhillips is looking  forward to learning                                                               
more about it. He does not  have enough details to comment but is                                                               
looking forward to working collaboratively,  "but we'll just have                                                               
to see where it goes."                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
4:07:55 PM                                                                                                                    
BILL McMAHON,  Senior Commercial Advisor,  ExxonMobil, Anchorage,                                                               
said he  has worked on the  commercialization of gas for  over 20                                                               
years. He noted  that ExxonMobil has worked  under each framework                                                               
established  by Alaska,  including the  Stranded Gas  Development                                                               
Act approach for a pipeline to  North America. In 2007, there was                                                               
the Alaska  Gasline Development Act, and  ExxonMobil aligned with                                                               
TransCanada to advance  a pipeline and LNG project.  In 2014, the                                                               
Heads  of Agreement  was  executed  and SB  138  was enacted,  he                                                               
explained. ExxonMobil  entered the  Pre-FEED phase  and committed                                                               
resources  with  the  understanding that  fiscal  and  commercial                                                               
agreements  would work  in parallel.  He said,  "That has  been a                                                               
disappointment for us  to expose that money  without having those                                                               
completed."  The company  has continued  to advance  the Pre-FEED                                                               
deliverables,  and those  will be  wrapped  up this  year. It  is                                                               
important to  note that  the agreement  under which  the Pre-FEED                                                               
works was done is scheduled to expire next year, he added.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:09:44 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  McMAHON said  that  ExxonMobil will  continue  to support  a                                                               
project that  takes an aligned  approach with the state,  BP, and                                                               
ConocoPhillips to commercialize  the gas, such as  they are doing                                                               
under  the Alaska  LNG project;  "however, we  need to  recognize                                                               
that  the LNG  project is  global-the LNG  market is  global-with                                                               
many  potential   supply  and   support  sources   competing  for                                                               
available  demand." He  explained that  projects need  to have  a                                                               
competitive  cost  of  supply to  remain  viable  throughout  the                                                               
market cycles.  All major projects within  ExxonMobil's portfolio                                                               
are  evaluated  on fiscal  terms,  stability,  and political  and                                                               
regulatory  frameworks. "We  remain committed  to commercializing                                                               
the  natural gas  resources on  the  Alaska North  Slope and  are                                                               
willing  to  work  with any  interested  parties,  including  our                                                               
coventurers, AGDC, and the state  of Alaska to explore options to                                                               
commercialize  the  gas." In  January,  the  governor provided  a                                                               
letter outlining all  of the agreements and actions  needed to be                                                               
completed prior  to the end of  the regular session, or  he would                                                               
have  no   other  choice  but   to  consider  other   options  to                                                               
commercialize the  gas. Mr. McMahon  said that the  letter failed                                                               
to  include   a  fiscal  agreement,  and   ExxonMobil  wants  the                                                               
assurance of predictable fiscal terms.  When it became clear that                                                               
the governor's  plan was not going  to be met, other  concepts to                                                               
progress the project  were discussed in February  with the Alaska                                                               
LNG  project  "sponsors."  One   concept  was  working  with  the                                                               
administration to explore other options,  he stated, and taking a                                                               
"paced" approach to "our current Alaska LNG project."                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
4:11:51 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  McMAHON said  that  approach would  continue  to advance  to                                                               
regulatory  permitting,  target  potential cost  reductions,  and                                                               
develop   fiscal  and   commercial  agreements   that  ExxonMobil                                                               
expected. To  be clear, he  said, ExxonMobil has been  willing to                                                               
have group  discussions about any modifications,  "and ExxonMobil                                                               
didn't request that  those discussions cease." He  added that his                                                               
company  has not  been having  one-on-one  negotiations with  the                                                               
state, and this all changed  last week. The administration shared                                                               
an alternative concept  for commercializing ANS gas as  well as a                                                               
potential plan to move from a  project structure based on the HOA                                                               
and SB 138  to a state alternative  project structure. ExxonMobil                                                               
