Legislature(2015 - 2016)ANCH LIO AUDITORIUM

07/19/2016 01:00 PM Senate RESOURCES

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Audio Topic
01:00:34 PM Start
01:01:47 PM Presentation: Plan of Development for the Prudhoe Bay Unit
03:41:00 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ Plan of Development for the Prudhoe Bay Unit TELECONFERENCED
Representative(s) of the Alaska Oil & Gas
Conservation Commission:
Andy Mack, Commissioner, DNR
Corri Feige, Director, Division of Oil & Gas, DNR
Paul Decker, Petroleum Geologist I, DNR
Mark Cotham, Contract Attorney, DOL
-- Teleconference <Listen Only> --
-- Testimony <Invitation Only> --
                    ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE                                                                                  
              SENATE RESOURCES STANDING COMMITTEE                                                                             
                         July 19, 2016                                                                                          
                           1:00 p.m.                                                                                            
                         Anchorage LIO                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Senator Cathy Giessel, Chair                                                                                                    
Senator Mia Costello, Vice Chair                                                                                                
Senator John Coghill                                                                                                            
Senator Peter Micciche                                                                                                          
Senator Bill Stoltze                                                                                                            
Senator Bill Wielechowski                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Senator Bert Stedman                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
OTHER LEGISLATORS PRESENT                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Senator Anna MacKinnon                                                                                                          
Representative Dave Talerico, via teleconference                                                                                
Representative Mike Hawker, via teleconference                                                                                  
Representative Kurt Olson, via teleconference                                                                                   
Representative Dan Saddler                                                                                                      
Representative Craig Johnson                                                                                                    
Representative Liz Vazquez                                                                                                      
Representative Geran Tarr                                                                                                       
Representative Cathy Tilton                                                                                                     
Representative Andy Josephson                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
COMMITTEE CALENDAR                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
PRESENTATION: PLAN OF DEVELOPMENT FOR THE PRUDHOE BAY UNIT                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     - HEARD                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
No previous action to record.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
WITNESS REGISTER                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
CATHY FOERSTER, Chair                                                                                                           
Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commissioner (AOGCC)                                                                            
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT: Explained AOGCC  rulings on allowable offtake                                                             
of gas at Prudhoe Bay and Pt. Thomson.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
ANDY MACK, Commissioner Designee                                                                                                
Department of Natural Resources (DNR)                                                                                           
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT: Spoke to DNR procedures.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
PAUL DECKER, Manager                                                                                                            
Resource Evaluation Section                                                                                                     
Division of Oil and Gas                                                                                                         
Department of Natural Resources                                                                                                 
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT: Gave  an overview  of Prudhoe  Bay petroleum                                                             
fields.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
CORRI FEIGE, Director                                                                                                           
Division of Oil and Gas                                                                                                         
Department of Natural Resources                                                                                                 
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION   STATEMENT:  Described   the  oil   and  gas   plan  of                                                             
development (POD) for the Prudhoe Bay unit.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MARK COTHAM, Contract Attorney                                                                                                  
Alaska Department of Law                                                                                                        
Houston, Texas                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT:  Explained that it is  appropriate to request                                                             
marketing plans from the working interest owners of Prudhoe Bay.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
ACTION NARRATIVE                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
1:00:34 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  CATHY   GIESSEL  called  the  Senate   Resources  Standing                                                             
Committee meeting  to order at 1:00  p.m. Present at the  call to                                                               
order were  Senators Coghill,  Costello, Wielechowski,  and Chair                                                               
Giessel.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
^Presentation: Plan of Development for the Prudhoe Bay Unit                                                                     
   Presentation: Plan of Development for the Prudhoe Bay Unit                                                               
                                                                                                                              
1:01:47 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR GIESSEL said  she wanted to provide the  public and members                                                               
of  the committee  with an  in-depth  discussion of  the plan  of                                                               
development  (POD) for  petroleum  resources in  the Prudhoe  Bay                                                               
unit on the North Slope. The topic  has been in the media for the                                                               
last  few months,  and letters  have been  exchanged between  the                                                               
Alaska Department of Natural Resources  (DNR) and the Prudhoe Bay                                                               
unit operator, which is BP Alaska.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR GIESSEL  explained that a  plan of development  is required                                                               
under Alaska regulation and is  submitted annually for review and                                                               
approval. It  describes how a  resource is going to  be developed                                                               
in the  upcoming year. The POD  is approved-or not-by DNR.  If it                                                               
is  deemed insufficient,  DNR can  propose modifications.  If the                                                               
operator agrees  to the revisions,  then the plan  of development                                                               
goes  forward. In  the  case of  the Prudhoe  Bay  unit, DNR  has                                                               
proposed  changes  to  next  year's  POD,  and  if  the  proposed                                                               
modifications are  not accepted by  the operator and there  is no                                                               
approved  plan of  development,  the current  plan could  expire.                                                               
Under  11 AAC  83.343,  no development  activity  can be  allowed                                                               
without an approved POD.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR GIESSEL noted that Senator  Stoltze and Representative Tarr                                                               
joined the meeting.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
1:04:28 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  GIESSEL  said the  letters  from  the administration  have                                                               
asserted  that  the  Prudhoe  Bay  unit should  have  a  plan  of                                                               
development for  the gas.  "I think all  Alaskans are  aware that                                                               
we've  been developing  the oil,  but now  the DNR  is requesting                                                               
there be  a plan of development  for the gas." The  state is also                                                               
requiring  the  companies to  provide  gas  marketing plans,  she                                                               
stated,  which  is  a  new  policy.  The  Prudhoe  Bay  producing                                                               
companies contend  that a  plan to develop  the gas  is premature                                                               
and that  it would violate antitrust  laws if they were  to share                                                               
their marketing  strategies. She noted  that the DNR  letters are                                                               
posted on the BASIS website, and  they state that there is a duty                                                               
to  make  the gas  available  from  Prudhoe  Bay to  third  party                                                               
projects on  commercially reasonable  terms in  the absence  of a                                                               
binding  commitment  to  progress  to   a  major  gas  sale.  The                                                               
companies  say this  is unprecedented.  "We're here  to find  out                                                               
more,"  she  said. She  added  that  elected officials  represent                                                               
Alaskans, and she  wants to make sure  resource committee members                                                               
understand so  that their voice  can be heard  appropriately, and                                                               
they can make appropriate decisions should it come down to that.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  GIESSEL  noted  that Representatives  Talerico  and  Olson                                                               
joined the meeting via teleconference.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:06:57 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR GIESSEL  announced that  there will  be testimony  from the                                                               
Alaska  Oil  and Gas  Conservation  Commission  (AOGCC), and  she                                                               
noted  that many  Alaskans  do not  know  about this  commission,                                                               
which was established prior to  statehood. Its main functions are                                                               
to  prevent waste  and  to  protect the  public  interest in  the                                                               
production of  oil and gas.  In 1978, the present  commission was                                                               
formed  as an  independent  quasi-judicial agency  of the  state,                                                               
with  powers  and  duties described  in  statute,  including  its                                                               
responsibility  to  prevent  the  waste of  resources.  She  then                                                               
welcomed Representative Josephson to the meeting.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
1:07:42 PM                                                                                                                    
CATHY   FOERSTER,  Chair,   Alaska  Oil   and  Gas   Conservation                                                               
Commission (AOGCC),  Anchorage, said that  she has been  asked to                                                               
discuss the  rulings that  AOGCC made  on gas  offtake allowables                                                               
from Prudhoe  Bay and  Pt. Thomson in  anticipation of  major gas                                                               
sales from the North Slope in  2025. There is no regulatory piece                                                               
for AOGCC in  a plan of development;  however, because preventing                                                               
waste  and  encouraging greater  ultimate  recovery  are part  of                                                               
their statutory  mandate, if  the AOGCC sees  something in  a POD                                                               
that is  counter to  either of those  objectives, "we  could then                                                               
call a  hearing of our  own motion  and pursue something  that we                                                               
didn't like in a POD."                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:09:24 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR GIESSEL asked who "we" refers to.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. FOERSTER explained that she  is representing the AOGCC, which                                                               
is supposed  to have  three commissioners but  now only  has two.                                                               
She noted  that she is  the chair of  the commission and  is also                                                               
the  engineering commissioner.  Statute  requires an  engineering                                                               
commissioner who has at least  ten years of petroleum engineering                                                               
experience. The other commissioner is  Dan Seamount, and he fills                                                               
the statutory  requirements of having a  petroleum geologist with                                                               
at least  ten years of experience.  The statute also calls  for a                                                               
public member with  knowledge and experience relevant  to oil and                                                               
gas issues, but that position is currently vacant.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
1:10:18 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. FOERSTER said  there was an existing Prudhoe  Bay gas offtake                                                               
allowable set  at 2.7 BCF  [billion cubic  feet] per day,  "but I                                                               
call that  the over-my-dead-body allowable,"  because it  was set                                                               
in the 1970s  when it was thought that Prudhoe  Bay would recover                                                               
8 billion  barrels of oil,  and enhanced oil  recovery techniques                                                               
were not well  understood. The thought was to get  the gas at the                                                               
same time as getting the oil,  but if that first gasline had been                                                               
built, "we  probably would have  gotten 8 billion barrels  out of                                                               
Prudhoe Bay, and  we would have gotten  a lot of gas  too, but we                                                               
wouldn't be  meeting here today."  There would have  been Kuparuk                                                               
but  probably not  Nikaitchuq, Oooguruk,  Alpine,  or "all  those                                                               
other  little  satellites  that  have come  on  over  the  years,                                                               
because Prudhoe Bay would be  dead now." Instead, it has produced                                                               
about 12 billion barrels and has over 2 billion left to produce.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:12:07 PM                                                                                                                    
MS.  FOERSTER said  she calls  it over-my-dead-body,  because "we                                                               