is  working  to understand  it  better  so  it can  evaluate  the                                                               
concept, he stated. He said it is exploring all options.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
4:13:24 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR GIESSEL said  she pulled up the last  presentation that Mr.                                                               
McMahon gave, because  it was so easy to follow.  She said he had                                                               
five elements, and  she asked for a review of  "where they are at                                                               
from the perspective  of the three companies."  The first element                                                               
is  gas production-"so  we can  check  that one  off," she  said.                                                               
Prudhoe Bay and Pt. Thomson  development plans and AOGCC offtake,                                                               
"so  we  can  check  that  one off,  [because]  AOGCC  has  given                                                               
authorization for offtake." She asked if that is true.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. McMAHON said yes.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  GIESSEL said  the next  criteria is  deliverable, and  "it                                                               
says  key   agreements,  lease  modifications,   governance,  gas                                                               
supply, firm transportation services  agreement." She asked where                                                               
the commercial negotiations are now.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. McMAHON said that those discussions have been suspended.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR GIESSEL  said she sent  a letter  to each of  the companies                                                               
asking  them  to  answer three  questions,  although  the  second                                                               
questions was only relevant to  AGDC. The letter asked how things                                                               
are going, and  in each response [the producers]  "call out" that                                                               
commercial agreements and fiscal  agreements necessary for a FEED                                                               
decision have been suspended. "How did that happen?"                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. McMAHON said ExxonMobil did not support that cessation.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. VAN TUYL said BP is ready to  engage at any point in time and                                                               
did not anticipate the suspension.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEZNARICH  said ConocoPhillips  is ready  to engage,  but, in                                                               
fairness, it  had not made a  lot of progress either.  It is also                                                               
ready to  engage if the  legislature and the  administration want                                                               
to go a different direction.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
4:16:08 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR GIESSEL said  the fiscal elements are  property tax (PILT),                                                               
royalty-in-kind decision,  predictable and  durable terms,  and a                                                               
constitutional  amendment. There  is an  opinion from  the Alaska                                                               
attorney  general,  and  it  is  on  [the  legislative  website],                                                               
indicating that  the state would need  a constitutional amendment                                                               
to  provide  a  predictable  tax structure.  She  said  the  next                                                               
category  includes  regulatory  elements, progressing  FERC,  and                                                               
pre-filing NEPA.  She believes the  companies are working  on the                                                               
FERC process.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. McMAHON said that is correct.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
4:17:27 PM                                                                                                                    
CO-CHAIR GIESSEL  said the last  element is  government relations                                                               
and broad  support for the project.  She stated that she  is very                                                               
supportive of this project, but  she is concerned about the cost.                                                               
"Our job  is to make  sure that the  benefit of this  resource is                                                               
maximized for the  people in the state," she said.  It is not the                                                               
legislature's job  to provide the  buyers with the  lowest priced                                                               
product, but  the most  competitive price  that brings  a return,                                                               
and that is the self-interest of [the oil companies].                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
4:18:27 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE JOSEPHSON said he has  been working on this topic,                                                               
and he has found the  witnesses to have impeccable integrity, and                                                               
everything they  have told him  has been accurate. He  noted that                                                               
everything  the  three  men  are   saying  supports  Mr.  Meyer's                                                               
position that this  project will have to be  shelved unless there                                                               
is  an  alternative. It  is  imperative  to fix  Alaska's  fiscal                                                               
problems, and it could take  years. There is an implication about                                                               
a  willingness to  continue to  engage in  commercial agreements,                                                               
and there  is an  implication that  the state  is not  willing to                                                               
engage in some  way. "That's a pretty powerful  implication to be                                                               
left with,  and I  think the  record needs  to be  made perfectly                                                               
clear," he  stated. Perhaps the  administration does not  see the                                                               
project as coming  to fruition in 2017/2018 moving  into FEED. He                                                               
wants to know what factor caused the suspension.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. McMAHON told him to ask AGDC.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR. VAN  TUYL said  if he is  asking if the  state is  willing to                                                               
engage, then  he agrees  with Mr.  McMahon. He  added that  BP is                                                               
willing to engage on any  discussions to advance the project, but                                                               
the common  thread is  the cost  of supply and  more needs  to be                                                               
done so that the project can compete.  There are a lot of ways to                                                               
approach that; the project team  work is essential, and there are                                                               
other  things that  might be  possible, like  tax efficiency.  He                                                               
said he is always willing to hear a good idea.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
4:22:32 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  STOLTZE said  he is  trying  to buttonhole  the lack  of                                                               
consensus and asked if there is consensus with the industry.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEZNARICH  said ConocoPhillips  needs to have  technical work                                                               
done and  a reliable cost  estimate. Additionally, there  are the                                                               
fiscal  terms,   the  commercial  terms,  and   the  market.  The                                                               
technical  piece  is   going  well,  but  "the   fiscal  and  the                                                               
commercial are not ready and  obviously the market is not ready,"                                                               
and  that is  why ConocoPhillips  indicated that  it is  unlikely                                                               
that it would be ready for FEED in 2017.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
4:24:26 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR STOLTZE  said, based  on his readings,  that he  has been                                                               
bombarded  by a  lack  of consensus  in  the administration.  "We                                                               
don't usually have four commissioners  appointed during one day,"                                                               
he stated.  The most  prominent litigator  in his  memory against                                                               
the  industry  resigned,  and  "there's a  lot  of  almost  coded                                                               
message on the DNR departure about  the plan of development and a                                                               
move to  put that in  default." He added  that around 2005  or so                                                               
there  was litigation  on a  field,  Pt. Thomson,  with only  one                                                               
player,  Exxon, through  three governors,  "and  I think  finally                                                               
about half  way through former Governor  Parnell's administration                                                               
there was a resolution or some  type of closure on that, so seven                                                               
years just  on a litigation issue  on a plan of  development with                                                               
only one player  involved." He asked if that is  part of the lack                                                               
of consensus  on the plan of  development. He said he  knows from                                                               
watching the media there is  a lack of consensus, apparently, and                                                               
maybe   that   consensus   is  being   solidified   through   new                                                               
appointments. "Maybe that will be a  new model … straight down to                                                               
the commissioners and directors,  but I guess the combination-I'm                                                               
trying  to figure  out this  whole lack  of consensus  discussion                                                               
that Mr.  Meyer brought up." He  added that he can  observe there                                                               
has been a lack of consensus  internally, but he is not trying to                                                               
"take the steam out of the engine  of what we might hear from DNR                                                               
later,  but it  pops up."  He said  when there's  words used,  he                                                               
tries to take  them to heart, and he is  trying to understand the                                                               
lack of consensus  part. He added that it seems  to involve a lot                                                               
of things,  so, he said, he  will just default to  the whole plan                                                               
of development  discussion. He stated  that he did not  know what                                                               
the position  was last  week, and  he assumes  that he  will know                                                               
what it is soon when there  is new [unclear]. He continued, "Just                                                               
on the  whole issue of plan  of development and using  that legal                                                               
lever."                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR. VAN TUYL said BP, as  the Prudhoe Bay unit operator on behalf                                                               
of  all  the  working  interest owners,  submitted  its  plan  of                                                               
development to DNR  "that we think should be  approved." The plan                                                               
included  "the level  of information  consistent  with the  plans                                                               
that we've  provided each year  to DNR  since the annual  plan of                                                               
development process started  in the year 2000." He  noted that BP                                                               
has  not yet  heard  a formal  response from  DNR,  and he  looks                                                               