needed to  see a specific  case for  gas offtake with  timing and                                                               
rate and  see the analysis of  the offsetting oil and  gas losses                                                               
before  we  could grant  an  allowable,  but  we knew  that  that                                                               
allowable was based on premises that were no longer accurate."                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR GIESSEL  asked her  to explain  the connection  between gas                                                               
and oil in simple terms for the listening public.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS. FOERSTER said she will get  to that. The Prudhoe Bay operator                                                               
presented  a specific  case of  a volume  of offtake  starting in                                                               
2025, and AOGCC  made a ruling based on that  very specific case.                                                               
She noted  that it is  the only data  that has been  presented to                                                               
the commission, so  that is the only scenario that  it has made a                                                               
ruling  on. Pt.  Thomson has  a  different set  of concerns,  but                                                               
there was no offtake allowable in  place for that gas at all, and                                                               
now there is, and it is 1.1 BCF  per day. The bottom line is that                                                               
the two  allowables together provided sufficient  offtake to meet                                                               
the proposed 2025 project.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS.  FOERSTER  stated  the  AOGCC  has  five  statutory  mandates                                                               
relating  to  oil  and  gas  production:  protect  human  safety;                                                               
protect   fresh  ground   waters;   prevent  hydrocarbon   waste;                                                               
encourage  greater  ultimate  recovery; and  protect  correlative                                                               
rights, which relates to a  landowner stealing someone else's oil                                                               
and gas.  Preventing waste and  encouraging greater  recovery are                                                               
the two mandates  that are relevant in this  discussion. She said                                                               
that all  proven gas  on the  North Slope of  any quantity  is at                                                               
Prudhoe Bay  and Pt. Thomson,  and there is a  lot of it.  It has                                                               
been deemed stranded, as there is no way to get it to a market.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:15:22 PM                                                                                                                    
MS.  FOERSTER  said  since  AOGCC  is  charged  with  encouraging                                                               
greater hydrocarbon recovery, it is her  job to help see that the                                                               
gas gets  to market. At  Prudhoe Bay  there is 22  trillion cubic                                                               
feet (TCF)  of gas that the  operators say they can  recover, and                                                               
Pt. Thomson  has 6  TCF that operators  expect can  be recovered.                                                               
Along  with encouraging  recovery,  the AOGCC  has  a mandate  to                                                               
prevent waste. When gas is taken  from an oil field before all of                                                               
the oil has been produced, some  oil will be lost. Taking the gas                                                               
too soon  will cause some of  the oil to be  lost forever. Taking                                                               
gas  from  a  condensate  field   like  Pt.  Thomson  before  the                                                               
condensate has  been recovered will  cause some condensate  to be                                                               
left in the ground forever. It is a fact; it is just physics.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
1:16:47 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. FOERSTER  said there are 2.5  billion barrels of oil  left in                                                               
Prudhoe Bay, and  that is huge and about same  amount Kuparuk has                                                               
produced in its entire life. There  is a lot of condensate at Pt.                                                               
Thomson, an  amount almost  equal to the  oil that  Swanson River                                                               
has  produced since  it came  on  line 50  years ago.  This is  a                                                               
significant resource that needs to be protected.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  GIESSEL  asked for  a  definition  of condensate  for  the                                                               
listening public.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS. FOERSTER  explained that condensate  is a lighter  end liquid                                                               
that is in  the gas in a  gas reservoir. In a  reservoir like Pt.                                                               
Thomson, it is under pressure  and temperature and called a dense                                                               
fluid.  It is  not really  a  liquid or  gas,  it is  kind of  in                                                               
between, but  as it comes  to the  surface, the liquids  drop out                                                               
and it changes to a light oil.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:18:48 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. FOERSTER reiterated  that allowing gas to be  sold before all                                                               
of the oil and condensate have  been recovered will result in the                                                               
waste  of some  liquid, but  not allowing  the operators  and the                                                               
state to take  advantage of what might be the  only window to get                                                               
the gas  would not encourage greater  ultimate resource recovery,                                                               
so there  are tradeoffs. The  people at AOGCC have  been studying                                                               
the effects  of gas sales  on the  loss of liquid  recovery since                                                               
before Ms. Foerster arrived in  2005, and they are convinced that                                                               
they can trust  the technical validity of BP  and Exxon's reserve                                                               
reservoir  models.  She said,  "We've  participated  with BP  and                                                               
Exxon  in running  sensitivities on  those studies  to assist  in                                                               
optimizing  both liquid  and gas  recovery and  understanding the                                                               
dynamics of  protecting the oil  versus protecting the  gas." She                                                               
said she feels good about the  data and the conclusions of AOGCC.                                                               
From the day that  she got to the AOGCC, she  thought it would be                                                               
very  difficult for  BP and  Exxon  to convince  them to  approve                                                               
major gas  sales during her  tenure, as  she thought it  would be                                                               
further out  in the future. "What  I've been telling you  guys is                                                               
this:  for  Prudhoe  Bay,  later   is  better,  less  is  better,                                                               
accelerating  production of  the  oil beforehand  is better,  and                                                               
developing and  implementing strategies to mitigate  those losses                                                               
once the  gas production begins  is better." That's just  the way                                                               
it is, she  stated. The less gas taken, the  slower the damage to                                                               
the  remaining oil.  One  strategy to  mitigate  the losses  that                                                               
"they've been  working on  for several  years" is  called gas-cap                                                               
water injection.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:21:49 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. FOERSTER  noted that she  has been saying that  "the monkey's                                                               
going to be on Exxon's back to  prove to us that blowing down the                                                               
gas  cap  is  the  only  feasible  way  to  establish  commercial                                                               
production from  Pt. Thomson," rather  than cycling the  gas back                                                               
in to keep  the reservoir pressure up and  allowing condensate to                                                               
come out. She  has said that the operators will  get fully behind                                                               
North Slope gas sales when the  timing is right for them, and, in                                                               
general,  when it  is right  for them,  the timing  is right  for                                                               
Alaska. She noted a public  hearing last August where the Prudhoe                                                               
Bay owners testified  in support of major gas  sales from Prudhoe                                                               
Bay starting  in 2025. A few  days later, the Pt.  Thomson owners                                                               
testified  in  support  of  allowable  offtake  from  that  field                                                               
starting  in  2015. On  October  15,  2015, AOGCC  issued  orders                                                               
allowing offtake  at 3.6 BCF per  day at Prudhoe Bay  and 1.1 BCF                                                               
per day at Pt. Thomson starting in 2025.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:23:24 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. FOERSTER  showed a slide  summarizing the important  parts of                                                               
rulings by AOGCC for Prudhoe Bay  and Pt. Thomson. In addition to                                                               
the allowable  offtakes that were  granted to the  operators, the                                                               
AOGCC  put in  some caveats.  In five  years, BP  must provide  a                                                               
report  on  its  oil  recovery acceleration  activities  and  the                                                               
results  of those  activities. "In  other words,  you've told  us                                                               
that you're  going to do  all of  these things to  accelerate oil                                                               
production so that 2025 will be  the right time," and rather than                                                               
trusting their word,  they will have to demonstrate  it. "We also                                                               
asked that they  give us some studies  on CO2 injection-different                                                               
alternatives  for  it-but we  gave  them  approval for  that  but                                                               
contingent on the results of  those studies." The operators asked                                                               
for authority  to dispose  of the  CO2, but  AOGCC does  not have                                                               
jurisdiction.  It  is  under the  EPA  [Environmental  Protection                                                               
Agency],  and AOGCC  does  not  have primacy  for  that class  of                                                               
underground injection control,  "so we weren't able  to give them                                                               
anything on that except the  EPA's phone number." At Pt. Thomson,                                                               
in addition  to the  allowables, AOGCC  stipulated that  prior to                                                               
the major gas  sales, Exxon must demonstrate that  cycling is not                                                               
feasible.  Pt. Thomson  started  up on  a  pilot cycling  project                                                               
earlier this year, and AOGCC will watch and see how that goes.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:25:08 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. FOERSTER  noted that AOGCC  can call a hearing  to reconsider                                                               
these decisions, along with any  other decisions it makes, at any                                                               
time. It is a promise to Alaskans  that AOGCC will keep an eye on                                                               
this and  make sure that 10  years later decisions are  still the                                                               
right ones. If things evolve, AOGCC will stay in touch.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
1:26:04 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR GIESSEL asked Ms. Foerster to discuss CO2.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS. FOERSTER explained that carbon  dioxide is a gas entrained in                                                               
hydrocarbon gas  in Prudhoe Bay  and Pt.  Thomson, and it  is not                                                               
combustible for  use as a fuel.  It is a waste  byproduct. In the                                                               
Lower  48,  the  CO2  might  be used  as  an  EOR  (enhanced  oil                                                               
recovery) product. On  the North Slope, the CO2 might  be able to                                                               
be used as  an EOR, but it  might not, and those  are the studies                                                               
the operators will be performing over the next several years.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
1:27:40 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR STOLTZE  asked when the  governor will appoint  the third                                                               
AOGCC commissioner.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS.  FOERSTER stated  that the  governor can  appoint the  public                                                               
member any time,  "and we're optimistic that he's  going to," and                                                               
three  heads are  better than  two. She  noted that  Commissioner                                                               
Seamount's  term  ends  at  the  end of  February  2017  and  two                                                               
commissioners are required for a quorum.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR STOLTZE  observed that the  governor could appoint  a new                                                               
quorum and a majority. He  asked, "What is the contestability and                                                               
the  "appealability",  and  what   are  the  standards  that  you                                                               
establish and  the professional and  the legal standards,  and is                                                               
it common to have a ruling contested or appealed?"                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MS. FOERSTER  answered that  it takes agreement  of at  least two                                                               
commissioners  to make  a  decision.  In the  time  she has  been                                                               
there, she has never had two  against one, but that should not be                                                               
too  surprising,  because decisions  are  based  on the  laws  of                                                               
physics and  the statutes and  regulations set out by  the state.                                                               
"There's  just no  latitude  in our  decisions."  If the  science                                                               
supports it, and  it fits into the laws, "it's  pretty darn black                                                               
and white." She  said she has not seen a  decision that all three                                                               
commissioners  did not  come  to  or a  decision  that the  staff                                                               
recommended against. If AOGCC makes  a decision that the affected                                                               
party does  not like it, the  party can request a  rehearing, and                                                               