forward  to receiving  an  approval from  DNR.  Regarding how  BP                                                               
views  AKLNG, it  all starts  with cost  of supply,  and once  BP                                                               
identifies a  competitive cost  of supply, "then  get out  of the                                                               
way." He said BP will want  to move forward with that project and                                                               
get that gas to  market, "and until we do, it  makes sense for us                                                               
to continue to work hard to  make sure that the project competes-                                                               
it's as simple as that."                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR.  McMAHON  added  that  there  is total  support  with  BP  as                                                               
operator  and  the way  it  has  handled the  plan-of-development                                                               
process. He  said ExxonMobil  is focused on  cost of  supply, and                                                               
that will  be used  to go  through the  time-tested process  of a                                                               
stage-gate.  "Before signing  up  for  our share  of  the over  a                                                               
billion dollars  of FEED  expenditures, one  of the  things we'll                                                               
want  to  do  is  assess  where   do  we  think  the  project  is                                                               
commercially before making … that decision."                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
4:29:27 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. McMAHON said that  he seems to be in line  with Mr. Van Tuyl,                                                               
so he does not see a lack of unity there.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEZNARICH  said ConocoPhillips  supports the  operator's plan                                                               
of development  for Prudhoe  Bay. Regarding  the cost  of supply,                                                               
ConocoPhillips is interested in new ideas.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR STOLTZE said it sounds like  there is a consensus on that                                                               
part.  He  said AGDC  represented  a  lack  of consensus,  so  he                                                               
guesses he  will hear what  DNR says,  "and we'll find  out where                                                               
that little glitch on the consensus is."                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  TARR  noted that  the  witnesses  said that  2017                                                               
would not  be a  time when  their companies  would want  to enter                                                               
into  FEED, but  she did  not hear  information about  a schedule                                                               
that might look  more possible. She acknowledged  that there were                                                               
many unknowns, but, legislators will  be faced with evaluating if                                                               
the new  concept is  a good idea,  so she asked,  "How long  of a                                                               
delay would  we be looking at  versus some other idea  that may …                                                               
move things along a little  more quickly?" She noted that Senator                                                               
Giessel said  there is hesitation  in starting all  over, because                                                               
it  has taken  so many  years  to get  to this  point. "How  much                                                               
information can you share with  us about how you'll evaluate that                                                               
timeline?"                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:31:59 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. VAN  TUYL said he  takes some  exception to an  assumption of                                                               
showing opposition  to a  2017 FEED.  For BP,  "the timing  is an                                                               
outcome, whether it's any particular  time, that's something that                                                               
you earn  as a result  of having done  the work." Doing  the work                                                               
means getting to a competitive cost  of supply and such things as                                                               
the  governance terms  and commercial  agreements,  he added.  If                                                               
that  can  get  done  promptly  and  everyone  can  make  a  FEED                                                               
decision, "we'll look  at the calendar and figure out  when it is                                                               
and we'll  celebrate." Once there  is a competitive  project that                                                               
will be the time for each company to decide to commit to FEED.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. McMAHON said ExxonMobil does  not want to be schedule driven,                                                               
because that is how bad things  happen to mega projects. He cited                                                               
cost  overruns and  technical problems,  so  ExxonMobil does  not                                                               
want to pin  down a date for  the FEED decision, "but  we want to                                                               
work diligently to  clear all the factors that we  test each time                                                               
we approach a  stage gate." He said he has  only had the proposal                                                               
for a  week and looks forward  to learning more about  it, and if                                                               
it  has  ways  to  reduce  the  cost  of  supply,  that  will  be                                                               
supported. In  order to compete in  the LNG market, there  has to                                                               
be a competitive cost of supply, he reiterated.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
4:34:10 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. MEZNARICH  responded that for  ConocoPhillips to make  a FEED                                                               
decision,  it must  understand  the cost,  the  assurance of  the                                                               
resource,  and the  rules of  the game.  Whoever the  investor is                                                               
will want  to understand that  there is gas supply  assurance and                                                               
what the  fiscal and  commercial terms are,  he said.  "Those are                                                               
the things that  we can work on  and then the market  is going to                                                               
take care of itself."                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
4:34:54 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE  HAWKER said  Mr. McMahon  has been  an articulate                                                               
spokesperson for the  producers, so he is asking  for his opinion                                                               
on Mr. Meyer  being very adamant about the  importance of sharing                                                               
more information with the legislature  and the public, as well as                                                               
getting  the legislature  more  involved in  the  next series  of                                                               
joint  venture  agreements  and  contracts.  He  then  asked  Mr.                                                               
McMahon  if he  and his  corporation  would object  to the  state                                                               
giving the legislature  and the public the  new concept documents                                                               
that were offered last week.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. McMAHON  said that proposal  belongs to AGDC,  and ExxonMobil                                                               
would have no objections if AGDC chose to release it.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. VAN TUYL and MR. MEZNARICH agreed.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
4:37:42 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  MACKINNON asked  the  producers if  there  has been  any                                                               
disadvantage by  not having AOGCC  at full complement.  There has                                                               
been a vacant position for almost two years, she stated.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. VAN TUYL  said no; BP has had great  interactions with AOGCC,                                                               
and it  celebrates the  ruling that it  obtained last  October on                                                               
both the  offtake rate  at Prudhoe Bay  and for  CO2 reinjection.                                                               
Both are essential elements in allowing AKLNG to move forward.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. McMAHON echoed  that for Pt. Thomson. ExxonMobil  was able to                                                               
secure the necessary offtake rules, he said.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEZNARICH said  ConocoPhillips  appreciates  what AOGCC  has                                                               
done; "I think they've done what they could and done well."                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  MACKINNON said  the  governor's  press release  suggests                                                               
that the  offtake is an indication  that Alaska is ready  to move                                                               
forward  and  sell gas  in  market.  She  asked  if that  is  the                                                               
decision or  is further work  needed for the commission  to start                                                               
taking off or selling some of the CO2.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
4:39:59 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  VAN  TUYL  said  AOGCC  gave  approval  with  some  homework                                                               
assignments that  are due in five  years. There is still  work to                                                               
do on CO2 optimization, he clarified,  but BP is confident it can                                                               
do the technical work required within the timeframe required.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MACKINNON said she is  concerned that "we could reappoint                                                               
an  AG   in  48  hours,   a  DNR  commissioner,  and   maybe  the                                                               
administration  has had  more lead  time than  that, but  that we                                                               
continue to  hold vacant a  very technical position that  is part                                                               
of the  livelihood of understanding  and creating  monetary value                                                               
for the  people of  Alaska." She  stated that  Commissioner [Dan]                                                               
Seamount's  position  expires in  2017,  and  there will  be  two                                                               
vacancies. She  said she is  not part of  the press, so  she does                                                               
not get her answers publicly sometimes,  and she is doing a shout                                                               
out  to  the   governor's  team  that  she  is   waiting  for  an                                                               
appointment and  has been for  at least  18 months. She  said she                                                               
appreciates  Mr.  Meyer   taking  over  the  lead   at  AGDC  and                                                               
advocating for  Alaskans an economically and  commercially viable                                                               
project.  She  noted  that  she feels  like  "some  folks  aren't                                                               
playing well  together." Legislators  are not  able to  be inside                                                               
some  of  the  conversations,  so  they  would  just  be  finger-                                                               
pointing. She  asked the witnesses why  there is not a  gas sales                                                               
agreement between the three producers  so that some of the supply                                                               
costs can  be advanced.  She said the  legislature has  been told                                                               
that  "you're  not  playing  well together"  in  reaching  a  gas                                                               
balancing agreement on the North Slope. She asked for an update.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
4:42:58 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. MEZNARICH answered that he  could not comment on confidential                                                               
negotiations,  but ConocoPhillips  continues  to make  reasonable                                                               