if they disagree, they can then take it to court.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR STOLTZE  said his observation  is that "you might  be the                                                               
one on two to one under certain scenarios."                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  WIELECHOWSKI suggested  that economics  also factors  in                                                               
somewhat.  He asked  how much  oil is  expected to  be lost  from                                                               
Prudhoe Bay by  allowing a 3.6 BCF offtake, and  if there will be                                                               
loss of  oil if the allowable  gas offtake is increased.  "How do                                                               
you balance that?  Do you do a net-present value  for the state?"                                                               
There must be a financial metric that is used, he added.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS. FOERSTER  answered that she  did not recall the  exact number                                                               
for  losses,  but  it is  based  on  a  model  that is  based  on                                                               
assumptions that  are likely  to change,  but it  will be  in the                                                               
hundreds of thousands  of barrels at Prudhoe Bay.  There are over                                                               
2 billion  barrels left to produce,  much of that in  the next 10                                                               
years, but  there will  still be  enough oil  left to  have those                                                               
losses. "This  was presented  to us  as this is,  or may  be, our                                                               
only window  of opportunity."  It was  looked at  it in  terms of                                                               
losing  28  TCF  of  gas,  so on  the  basis  of  heating  value,                                                               
independent  of price,  1,000 cubic  feet of  gas is  worth about                                                               
one-sixth of  a barrel  of oil.  She gave  the example  of losing                                                               
300,000 barrels  of oil, which  would equate  to 1.8 BCF  of gas,                                                               
"and there is a boatload more than 1.8 BCF of gas to be lost."                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:34:09 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. FOERSTER  said that the ideal  scenario would be to  not lose                                                               
the oil  but still get the  gas. "But we were  given one scenario                                                               
and  told that  that scenario  may be  the only  scenario, so  we                                                               
evaluated that scenario."                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  WIELECHOWSKI   questioned  the  lack  of   any  economic                                                               
analysis on  the loss of  net present value  to the state  or the                                                               
internal rate of return for the state or for the industry.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS. FOERSTER stated  that the commission does  not make decisions                                                               
based on  economics. ExxonMobil  and BP  make their  decisions on                                                               
economics,  and there  are other  departments in  the state  that                                                               
look at money,  but "I don't think  you have to have  a very high                                                               
powered calculator  to know that this  is a good decision  as far                                                               
as present value."                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI asked  if the state has the  ability to say,                                                               
for instance,  oil is  $100 a  barrel and  is much  more valuable                                                               
than  the gas,  so  that somebody  will be  looking  out for  the                                                               
state's treasury.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS.  FOERSTER  answered that  no  one  has  done that,  but  that                                                               
testimony is always  welcome at the AOGCC hearings.  The oil that                                                               
the state is selling is the same  as the oil that the operator is                                                               
selling, and if selling 10 extra  barrels of oil versus 10 MCF of                                                               
gas  is better  for the  operator….  "I think  the economics  are                                                               
going to  be pretty much  the same  for the oil  companies versus                                                               
the state  on the  decision to sell  the gas or  sell the  oil in                                                               
this particular  field." This is a  case where "if it's  good for                                                               
them, it's good for us."                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  GIESSEL said  she reviewed  a 1996  opinion from  Attorney                                                               
General [Bruce] Botelho that defines  the tension between DNR and                                                               
AOGCC. Mr.  Botelho points out  that DNR actually  has economists                                                               
available to make those kinds of determinations.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  WIELECHOWSKI said  it would  be important,  particularly                                                               
for  Pt. Thomson,  where costs  are probably  very high.  The oil                                                               
companies have  said for years that  "they want to blow  it down;                                                               
it's too  expensive to produce."  There can  be a huge  amount of                                                               
tension at Pt. Thomson,  and there is a need for  the state to be                                                               
advocating  on   Alaskans'  behalf.  There  will   be  tremendous                                                               
variation between what Exxon wants  and what the state wants when                                                               
costs are high  but the potential returns to the  state are high.                                                               
The company  has projects all  over the world, but  the potential                                                               
resource  is huge  for Alaska.  He  reiterated the  need to  look                                                               
after the state's  interest, "and I do think that  a lot of times                                                               
what's good  for BP,  ConocoPhillips, and Exxon  is good  for the                                                               
state, but I think Pt. Thomson is probably a little different."                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:37:52 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. FOERSTER  said she would like  to think the AOGCC  is looking                                                               
out for the state.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI noted the lack of economic analysis.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS. FOERSTER said  that is true, but it is  still looking out for                                                               
the best interests  of the state, "and we do  take input from the                                                               
people who do have that information."                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
1:38:33 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE  SADDLER noted  that  the technical  determination                                                               
only comes  at leaseholder  requests. The state  does not  keep a                                                               
running  tally of  when  it  might be  best  to  start doing  gas                                                               
offtake  versus oil.  Is  that  correct? He  asked  if the  AOGCC                                                               
determines  the best  time to  take gas  only when  a leaseholder                                                               
requests it.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS.  FOERSTER  said  yes  and  no.  If  the  operator's  plan  of                                                               
development  includes something  that would  create waste  or not                                                               
encourage  greater  recovery, AOGCC  could  step  in and  have  a                                                               
hearing.  "If we  felt that  having a  gas offtake  was something                                                               
that the operator  wasn't trying to do and it  was time, we could                                                               
step in and have a hearing about that."                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SADDLER asked if there  are policy rules that play                                                               
into the decision. What if the  laws of physics and state law are                                                               
countered  in  order  to  meet a  marketing  window?  Would  that                                                               
override the technical requirements, and who has that role?                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS. FOERSTER said  that did go into  AOGCC's consideration. There                                                               
is a time  when it takes more  gas to fuel the  production of the                                                               
oil  than  the oil  is  actually  worth,  "and that  happens  way                                                               
later." But the operator came to  AOGCC and said this is a window                                                               
of opportunity, so  for that testimony, AOGCC said,  "if you take                                                               
this window of opportunity, your  oil losses will be greater than                                                               
they would  be if you waited  longer, but the oil  losses will be                                                               
less than the gas losses."                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:41:44 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE SADDLER  asked if a  state agency ever  asks AOGCC                                                               
for a calculation, or does it just serve the lease holders?                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS.  FOERSTER said  AOGCC  serves  the State  of  Alaska, but  it                                                               
regulates the industry. It also  tries to be helpful in answering                                                               
questions that are not too onerous.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SADDLER   asked  if   DNR  or  anyone   from  the                                                               
governor's office has asked AOGCC for recent assessments.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS. FOERSTER answered no.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COGHILL  said technology  has shifted,  and oil  has been                                                               
recovered "probably  better and  better." He  has heard  that the                                                               
gas and water  flooding have changed the dynamics  of the Prudhoe                                                               
Bay field and asked if that  changes the calculus of when to take                                                               
oil  or  gas. The  reinjection  of  gas  over time  actually  has                                                               
created very, very different dynamics in that field, he added.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS. FOERSTER answered  that technology has changed  the timing on                                                               
when  to take  the gas.  The original  ruling was  probably sound                                                               
when  it  was  made,  but  EOR, or  enhanced  oil  recovery,  has                                                               
advanced. There was not horizontal  or multilateral drilling, for                                                               
example. That is why AOGCC can revisit its decisions over time.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COGHILL asked if CO2 becomes valuable.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS. FOERSTER said  that CO2 as an EOR product  is well-known, but                                                               
how  it  can be  used  on  the North  Slope  has  not been  fully                                                               
evaluated, and AOGCC is asking the operators to evaluate it.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
1:45:19 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR COGHILL asked if the primary  use of CO2 would be for oil                                                               
recovery, but not for gas extraction.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS. FOERSTER said CO2 is an oil recovery tool.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:46:23 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE SADDLER said he went  to Saskatchewan and saw that                                                               
CO2 was being sequestered and  turned into a value-added product.                                                               
He  asked if  there is  any commercial  value to  the CO2  at Pt.                                                               
Thomson.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS. FOERSTER said that is not her area of expertise.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR GIESSEL recapped  that gas offtake has  been authorized for                                                               
2025, and  AOGCC will continue  oversight to ensure  oil recovery                                                               
is enhanced and waste prevented.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:47:47 PM                                                                                                                    
ANDY   MACK,  Commissioner   Designee,   Department  of   Natural                                                               
Resources (DNR), Juneau, noted that  he has been the designee for                                                               
19  days. He  introduced  other  DNR staff  who  will provide  an                                                               
overview  of   the  Prudhoe  Bay   reservoir  and  the   plan  of                                                               
development process.  He referred  to a letter  he sent  to Chair                                                               
Giessel telling  her he has received  all kinds of advice  in the                                                               
last  19   days,  but  he   has  been  advised  not   to  discuss                                                               
hypothetical  scenarios  today  or   what  is  happening  in  the                                                               
deliberative process.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  GIESSEL noted  an announcement  the day  before that  John                                                               
Hendrix was  appointed as  a special advisor  to the  governor on                                                               
oil and  gas. That role  is typically filled by  the commissioner                                                               
of DNR or  the director of oil  and gas, so she  asked which role                                                               
Mr. Mack will play and if there will be conflict.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER MACK  said he  is delighted to  have Mr.  Hendrix on                                                               
board as  he has a  very deep and  long history in  the petroleum                                                               
industry. The role  of senior advisor is important,  and the role                                                               
of commissioner  is different but includes  ample authorities and                                                               
responsibilities. Mr. Hendrix  will be a tremendous  asset to the                                                               
state, and he looks forward to working with him.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR GIESSEL  said that the  DNR commissioner has  the authority                                                               
to  make  a  royalty-in-kind  and  royalty-in-value  decision  on                                                               
Alaska's resources. Who will make that decision?                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  MACK answered  that  upstream  decisions reside  in                                                               
DNR.  Of course,  on  all major  decisions,  Alaskans can  expect                                                               
consultation with the governor's office.  Mr. Hendrix may be part                                                               
of that conversation, but he does not know to what extent.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:52:01 PM                                                                                                                    
PAUL DECKER,  Manager, Resource  Evaluation Section,  Division of                                                               
Oil  and   Gas,  Department  of  Natural   Resources,  Anchorage,                                                               
referred to  a slide presentation and  the map on slide  3, which                                                               
shows the  Chukchi and Beaufort Seas  in the north and  the outer                                                               
continental  shelf.  Federal  management occurs  offshore  beyond                                                               
three  miles. There  is federal  acreage  onshore, including  the                                                               
National  Petroleum Reserve,  Alaska (NPRA),  which is  about the                                                               
size of  Indiana. The  area has been  somewhat explored,  and the                                                               
most promising results  have been in northeastern  NPRA, which is                                                               
an  extension of  the Alpine  pool  of the  Colville River  unit,                                                               
which  is  coming  into  production   now.  He  pointed  out  the                                                               
protected Arctic  National Wildlife  Refuge, Gates of  the Arctic                                                               
National Park, and the Noatak  National Monument and Preserve. He                                                               
noted  the Arctic  Slope Regional  Corporation inholdings  within                                                               
the  state-managed Central  North Slope  lands. The  red outlines                                                               
denote area-wide  lease sales, which includes  "our" Beaufort Sea                                                               
area-wide  sale, and  the North  Slope area-wide  sale, which  is                                                               
home to really  all of the commercially producing oil  and gas to                                                               
date,  other than  production beginning  in the  NPRA. There  are                                                               
also the  area-wide sales  in the North  Slope foothills,  "so we                                                               
offer those sales every year, usually in November."                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR. DECKER noted the dark  green shapes that represent the extent                                                               
of the oil  accumulations on the North Slope; so  Prudhoe Bay and                                                               
Kuparuk  figure prominently  there. The  red spots  represent gas                                                               
fields, notably the  Pt. Thomson accumulation next  to the Arctic                                                               
Wildlife Refuge.  There are several  oil and  gas-especially gas-                                                               
fields along  the foothills.  He pointed  out "the  sparseness of                                                               
exploration  overall" is  indicated by  black dots,  representing                                                               
about  600 exploratory  wells to  date. Many  areas, particularly                                                               
away  from  the existing  discoveries,  are  "really very  poorly                                                               
explored-or sparsely explored."                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:57:26 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  DECKER moved  to slide  4, a  map of  the Prudhoe  Bay unit.                                                               
There is an outline of  the huge IPA (initial participating area)                                                               
that is really one oil and gas pool.  It is 30 miles east to west                                                               
and up to  15 miles north to  south, and it occupies  most of the                                                               
Prudhoe  Bay unit,  "so the  IPA is  the big  dog, obviously,  at                                                               
Prudhoe." It  was discovered in  1968, and production  started in                                                               
1977 with  the startup  of TAPS  [Trans Alaska  Pipeline System].                                                               
With 38  drill pads and  six processing centers,  peak production                                                               
was in 1987 and about 2 million barrels per day.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:58:50 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. DECKER turned to a  3-dimensional schematic of Prudhoe Bay on                                                               
slide  5, showing  different reservoirs  at different  depths. He                                                               
said there  are 13 different  "participating areas  (PAs)," which                                                               
are  various  reservoirs  that   contribute  to  production.  The                                                               
deepest level  is the  Lisburne limestone  and dolomite.  The IPA                                                               
reservoir is above  that, and it is sometimes referred  to as the                                                               
Permo-Triassic or  the Sadlerochit, Sag, and  Shublik formations,                                                               
but  he terms  it as  the Ivishak  formation. Above  that is  the                                                               
Kuparuk  Formation with  a number  of accumulations.  The western                                                               
reservoirs are  Borealis and  Aurora. There  are some  around the                                                               
Point McIntyre field, which are  referred to as the Greater Point                                                               
McIntyre  Area (GPMA).  Moving up  to  the shallowest  reservoir,                                                               
there is  the Schrader  Bluff with Orion  and Polaris,  which are                                                               
somewhat  viscous.  The  Orion,  Polaris,  Aurora,  and  Borealis                                                               
reservoirs are  referred to as  the western satellites,  and they                                                               
have one POD. There is another  POD for the GPMA area reservoirs,                                                               
and there is one for the main IPA reservoir.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  DECKER turned  to  slide 6,  a diagram  of  the Prudhoe  Bay                                                               
anchor field  that made all the  other accumulations commercially                                                               
accessible. The  IPA is really  the lion's share of  what happens                                                               
at Prudhoe Bay. All of the  other production is important, and he                                                               
listed the number of wells, producers, and oil in each.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:02:14 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  DECKER  showed  slide  7,  a  Prudhoe  Bay  reservoir  cross                                                               
section. It  is very  heterogeneous with  regard to  porosity and                                                               
permeability, he  explained. The  lower most portion  is lousiest                                                               
for oil recovery.  Slide 8 shows another cross  section. Prior to                                                               
development,  the   reservoir  fluids  were  simply   layered  in                                                               
discreet fluid layers: gas at the  top (the gas cap), a thick oil                                                               
column  (oil leg),  and  then the  heavy oil  and  tar (HOT).  So                                                               
everything was nice and simple, he stated.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:05:16 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. DECKER  said the layers  are really complicated now,  as they                                                               
were jumbled up  by fluid movements. By lowering  the pressure in                                                               
the  reservoir, the  gas bubble  grows and  moves down  into what                                                               
used to be  the oil column, he explained. He  noted the secondary                                                               
(water  flood)   and  enhanced  (miscible   injections)  recovery                                                               
projects. Lean gas  injection is another mechanism,  which is the                                                               
injection  of  the  "dry"  gas  that has  been  stripped  of  its                                                               
condensate back into  the top of the reservoir where  that gas is                                                               
"hungry  to   scavenge  additional  higher   chained  hydrocarbon                                                               
molecules." The  lean gas injection is  a really big part  of the                                                               
current recovery, he told the committee.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. DECKER said  the gas cap water injection  is best exemplified                                                               
on the  lower right of  the slide. It  is a huge  innovation that                                                               
the  owners have  implemented at  Prudhoe Bay  and not  something                                                               
that  has been  the standard  procedure. It  has had  substantial                                                               
impacts. He pointed  out oil in the diagram that  has not been as                                                               
effectively  swept, which  represents a  real opportunity  to get                                                               
that next  billion or two  barrels out  of this reservoir.  To do                                                               
that, he said, the energy of the reservoir has to be maintained.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR.  DECKER said  the Prudhoe  Bay IPA  was initially  modeled to                                                               
recover  about  9.6  billion  barrels   of  oil.  The  cumulative                                                               
production to date  is more than 12.3 billion,  and currently the                                                               
estimated ultimate recovery (EUR)  is about 14 billion barrels-46                                                               
percent greater than the original  estimate. "That's a remarkable                                                               
achievement,"  he  opined. He  stated  that  the WIOs  have  been                                                               
diligent, in his opinion, in  maximizing oil recovery as mandated                                                               
by  the  AOGCC, by  using  coiled  tubing sidetracks,  horizontal                                                               
lateral  wells,   and  well-workover   jobs.  "We've   seen  four                                                               
successive years  of increasing activity  for those kinds  of oil                                                               
recovery jobs." There has been  a recognition and exploitation of                                                               
the  new  targets-the opportunities  that  are  created by  these                                                               
complex oil/water/gas  distributions in the reservoir.  There has                                                               
also been  the optimization of  vapor phase oil  recovery through                                                               
the lean gas injection technique.  Right now, about 50 percent of                                                               
the oil  liquids recovered  from the Prudhoe  Bay pool  exists in                                                               
the reservoir  in the vapor phase,  and that is a  very effective                                                               
mechanism, he  stated. There has  also been  expanded development                                                               
of the shallower  and thinner lower quality  Sag River reservoir,                                                               
and  there   has  been  lots   of  infrastructure   and  facility                                                               
maintenance projects  over the years that  have improved recovery                                                               
and extended the life by several decades.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:10:49 PM                                                                                                                    
MR.  DECKER showed  a slide  of  the Prudhoe  Bay timeline.  Many                                                               
projects came  on line between  1977 and  1990, and they  made it                                                               
possible that by  1990 the estimate of ultimate  recovery went up                                                               
to  12 billion  barrels. He  thinks  the IPA  will eventually  be                                                               
about 14 billion barrels.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  GIESSEL noted  the arrival  of Representative  Vazquez and                                                               
Senator MacKinnon.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:12:10 PM                                                                                                                    
CORRI FEIGE,  Director, Division  of Oil  and Gas,  Department of                                                               
Natural Resources, explained that a  plan of development (POD) is                                                               
like an  annual checkup with  a doctor. Once a  PA (participating                                                               
area)  is formed,  the  POD  is required.  The  POD is  submitted                                                               
annually  to  the  division  of  oil and  gas  and  outlines  the                                                               
previous year activities and the  planned activities for the next                                                               
year. It  allows the  operator to  demonstrate that  the unitized                                                               
resources are being diligently developed and produced.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR STOLTZE asked who the patient is and who the doctor is.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MS. FEIGE said she sees it  as the discourse a patient would have                                                               
with a  doctor, where the  patient comes in and  discusses health                                                               
issues, last  year's diet and  exercise activities, and  the plan                                                               
for the upcoming year. All  operations must be conducted under an                                                               
approved  POD. The  regulatory  authority is  in  11 AAC  83.343,                                                               
which  states that  the POD  must  include a  description of  the                                                               
proposed   development   based   on  the   reasonably   available                                                               
information  at the  time that  the  plan is  submitted. It  must                                                               
include the  long range proposed development  that will delineate                                                               
and produce  the underlying oil  and gas reservoirs  and maintain                                                               
and enhance recovery once production is established.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
2:15:14 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. FEIGE  added that  the POD  must include  any lands  that may                                                               
reside within  the unit that are  not yet included in  a PA. "The                                                               
POD  looks for  an explanation  of  the activities  that will  be                                                               
directed at those lands in order  to establish PAs and bring that                                                               
acreage  into  production,  as  well."  The  division  looks  for                                                               
details of  any proposed  operations for  the upcoming  year, and                                                               
then  it looks  for  a  discussion of  any  surface locations  or                                                               
proposed  facilities that  need  to be  maintained or  developed,                                                               
such as pads, camps, and roads.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:16:18 PM                                                                                                                    
MS.  FEIGE turned  to slide  14 to  explain the  flow of  the POD                                                               
process. The  operator submits  its POD at  least 90  days before                                                               