offers  and resolve  the differential  ownership between  the two                                                               
fields. "It' a challenging issue right now."                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. VAN  TUYL said there has  been tremendous progress on  a very                                                               
commercially complex  issue, but he  does not know what  it takes                                                               
to reach agreement, because it  depends on the counter party. "We                                                               
are very  much motivated  to try  to remove  any of  the barriers                                                               
that we have." He said BP  will devote the resources necessary to                                                               
solve those problem, no matter how complex or time consuming.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. McMAHON  answered that ExxonMobil has  been making reasonable                                                               
offers as well.  If Alaska elects to take royalty  in kind, it is                                                               
a party  to the agreement,  "and they  have been involved  in the                                                               
negotiations when they were under one."                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MACKINNON expressed hope to  find a way for a legislative                                                               
representative   to   start   listening    to   some   of   these                                                               
conversations,  because  "with  the  answers that  we  were  just                                                               
given,  it's  hard  to  determine   how  to  help  progress  this                                                               
integrated  project."  There  is finger-pointing  that  at  least                                                               
three  of  the parties  are  not  coming  up with  the  balancing                                                               
agreement for a variety of reasons  that we're not privy to." She                                                               
said it is frustrating to not  have the inside details, "and then                                                               
we hear  the blame game  going around  that the state  hasn't set                                                               
our fiscal terms when we've  been waiting for some agreement from                                                               
the  management team  or  the  producers." She  said  she is  not                                                               
meaning to  be disparaging;  it is a  complex project.  She hopes                                                               
the administration allows participation  so someone can represent                                                               
the legislature to give confidence that the blame game is fair.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
4:46:29 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE SEATON  asked if  there are other  agreements that                                                               
are in conflict besides the  gas balancing agreement, and, if so,                                                               
what is  the nature  of any other  upstream agreements  that have                                                               
not reached alignment?                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR.  VAN  TUYL   told  Representative  Seaton  to   look  at  the                                                               
governor's January  18 letter for  a list of agreements  that the                                                               
administration  was looking  for at  that time.  "Those were  the                                                               
things that we were engaged on at the time," he stated.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SEATON asked  about other  "complex issues"  that                                                               
are not in alignment and that he is not aware of.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR. VAN TUYL  said one of the  key issues that was  not listed in                                                               
the letter was the fiscal terms, which remains to be completed.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. McMAHON said  he has a copy  of the letter, and  one issue is                                                               
the  byproduct handling  agreement, which  deals with  taking the                                                               
byproducts from  the GTP and use  them at Prudhoe Bay.  The third                                                               
issue  listed  is  the  field  cost  allowance  under  the  lease                                                               
agreements, he added.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SEATON  asked  if  those agreements  need  to  be                                                               
worked out before a FEED decision.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
4:49:12 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  MEZNARICH  added  that  the  other issue  that  came  up  in                                                               
testimony  in  Palmer,  Alaska,   last  fall  was  the  marketing                                                               
structure, "and there's JV versus  equity marketing," and that is                                                               
another open issue.  He explained that JV  means "full four-party                                                               
JV  marketing."  From  the   perspective  of  ConocoPhillips  and                                                               
regarding  a  constitutional  amendment,   before  a  package  is                                                               
brought to the legislature and  the public, all these things need                                                               
to be  sorted out. The rules  of the game and  the technical work                                                               
all have to be  done, he said, and then the  project can be ready                                                               
when the market is ready. "They should be resolved in advance."                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SEATON  asked if  that  would  be before  a  FEED                                                               
decision is made.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEZNARICH  said that is  before a  package is brought  to the                                                               
legislature    for   ratification,    which   will    precede   a                                                               
constitutional  amendment, "and  then  you'd be  ready  to go  to                                                               