the  prior  POD   expires.  The  division  has  10   days  for  a                                                               
"completeness review,"  where the  DNR technical  teams determine                                                               
if anything  else is needed.  The process is iterative  until the                                                               
division has  the required  information. After  completeness, the                                                               
POD review begins, and it  includes technical sessions looking at                                                               
the geology,  reservoir models, and  other data. The  process can                                                               
continue even  if some  parts are  stalled. "We  like to  keep it                                                               
moving, because  of that  90-day clock."  The division  checks if                                                               
prior commitments  were fulfilled, which sometimes  they are not.                                                               
Once, for  example, a river  flooded drilling sites  and impacted                                                               
production. "We  talk about that;  we share that  information; we                                                               
amend … the  plan going forward to be sure  we're capturing those                                                               
residual activities and bringing them forward."                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:19:16 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. FEIGE said the division then  determines if the POD meets the                                                               
regulatory  criteria:  Does  it  protect  all  parties?  Does  it                                                               
promote conservation of all resources?  Does it prevent waste? If                                                               
there are still  outstanding issues or a lack  of information, it                                                               
goes  back around.  If parties  are at  loggerheads, the  process                                                               
goes into "default and cure,"  where the division issues a notice                                                               
of default.  There would  be a  cure period of  not less  than 90                                                               
days, and without resolution for  a producing unit, the POD would                                                               
advance to the Superior Court to challenge the leases.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:21:00 PM                                                                                                                    
MS.  FEIGE  said  slide  15   is  specific  to  the  Prudhoe  Bay                                                               
participating area. The POD was  submitted on March 31, 2016, and                                                               
the anniversary  date is April 1.  At the beginning of  the year,                                                               
DNR  Commissioner Myers  issued a  letter to  all unit  operators                                                               
saying DNR  would seek information  related to gas  marketing. He                                                               
also  requested more  information  on facility  sharing to  learn                                                               
about   maximizing   existing   facilities  and   about   sharing                                                               
agreements. That went  out to all 62 units in  the state on March                                                               
24.  The unit  operator, BP,  was then  scheduled for  the annual                                                               
technical  field review  and  submitted its  POD  for 2016.  That                                                               
triggered  the  10-day  completeness  period,  and  the  division                                                               
determined it  needed additional  information on  infill drilling                                                               
schedules  and  gas handling.  The  division  also asked  for  an                                                               
expanded discussion of marketing toward  a major gas sale. On May                                                               
2, BP, as  operator and working interest owner,  responded to the                                                               
April  11 letter,  and  a nuance  came  to light:  BP  is a  unit                                                               
operator, but BP, ConocoPhillips,  and ExxonMobil are the working                                                               
interest  owners in  the  leases  in the  unit.  BP notified  the                                                               
division that  they do not  market unitized resources-it  is done                                                               
by the  working interest owners,  and each handles  its ownership                                                               
portions separately. ConocoPhillips made  the same assertion, and                                                               
on April  12, the  division issued a  letter clarifying  what the                                                               
division needed.  "We still needed a  bit of an update  on an old                                                               
CO2 study  and a handling  study from  2010, and then,  again, we                                                               
clarified the  discussion about marketing information  to come in                                                               
from the working interest owners."                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:24:57 PM                                                                                                                    
MS. FEIGE  said that on  May 17,  BP, as working  interest owner,                                                               
responded to  the May 12  request and then, as  operator, invited                                                               
the  division  to  have  another technical  session  to  look  at                                                               
specifics, and  that session  did not  include any  discussion of                                                               
marketing.  On May  20,  the division  received  a response  from                                                               
ExxonMobil  on marketing.  In all  letters, the  working interest                                                               
owners  expressed antitrust  concerns. Those  letters are  online                                                               
and  are  included  in  the  committee packet.  On  June  2,  the                                                               
division  concluded its  internal technical  review and  notified                                                               
the commissioner  that the division  had completed  that process.                                                               
The  administration   asked  the  division,  again,   to  request                                                               
information  on marketing,  "and we  did so  in an  email to  the                                                               
working interest  owners from whom  we had  heard on the  12th of                                                               
June."  On  the 17th,  they  all  responded with  concerns  about                                                               
sharing information and antitrust laws  and because it was behind                                                               
the confidentiality agreement  of the AKLNG project.  On June 30,                                                               
the  division issued  the incompleteness  letter  and called  out                                                               
that  the IPA  technical plans  are complete,  but the  marketing                                                               
information is incomplete.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:27:48 PM                                                                                                                    
MS.  FEIGE  said  the  January  letter  from  Commissioner  Myers                                                               
provided  a  new  policy direction  on  capturing  the  facility-                                                               
sharing and marketing information,  so the conversations with the                                                               
working interest  owners are evolving. The  letter requested some                                                               
very specific  information, and typically  the agency aims  to be                                                               
very clear  and specific in  its requests; however,  the division                                                               
has  learned  that  it  probably was  overly  specific,  and  the                                                               
conversations  around marketing  evolved to  more general  terms.                                                               
The  regulation  relates  to the  long-term  development  of  the                                                               
resource and,  in this case, moving  that IPA toward a  major gas                                                               
sale. In summary,  the division has an  incomplete POD submittal.                                                               
As it was  reported wrongly in the press, she  clarified that "we                                                               
are not  at a default  point. The  POD is still  incomplete." The                                                               
division  extended the  2015 POD  for the  Prudhoe Bay  IPA until                                                               
November 1, and  the discussion on marketing for  moving the unit                                                               
to a major gas sale is due September 1.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:30:38 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE  SADDLER  said,  "I   like  you  Corri,"  but  the                                                               
requests from your division  are extraordinary and unprecedented,                                                               
and they are very chilling to  the oil and gas industry. "What is                                                               
the endgame  here? What are you  trying to do with  Prudhoe Bay's                                                               
oil production,  and what's the relationship  with the governor's                                                               
plan for a gas pipeline?"                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS. FEIGE  said the endgame  is to  understand where the  unit is                                                               
headed in  terms of a  major gas sale.  What changed for  the IPA                                                               
was the new  offtake order, and, "for the state,  that now places                                                               
some real sidebars  around a major gas sale at  a reasonable time                                                               
in the future." It seemed appropriate,  at the time, to request a                                                               
discussion  about what  is being  done with  the unit  to prepare                                                               
that gas for a major sale.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SADDLER  asked  about the  implications  for  the                                                               
future of Prudhoe Bay and the governor's gas pipeline plan.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS.  FEIGE said  she does  not speak  for the  governor, but  the                                                               
division  does not  set  policy. Commissioner  Mack  may want  to                                                               
respond.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SADDLER asked, "What's  the endgame here?" He said                                                               
the commissioner  has "tremendous  responsibility for  the future                                                               
wellbeing of our state and our  industry." He asked for the plan,                                                               
here, and about Alaska's future oil and gas development.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:32:45 PM                                                                                                                    
COMMISSIONER MACK said,  with respect to the endgame,  "We are in                                                               
the middle  of a process."  The letter was  sent on June  30, and                                                               
more will  be known on  September 1.  There is a  discussion, and                                                               
one issue is whether some  of the requested information exists in                                                               
the AKLNG project. He said he prefers to reference the letters.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SADDLER asked  if  the division  has ever  issued                                                               
other "one-last-chance letters" for a POD.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS. FEIGE answered  that it has not done so  during her tenure of                                                               
the last  15 months. She  said that such  a letter may  have been                                                               
issued when Pt. Thomson was in dispute.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SADDLER  asked if the  POD process is  oriented to                                                               
getting to a yes or a no.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS. FEIGE  answered that the  division works very, very  hard and                                                               
diligently to arrive  at a good negotiated outcome. It  is in the                                                               
state's interest to  continue to see its  resources prudently and                                                               
diligently  developed, but  at the  same time,  the division  has                                                               
statutory authorities  to abide by. The  division cannot approach                                                               
things through  a purely  commercial lens.  The division  has the                                                               
right and  the responsibility to  the people of Alaska  to ensure                                                               
that the diligence is taking place.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MACKINNON asked if the  working interest owners requested                                                               
any meetings with the division that have been denied.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS. FEIGE said the owners  requested meetings to talk about these                                                               
issues,  and  they  requested  confidentiality  under  the  AKLNG                                                               
confidentiality  agreements.  There   is,  as  Senator  MacKinnon                                                               
knows, a  firewall between the  division as a  regulatory agency,                                                               
and DNR, as the agency  involved in discussions around AKLNG. The                                                               
Department of Law  (DOL) advised "those requests  and the request                                                               
for   that   information   be  confidential   under   the   AKLNG                                                               
confidentiality  agreement was  too specific  and was  outside of                                                               
the division's  authority. Our authority and  our confidentiality                                                               
regulation is under  [AS] 38.05.035, and [the  Department of] Law                                                               
felt that it would be a  breach of that firewall, potentially, to                                                               
hold those  conversations under  the AKLNG  CA rather  than under                                                               
the division's authority.  So we opted not-erring on  the side of                                                               
caution  on   the  firewall  around   AKLNG-to  not   hold  those                                                               
meetings." The  working interest owners indicated  that they were                                                               
not comfortable  with having that information  specifically under                                                               
the DNR 38.05 authority. The state  decided to err on the side of                                                               
caution.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:37:34 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  MACKINNON said  that is  not  exactly how  she read  the                                                               
letters. She saw it as a request  to meet on the specifics of the                                                               
marketing concepts. She  said she will reread them,  but she felt                                                               
that  the working  interest owners  were  not trying  to use  the                                                               
AKLNG  confidentiality  as  a  firewall.   She  asked  the  three                                                               
witnesses  if they  have signed  confidentiality agreements  with                                                               
AKLNG.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  GIESSEL   clarified  that  only  Mr.   Decker  has  signed                                                               
confidentiality agreements.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MACKINNON asked  about evaluating the benefit  of the gas                                                               
field  to Alaskans  versus the  remaining oil.  "Have you  done a                                                               
study, then,  to understand  the impact of  starting to  pull the                                                               
gas  off?"  She believes  that  the  value  of  the oil  is  more                                                               
significant, "and we have a  letter that is okaying some offtake,                                                               
but  there's quite  a few  bits of  information that  need to  be                                                               
brought into  the light  of day  for us  to actually  verify that                                                               
that offtake can happen. Is that accurate?"                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS. FEIGE said that is accurate.  Those studies are due to AOGCC,                                                               
not the Division of Oil and Gas.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:39:47 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR MACKINNON asked  if she is saying that there  is value in                                                               
both  hydrocarbons,  and since  January  14,  2016, the  division                                                               
wants marketing information  more specific for gas  offtake in 10                                                               
years.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MS. FEIGE said that is a correct assessment.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI  asked if DNR  has offered to work  with the                                                               
working interest  owners to insure that  confidential information                                                               
is protected.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS. FEIGE  said yes. The  working interest owners were  told that                                                               
DNR can hold information confidential under DNR's authority.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI asked about advantages of working together.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:41:17 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI said  that DNR is trying  to get information                                                               
on how  the working interest owners  are going to market  the gas                                                               
resources. Is that in order to work as a team to market the gas?                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS. FEIGE said no, the  purpose for seeking the information under                                                               
the  POD process  is to  look at  the long-range  development and                                                               
production  plans for  the unitized  resources.  The division  is                                                               
trying  to determine  if there  is an  effort to  diligently move                                                               
toward getting gas  to market. She said the unit  will roll over,                                                               
at some point, where it will be producing more gas than oil.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  WIELECHOWSKI noted  that  other jurisdictions  typically                                                               
have private landowners.  Is it common for  landowners to request                                                               
this kind  of information to  ensure that work is  actually being                                                               
performed?                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS. FEIGE  stated that it is  very common here, but  she does not                                                               
have "Outside" information.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:42:56 PM                                                                                                                    
COMMISSIONER MACK suggested getting an answer from DOL.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR   GIESSEL  noted   that  AOGCC   does  not   take  economic                                                               
evaluations of the  product into account, but  DNR has economists                                                               
on staff. How do they play into this?                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS.  FEIGE  said  the  division has  a  commercial  section,  and                                                               
petroleum economists  and commercial analysts  examine operations                                                               
throughout the  life of the  fields. "We  try to stay  abreast of                                                               
how that field  is performing [and] where production is  at in an                                                               
effort  to understand  when we  may  be approaching  end-of-field                                                               
life, for example."  When it comes to the specifics  of the value                                                               
of oil  versus gas,  the project  economics are  fairly critical,                                                               
because  that  will  provide  the   variables  for  modeling  and                                                               
evaluations throughout  the life  of the  field. It  is something                                                               
that the Department of Revenue would use as well.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
2:44:44 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR COSTELLO  spoke of  Ms. Feige's  wealth of  knowledge and                                                               
asked if she  trusts that the governor is  being forthright about                                                               
his vision for the pipeline.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. FEIGE said  she does not have interactions  with the governor                                                               
on a pipeline project. There is a firewall.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COSTELLO asked about the  current operating pipeline that                                                               
is funding  most of the  state government. Is the  governor being                                                               
forthright  with  the public  about  his  vision of  the  future,                                                               
considering  that this  announcement  about requesting  marketing                                                               
information was  made very  late on  a Friday  and there  was not                                                               
press availability?                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS. FEIGE said the governor is  very engaged in this process, and                                                               
it is a new  policy direction. In terms of a  sense of trust, her                                                               
personal  opinion  is  not  relevant, "and  we  certainly,  as  a                                                               
division, have  worked very hard  to run a  diligent, transparent                                                               
process  working  with  the  working   interest  owners  and  the                                                               
operators  to get  the information  that is  sought in  a fashion                                                               
that fits within the bounds of the POD process."                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:47:24 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  COSTELLO  said that  regulations  are  written based  on                                                               
state law  in statute  books. The POD  process is  in regulation,                                                               
and  Ms.   Feige  said  these   are  new  policies   that  seemed                                                               
appropriate.  Where  does  the  division  get  the  authority  to                                                               
request the new information, and is it appropriate?                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS. FEIGE  said the regulation  looks specifically  at long-range                                                               
proposed  development  activities  of  a unit,  specific  to  and                                                               
including bringing resources and  maintaining them in production.                                                               
The DOL advised the division of  implied covenants in oil and gas                                                               
leases when  the new policy  direction was announced.  Within the                                                               
DL1 lease that  the Prudhoe Bay leases are anchored  to, there is                                                               
a specific  call out  for production and  marketing and  sales of                                                               
unitized  resources. It  is through  that  the implied  covenants                                                               
attach  to  the  lease  and  through  the  existing  regulations.                                                               
Looking toward  the long-term and diligent  development of moving                                                               
this  unit from  oil  to  gas, "then  I  do  believe that  that's                                                               
appropriate.  I  believe we  have  a  responsibility through  the                                                               
division  to the  people  of  the state  to  know  that there  is                                                               
diligence in development of those resources."                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COSTELLO said she understands  the implied duty to market                                                               
[resources]. She said  she thinks it is troubling  to Alaskans if                                                               
there is  an implied duty  to market. Do  you think it  should be                                                               
explicit to show marketing plans?                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS. FEIGE suggested  that legal questions on the  implied duty to                                                               
market or produce should be answered by DOL.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COSTELLO said, "I find  it interesting that multi-billion                                                               
dollar companies  would develop  a product  with no  intention to                                                               
sell or market it, so I do  understand that, and I feel like some                                                               
of the questions that I've had today have yet gone unanswered."                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:50:32 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR GIESSEL  asked who wrote  the letters that have  been sent.                                                               
Was it the Department of Law or Natural Resources?                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MS. FEIGE  said all decisions  of the division  are collaborative                                                               
with other agencies. This letter was  drafted by the DOL, and her                                                               
division made comments and edits.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  COGHILL  said  a  firewall is  important,  and  that  is                                                               
probably what is  being tested. There is a  requirement to market                                                               
from  AGDC  to  DNR,  and  under this  POD,  DNR  is  asking  for                                                               
marketing  information, so  it  looks like  the  state could  put                                                               
itself in  an ethical problem  of having information on  one hand                                                               
as a marketer and requiring  information on marketing from "these                                                               
other groups."  Should it be there,  or should it be  thicker? He                                                               
said that  "under 138, we  had given a requirement  for marketing                                                               
to  DNR." The  commissioner  also has  the  authority to  "value-                                                               
switch,"  he  added.  The complexity  increases  with  regard  to                                                               
ethical, legal,  and antitrust issues, but  once this information                                                               
is given from a  POD, he asked if it becomes vaulted  or if it is                                                               
available for other DNR uses.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:52:28 PM                                                                                                                    
MS.  FEIGE concurred  that the  firewall is  very important,  and                                                               
part of  the evolution  is that DNR  stepped back  from specific,                                                               
nitty-gritty  terms to  terms  that  are more  in  line with  the                                                               
regulations, which is a discussion  of long-range development and                                                               
what things  are needed now to  market to help inform  the state.                                                               
By being less  specific, she hopes it "moves us  away from issues                                                               
of potential conflict around that firewall."                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR  COGHILL  asked  how  [the   information]  is  kept  from                                                               
decisions that are naturally contradictory to other laws.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS.   FEIGE  answered   that  when   DNR  receives   confidential                                                               
information  under  the  POD  process,   it  is  absolutely  held                                                               
confidential under AS 38.05.035,  and because the information was                                                               
received  through  a  regulatory   process,  the  firewall  would                                                               
separate it from anything on  the AKLNG side. The firewall exists                                                               
for the operator's  protection, she added, and that  is why there                                                               
was sensitivity around the meetings under the AKLNG.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR COGHILL  said, "Therein lies the  credibility problem for                                                               
many people.  We don't know that  those will hold firm.  We don't                                                               
know that the  state can do one  thing on one hand  and one thing                                                               
on the  other without bleeding  over information. I  think that's                                                               
going to be a problem as we move forward."                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:55:58 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  STOLTZE said  the senior  policy  advisor was  announced                                                               
yesterday, and  the governor  cited a  couple of  his attributes.                                                               
The position  is on par  with Commissioner Mack and  Mr. Hoffbeck                                                               
and  others, he  explained.  One  attribute was  that  he was  an                                                               
advocate of AKLNG. He asked if  the advisor will be involved with                                                               
confidential   agreements.  "What   will   be  the   constraints,                                                               
professionally,  ethically,  and  all the  other  parameters  you                                                               
might imagine?"                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER MACK answered that he  is currently being advised on                                                               
his duties  as commissioner.  He has great  staff to  advise him.                                                               
"In  particular,   where  I  have   a  role  as  a   reviewer  of                                                               
[regulatory] decisions,  perhaps as  a person who  would be  in a                                                               
position where  issues are reconsidered  or there's a  request to                                                               
reconsider,  there's a  couple of  things," and  the first  is to                                                               
follow ethics  rules and make  sure he  is well-advised and  in a                                                               
position to rule in  such cases. He said he does  not know all of                                                               