FEED."                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR GIESSEL said the goal of  FEED was to make that decision                                                               
in 2017. If that were delayed,  she asked, would the end time for                                                               
the  project coming  on line  also be  delayed by  a commensurate                                                               
amount of time or can that time be made up?                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
4:51:05 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  McMAHON  answered  that  when  a  project  schedule  is  put                                                               
together, it is  important to understand what is  on the critical                                                               
path. The  regulatory process, securing  permission from  FERC to                                                               
construct, is  one, so  the question  is hard  to answer  day for                                                               
day. There are scenarios where the schedule can be maintained.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. MEZNARICH noted that there  is technical and regulatory work,                                                               
but if  the commercial work  is not  ready, that may  not matter.                                                               
Some work in  Alaska have had permits and have  not gone forward,                                                               
he added. "We  really see this as  a package," so he  is not sure                                                               
that the regulatory work would be a critical path in all cases.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
4:52:28 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  MACKINNON asked  if the  current application  can change                                                               
leads without  having to  restart the FERC  process. If  the AGDC                                                               
proposal includes the  state taking the lead, would  FERC have to                                                               
be restarted?                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR.  MEZNARICH said  he  is  not a  FERC  expert,  but there  are                                                               
requirements to decide in advance.  But people can work together,                                                               
he added.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. VAN TUYL said there are  certain changes that would require a                                                               
restart, but he does not know about the project lead.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
4:54:25 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. McMAHON  said that is  one thing to  do due diligence  on. It                                                               
may be something that is quite simple to work out, he said.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  MACKINNON asked  about  the land  ownership interest  in                                                               
Soldotna and Nikiski held by an LLC.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
4:55:48 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. McMAHON  answered that  the land  is for  the LNG  plant, and                                                               
FERC  requires the  applicant to  have control  of that  land. He                                                               
said the land  might be purchased or leased, but  it is too early                                                               
to say how "that may come out."                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SEATON deduced  that  a constitutional  amendment                                                               
would  be in  late 2018,  which is  a requirement  for FEED,  "so                                                               
we're really looking at 2023 before  we would even get to project                                                               
sanctioning?"                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR.  McMAHON  said  ExxonMobil  needs  to  have  predictable  and                                                               
durable fiscal terms  to be able to enter FEED.  Those terms must                                                               
be valid under  Alaska's constitution, he stated.  In mapping out                                                               
additional milestones  down the  road, "we  approach each  one of                                                               
those stage gates, including the  final investment decision, with                                                               
that same rigor of looking  at the commercial agreements, looking                                                               
at  the  potential  commercial  viability  of  the  project,  the                                                               
economics  of the  projects, looking  at our  own individual  LNG                                                               
marketing progress,  so …  it's hard  to put  dates on  that." He                                                               
said ExxonMobil does not want to be schedule driven.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
4:58:52 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE  SEATON  noted  that  a  constitutional  amendment                                                               
could  happen no  sooner than  late  2018, so  the FEED  decision                                                               
would not  come until after  that. Then  there would be  the FEED                                                               
process, which optimistically would take two years.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR. VAN  TUYL said  BP does not  need a  constitutional amendment                                                               
for the  fiscal certainty  it envisions.  "We recognize  that the                                                               
former attorney  general had a  different opinion and  what not,"                                                               
but  BP has  gone  down a  path before  in  seeking fiscal  terms                                                               
without such  an amendment. He said  BP does not see  that delay.                                                               
He said  BP would  want "sufficient  confidence that  the parties                                                               
would all endorse those terms to  be able to make that commitment                                                               
from BP's  perspective for FEED. What  that sufficient confidence                                                               
might entail will be very  fact dependent." He reiterated that BP                                                               