the precise answers,  because he is assuming that  Mr. Hendrix is                                                               
not subject to  a lot of those restrictions  and obligations, so,                                                               
as a senior advisor or  cabinet-level position, he might not have                                                               
those obligations.  There are certain decisions-and  he hesitates                                                               
to  bring  up examples-but  there  are  very specific  situations                                                               
where he  is unable to  discuss certain issues with  Mr. Hendrix,                                                               
because  they are  either confidential  or  deliberative, "and  I                                                               
think he  would respect  those." There  is no  doubt that  he was                                                               
brought  on board  due to  his experience  as a  35-year industry                                                               
engineer. He said,  "It's probably going to come down  to a case-                                                               
by-case  basis.  Having said  all  that,  there's a  relationship                                                               
between   some   issues  that   are   not   regulatory  but   are                                                               
developmentally-minded,  and  we will  be  working  on those  for                                                               
sure."                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:59:15 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR STOLTZE said the governor  described the recent appointee                                                               
as  a relationship  person. "I  guess if  he was  in the  private                                                               
sector, he'd be  a lobbyist." Relationship is the  word the chief                                                               
executive  chose, and  that sounds  a lot  like lobbying.  When a                                                               
person   is  an   advocate  for   a  position-and   the  governor                                                               
practically described  him as  his lobbyist.  That was  the first                                                               
term the governor used was  "he's a relationship person." He said                                                               
he  thinks people  have heard  the cautions  on concerns  such as                                                               
firewalls. He added  that he likes him personally. He  was one of                                                               
the better  wrestlers that came  out of Alaska, he  explained. He                                                               
is a  locally-grown person,  too. He has  stepped into  an abyss,                                                               
"and  there's just  cautions, I  guess, when  the governor  hires                                                               
somebody sort of self-described as a lobbyist."                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
3:00:43 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE   SADDLER  said   the  first   paragraph  of   the                                                               
regulations for the  POD requirements seems to be  most at issue.                                                               
He asked  Ms. Feige to define  "long range." He asked  what level                                                               
of  detail is  required, what  is  missing, and  how binding  the                                                               
requirements are.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS. FEIGE  said "long range"  relates to the  foreseeable future,                                                               
and  it  will  be  different  for  each  unit  depending  on  the                                                               
projected activities  and logical production scenarios.  For this                                                               
IPA POD,  "long range" ties back  to the offtake that  was issued                                                               
in  October by  the  AOGCC, and  that had  a  loose timeline  for                                                               
moving to a gas-producing unit.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR.  DECKER  said that  his  resource  evaluation team  looks  at                                                               
"long-range  proposed  development  activities"  in  contrast  to                                                               
paragraph 3, the  annual details in the plan  of development, and                                                               
in many cases, they would be the plans beyond one year.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SADDLER asked  what level  of detail  is required                                                               
and what information is currently  missing, because certainly the                                                               
working interest  operators and  owner understood  the obligation                                                               
they made when they signed a POD.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS. FEIGE answered  that the discussion of marketing  a major gas                                                               
sale is  still missing from  the Prudhoe  Bay IPA. All  the other                                                               
information  is  complete.  The  level  of  detail  the  division                                                               
requested in  the June 30  letter is on page  9, and it  asks for                                                               
information concerning  marketing plans and activities  that will                                                               
result in the commencement of a  major gas sale and to have those                                                               
explained  with  specific  and measurable  items,  including  any                                                               
timelines  that  they  could  share.   The  regulation  adds  the                                                               
qualification, "to the extent the information is available."                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SADDLER said  the  terms are  subjective, so  the                                                               
governor will have  the last word, unless the owners  do not plan                                                               
to  litigate every  definition. "This  is a  very big  stick that                                                               
your  division  is  holding  over  the  production  of  our  main                                                               
economic  resource in  our state  and  the largest  asset for  at                                                               
least one of the companies operating  on the North Slope, so this                                                               
is authority that's  going to come down again  to some subjective                                                               
determinations, and that's concerning to me."                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
3:05:44 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE SADDLER asked if  the request for this information                                                               
is premature or just right.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS. FEIGE said the request  is framed as the regulation requires,                                                               
and it asks  for information that is available at  this time. The                                                               
division  has  the responsibility  to  ensure  diligence for  the                                                               
development of the  resource. "We need to be  informed." She said                                                               
the  discussion is  appropriate,  and  she said  to  look at  the                                                               
regulation and the requirements for  what is appropriate. It is a                                                               
new policy, and DNR is working  on this with other unit operators                                                               
in the state.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SADDLER  commented that  this is a  new direction,                                                               
and  it is  disconcerting. Because  the  stakes are  so high  and                                                               
because  the  information  from   the  administration  is  highly                                                               
opaque, "that's what gives me,  personally, dis-ease, not knowing                                                               
what  the  endgame is,"  and  he  asked  for information  on  the                                                               
endgame and  how DNR  will use its  authority. "Its  absence will                                                               
lead to resistance," he opined.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
3:08:10 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  WIELECHOWSKI  noted  that  there  is  not  unanimity  in                                                               
opposing DNR's request  for marketing information. He  said it is                                                               
not disconcerting or  troubling at all, it is  the division doing                                                               
its  job. The  Alaska Constitution  requires that  the state  get                                                               
maximum value for its resources,  and the law the legislature put                                                               
in  place, AS  38.05.180, was  written because  people in  Alaska                                                               
"have an interest  in the development of the state's  oil and gas                                                               
resources to maximize  the economic and physical  recovery of the                                                               
resources."  He said,  "That's what  you're doing-that's  exactly                                                               
what  you're doing.  You're  following  the constitution;  you're                                                               
following  the law  that  the legislature  put  in place;  you're                                                               
doing due diligence  to make sure the resource  is being properly                                                               
developed. That's your  job. Thank you for doing  your job." This                                                               
is what  any prudent  resource owner  in the  world would  do, he                                                               
added. The  confidential information is to  be kept confidential,                                                               
and  it  is  a  perfectly  appropriate  request  that  "the  vast                                                               
majority  of Alaskans  would overwhelmingly  support what  you're                                                               
doing."                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
3:09:45 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE JOHNSON said  it is always great to  follow a good                                                               
senator. He would  like "to take a 30 thousandth  view as opposed                                                               
to  digging  into the  weeds."  There  are  four partners  and  a                                                               
pipeline and each own one quarter  of the resource, and the state                                                               
has a decision  to market the gas ourselves or  partner with them                                                               
to market  it for  Alaska. "Until  we make  a decision  how we're                                                               
going to take  our gas or we're  going to let them  market it for                                                               
us,  all we're  doing is  asking for  a marketing  plan from  our                                                               
competitors." He  said it  is like Walmart  asking Kmart  for its                                                               
marketing plan.  "They're going  to throw you  out the  door." He                                                               
said  he does  not trust  the commissioner  with confidentiality,                                                               
because he  will be  the deputy commissioner  in the  future, and                                                               
because  of the  revolving  door  where "AOGCC  is  going to  ask                                                               
somebody that's  on the staff, and  you can't help but  take that                                                               
knowledge and use  it at some point," because it  is human nature                                                               
to use  what you know  and use it  to the advantage  of Alaskans.                                                               
"And that's, quite  frankly, your job." He said he  has no belief                                                               
that confidentially will be maintained.  If the competitors asked                                                               
for  the state's  marketing plan-and  the state  should have  one                                                               
because it  owns a  one quarter-he assumes  that the  state would                                                               
not be  prepared to provide it.  He said the state  has the right                                                               
to know,  but "we need  to take  the steps we  need to take  as a                                                               
state to say  yes we want it  in-kind or yes we  want a different                                                               
method of doing it or yes we want to partner with you."                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
REPRSENTATIVE JOHNSON said  that he guaranteed that  if the state                                                               
went to [the  operators] and asked them to market  it, they would                                                               
come to  the state  with a  marketing plan.  "But until  they can                                                               
identify us as friend or foe,  I think you're asking for a hurdle                                                               
that is  just too high  for companies." He  added that he  is not                                                               
sure this  is not  a violation  of the FCC.  "I'm not  sure their                                                               
stockholders aren't going  to come unglued if  they start sharing                                                               
marketing  plans."  He  said  he   does  not  disagree  with  the                                                               
constitution that  the state has a  right to know, but  until the                                                               
state decides if  it is a competitor in marketing  gas or not, it                                                               
is  unreasonable  for the  state  to  ask those  questions.  "Car                                                               
dealer-anyone-you  could  walk in  and  ask  for their  marketing                                                               
plan, they're going to tell to  pound sand, and I'll be surprised                                                               
if our partners don't tell you to pound sand."                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
3:12:44 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR MACKINNON  thanked the  witnesses for  advancing recovery                                                               
of  hydrocarbons that  help provide  services to  the people  who                                                               
live here.  "I firmly believe that  the value of what  we receive                                                               
will be  determined, possibly, in  your hands." She asked  if the                                                               
state  is continuing  to  pursue  bilateral marketing  agreements                                                               
with individual working interest owners at Prudhoe Bay.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  MACK  said he  cannot  discuss  it, because  it  is                                                               
covered by the confidentiality agreement.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MACKINNON noted that it is in documents that are online.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER  MACK   said  he   has  been   advised  to   sign  a                                                               
confidentiality  agreement  for the  bilateral  meeting  he is  a                                                               
party to.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:15:20 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR  MACKINNON  referred  to   a  note  from  "Kyle"  saying,                                                               
"Discussions   should   remain   confidential,   but   it's   not                                                               
confidential   now,   because   you've  provided   us   all   the                                                               
information." It is  hard to understand what  is confidential and                                                               
not,  because  some  of  the   documents  being  referred  to  as                                                               