has not  requested a constitutional  amendment, but it  might end                                                               
up being a  requirement if that is what the  host government says                                                               
is necessary.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  GIESSEL  said  there  are  competing  attorney  general                                                               
opinions about that.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. McMAHON  said, "The  premise given  to us was  it would  be a                                                               
constitutional amendment."                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR NAGEAK thanked all of  the witnesses and said that never                                                               
in his  wildest dreams  would he  "live to be  66 years  and have                                                               
been involved  with the oil industry  for at least 45  years." He                                                               
started back in 1969 as a  jug hustler, he explained, when he was                                                               
19 years  old. He  remembers those  days of  putting jugs  in the                                                               
ground and hooking them together,  doing one line and another for                                                               
16-hour days.  He said he  has known  some people from  the state                                                               
since when he was a young man,  and "Marty" has been a friend for                                                               
many years. He thanked "everybody  involved in this." In the past                                                               
45 years, "I've been very productive  for us in the North Slope."                                                               
Without oil  we would not  have our own municipality,  "and those                                                               
leaders who did  all that work for  us, and most of  them are all                                                               
gone," but  for those who  are still alive,  he said he  wants to                                                               
thank them publicly for giving  their lives to "better our ways."                                                               
There are  various people who were  in charge of the  North Slope                                                               
Borough, including  mayors and assembly  members, and he  said he                                                               
wants to  thank everybody  for what they  have done,  and without                                                               
working  with the  industry, they  would  not be  where they  are                                                               
today. He said there would not  be a permanent fund for the state                                                               
nor  for the  North Slope  Borough, and  without industry,  there                                                               
would not be the fire department  and all the clinics, roads, and                                                               
schools. "We  may not see eye-to-eye  on a lot of  things, but we                                                               
have  to live  together, and  we're hoping  for another  windfall                                                               
here  someday." He  hopes the  next generation,  his son  and his                                                               
grandkids, will  be able to enjoy  all that he has  enjoyed. "But                                                               
thank you  very much  for your presentation,  and we'll  see each                                                               
other again, I'm sure," he stated.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
5:05:35 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR GIESSEL said she has a  list of deliverables, and she asked                                                               
the producers to provide their  statements in written form and to                                                               
keep her  apprised about what would  happen with FERC "if  a lead                                                               
changes." She said she has been  asked to inquire with the DOL as                                                               
to AGDC's  role under SB  138. She also  requested a copy  of the                                                               
concept document from AGDC.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
5:06:39 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  GIESSEL  adjourn  the Joint  Senate  and  House  Resources                                                               
Committee meeting at 5:06 p.m.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
16-002_FiscalCertainty.pdf SRES 6/29/2016 10:00:00 AM
AG Opinion on Fiscal Certainty-AKLNG
SB138 Section 77 Report.PDF SRES 6/29/2016 10:00:00 AM
SB 138
AKLNG – Legislative Update 29Jun16 v8 - Final.pdf SRES 6/29/2016 10:00:00 AM
AKLNG Update 6-29-16 presentation
2016 06 29 AGDC Joint Resources Presentation.pdf SRES 6/29/2016 10:00:00 AM
AGDC Presentation AKLNG Update 6-29-16
AGDC Contracting Service List.pdf SRES 6/29/2016 10:00:00 AM
Response tp Questions
AGDC Employee & Embedded Contractor Salary & Benefits.pdf SRES 6/29/2016 10:00:00 AM
Response to Questions
AGDC Board Member Travel Per Diem and Stipend.pdf SRES 6/29/2016 10:00:00 AM
Response to Questions
AGDC Employee & Board Member Signed CAs.pdf SRES 6/29/2016 10:00:00 AM
Response to Questions
AGDC Employee Confidentiality Agreement.pdf SRES 6/29/2016 10:00:00 AM
Responses to Questions
AGDC Organizational Chart.pdf SRES 6/29/2016 10:00:00 AM
Responses to Questions
AGDC Responses to Senator Giessel set 1.pdf SRES 6/29/2016 10:00:00 AM
Responses to Questions
AGDC Responses to Senator Giessel set 2.pdf SRES 6/29/2016 10:00:00 AM
Responses to Questions
Letter_EM to Sen Giessel_RE AKLNG QandA_28Jun2016.pdf SRES 6/29/2016 10:00:00 AM
Responses to Questions
Persily overview of AK LNG Project 6-28-16.pdf SRES 6/29/2016 10:00:00 AM
Persily overview AK LNG project as of June 28, 2016
Sen. Giessel Questions - COP response - June 29 2016.pdf SRES 6/29/2016 10:00:00 AM
Responses to Questions
2016_June_28 - BP Response to Senator Giessel.pdf SRES 6/29/2016 10:00:00 AM
Responses to Questions
BP Legislative Testimony_06-2016_R8.pdf SRES 6/29/2016 10:00:00 AM
AKLNG Update BP testimony
enalytica, AK LNG Project Update, July 2016.pdf SRES 6/29/2016 10:00:00 AM
AK LNG Update JT Resources Cmmttee 6-29-16
COP response - Joint Committee question Jun 29 2016.pdf SRES 6/29/2016 10:00:00 AM
AK LNG Update Jt Resources Cmmttee 6-29-16
AGDC - AK LNG Project Concept Document.pdf SRES 6/29/2016 10:00:00 AM
AGDC AKLNG Project concept document
1. 07132016 Responses Joint Resources Qs.pdf SRES 6/29/2016 10:00:00 AM
AGDC Responses - AK LNG Update of June 29, 2016
2. Letter from Keith Meyer to Senators Meyer and Giessel 13 July 2016.pdf SRES 6/29/2016 10:00:00 AM
Letter AGDC President to Sen. Meyer and Sen. Giessel