confidential have been provided  here today. If Commissioner Mack                                                               
cannot tell  the committee if  the state is pursuing  a bilateral                                                               
agreement,  she will  ask  about how  to define  the  state as  a                                                               
regulator  different  from  a competitor.  Alaska  partners  with                                                               
working  interest owners  of the  Prudhoe Bay  unit on  the AKLNG                                                               
pipeline,  "and I'm  having  a difficult  time  … separating  the                                                               
Prudhoe Bay  and this new  requirement from us trying  to advance                                                               
an AKLNG project."  She said her problem is Alaska  being a bully                                                               
as  a regulator.  The  state  is trying  to  advance an  interest                                                               
somewhere else as a regulator  with information that benefits the                                                               
state as  a competitor when it  goes out into other  markets. She                                                               
said  she wants  to  monetize  the gas  and  agrees with  Senator                                                               
Wielechowski. "I want you, on behalf  of the people of Alaska, to                                                               
get the  highest value, but when  we start competing as  I see us                                                               
moving forward,  we're actually competing  to the bottom,  not to                                                               
the top." There  are group and individual efforts,  and she wants                                                               
to   understand  how   the  state   is  appropriately   acquiring                                                               
information as  a regulator without  jumping into  the competitor                                                               
role with regard to taking royalty in kind or in gas.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
COMMISSIONER MACK  said he will check  on bilateral conversations                                                               
and marketing  agreements. So far,  the meetings he  has attended                                                               
have  a  confidentiality  agreement   attached.  He  opined  that                                                               
Senator Coghill's  question was  well-informed and  thoughtful in                                                               
pointing out  different interests. He noted  being very cognizant                                                               
and working very hard to manage  a whole range of information and                                                               
trying to keep  things in their lane. It is  very difficult, like                                                               
Representative  Johnson  said, people  leave  service  and go  to                                                               
another entity  and carry personal  knowledge. "It is  very hard,                                                               
in many  cases, to distinguish  information that you  learned six                                                               
years  ago at  one  employer  and five  years  ago  at your  next                                                               
employer." He said  he recognizes the challenge. The  state is in                                                               
the middle  of a  very steady process  and will  continue through                                                               
the process.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SENATOR MACKINNON referred  to a 151-page document  and said "it"                                                               
is  under  the   gas  sales  agreement  between   the  state  and                                                               
ConocoPhillips  and BP  as working  interest owners.  On page  3,                                                               
there is a  section on bilateral negotiations, and  that is where                                                               
she got  her previous question  about negotiations.  Reading from                                                               
the  document, she  said:  "During the  term  of this  agreement,                                                               
provided that  DNR, AKLNG project  affiliate," which  is everyone                                                               
but  ExxonMobil,  "is continuing  and  is  not indicated,  it  is                                                               
discontinuing  its  participation  in   the  LNG  project…."  "To                                                               
address the  possibility that  Conoco [or]  BP indicates  it does                                                               
not   intend  to   continue  with   the  project…."   She  added,                                                               
"Apparently  we're pushing  Exxon out  of here,  and Pt.  Thomson                                                               
gas, at  least under this  gas term  agreement, so, when  you can                                                               
let  me know,  that would  be helpful  on whether  we're entering                                                               
into those  bilateral agreements,  but that's where  the question                                                               
came from."                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
3:21:03 PM                                                                                                                    
REPRESENTATIVE TARR  referred to  the comments about  the tension                                                               
between being a player and  regulator and recalled that the topic                                                               
was part of the discussion of  SB 138. She asked the commissioner                                                               
to  review  some  of  those  conversations,  because  there  were                                                               
concerns at  that time. She  noted that  Ms. Feige said  that the                                                               
change is  the recent  approval by AOGCC  for gas  offtake, which                                                               
"puts us in  an entirely new world, essentially."  She asked: "If                                                               
we  weren't  doing  what  we're   doing  now  with  the  plan  of                                                               
development  to  further understand  that,  what  would be  other                                                               
opportunities for us,  as the resource manager, to  see what that                                                               
decision means?"  She asked  if the POD  is the  only opportunity                                                               
"where we  would be able to  see that decision and  what it means                                                               
in terms  of resource  development in the  Prudhoe Bay  unit, for                                                               
example?"                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS. FEIGE  said the POD  process is one  tool that the  state has                                                               
for determining  how a unit is  going to progress. The  AOGCC and                                                               
the study that Commissioner Foerster  referenced are touch points                                                               
along a timeline  toward moving to a major gas  sale, so they too                                                               
will be  a tool for informing  us how Alaska is  going there. One                                                               
study   asks  if   the  escalation   of   liquid  production   is                                                               
appropriate. The other  is the potential use of  CO2 for enhanced                                                               
recovery.  Those two  will help  determine  if Alaska  is on  the                                                               
right path and where the development and the diligence is going.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE TARR noted that those  two studies are a few years                                                               
out, so the POD is the best tool Alaska has now.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS. FEIGE agreed.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
3:23:35 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  GIESSEL  introduced the  next  speaker,  Mark Cotham.  She                                                               
noted that  Mr. Cotham  presented at  a joint  resource committee                                                               
meeting in  April, 2005, when he  was counsel for the  Alaska Gas                                                               
Port  Authority. He  was introduced  as  being with  a firm  that                                                               
focusses on issues such as  failing to develop and other producer                                                               
royalty  claims. At  that meeting,  he  shared that  he had  been                                                               
asked by  the port  authority to  provide a  review of  the legal                                                               
duties and  obligations that the  producers have with  respect to                                                               
the Alaska North Slope gas.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MARK  COTHAM,   Alaska  Department  of  Law   Contract  Attorney,                                                               
Houston,  Texas, said  he has  practiced  law in  Houston for  34                                                               
years, primarily  as an oil  and gas litigator  representing both                                                               
operators  and royalty  owners. For  the  last 25  years, he  has                                                               
focused  on  "failure-to-develop"  cases, and  he  has  intensely                                                               
studied  strategies for  royalty  owners when  wells that  should                                                               
have  been  drilled  are  not  drilled.  He  noted  that  he  has                                                               
researched how  it can happen that  profit-motivated companies do                                                               
not undertake  development that they should.  A partial outgrowth                                                               
of that was  the testimony he gave before  the Legislative Budget                                                               
and Audit  Committee in 2005,  titled Five  Common Misconceptions                                                               
about  Producer  Control of  ANS  Gas  and  its Relation  to  the                                                               
Pipeline.  Considering  the  years  that have  passed,  his  2005                                                               
remarks have  withstood the  test of  time. The  obligations that                                                               
producers have  are not controversial  in the oil and  gas world.                                                               
It is  not a  controversy, and  oil and  gas companies  would not                                                               
even dispute that they have  an implied duty to reasonably market                                                               
a resource such  as gas or oil. In his  previous presentation, he                                                               
developed the  authorities and  cases to  support that.  He noted                                                               
that people say,  "They own the gas, so Alaska  is powerless." At                                                               
that  time,  he explained  that  the  nature of  their  ownership                                                               
interest does  not render  Alaska powerless.  He has  spelled out                                                               
the rights and  responsibilities that oil companies  have in this                                                               
context.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. COTHAM  said he has  also testified  on behalf of  the Alaska                                                               
Gasline  Port  Authority  before  Commissioner  [Mike]  Menge  in                                                               
connection with  the Pt. Thomson  cancelation proceeding.  He was                                                               
hired last year by the Department  of Law to provide legal advice                                                               
with respect  to the rights  and remedies  that the state  has in                                                               
oil and  gas matters. He  is appearing  at this meeting  today at                                                               
the  request  of  the  DOL,  and the  specifics  are  subject  to                                                               
attorney-client deliberative and work-product privileges.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:28:11 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. COTHAM  said he  is not appearing  in any  official capacity.                                                               
Any  comments or  opinions  he  has should  not  be portrayed  as                                                               
necessarily the  position of  Alaska agencies,  but "I  have been                                                               
instructed by the  Department of Law to  be helpful, cooperative,                                                               
and try  to answer your questions  so long as it  doesn't impinge                                                               
on any of the privileges I've described."                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:29:00 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR GIESSEL asked if it  is appropriate for operators to handle                                                               
the major gas sales on behalf of unit's working interest owners.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. COTHAM answered yes; that  would be the typical approach. The                                                               
joint  operating  agreement forms  that  are  established by  the                                                               
various organizations  contemplate that the operator  will market                                                               
the gas of the non-operators.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  GIESSEL  said,  "So,  you're   saying  that  BP  would  be                                                               
marketing the gas in the Prudhoe Bay unit for Exxon and Conoco?"                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. COTHAM  said yes.  That would  be the  overwhelmingly typical                                                               
relationship in the Lower 48.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  GIESSEL referred  to SB  138, which  is the  structure the                                                               
legislature put  in place for  a gas pipeline project.  Since the                                                               
state could  become a marketer of  its own gas by  taking royalty                                                               
in kind, how can the  state demand gas marketing information from                                                               
the Prudhoe  Bay unit  operator and the  other two  oil companies                                                               
without triggering antitrust issues?                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
3:30:53 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. COTHAM  said he sees two  different questions. One has  to do                                                               
with a possible  conflict or problem in such  a relationship, and                                                               
the second  has to do with  antitrust issues. There is  a need to                                                               
be  careful not  to take  information and  use it  for any  wrong                                                               
purpose, "and  I know  the state  would never  want to  do that."                                                               
What  is overwhelmingly  important, in  that context,  is a  true                                                               
understanding of the kind of  marketing information that is being                                                               
requested. The information that DNR  is requesting is just to get                                                               
some  understanding of  the  existence  of a  market  and if  the                                                               
producers plan to  market the gas when 2025 comes  around. If the                                                               
only plan is  dependent on the producers building  a pipeline, is                                                               
there a firm commitment from them  to build that pipeline? If the                                                               
producers are not going to give  the State of Alaska a commitment                                                               
to build that pipeline, can  the state obtain some information as                                                               
to what they are  doing to try to get third  parties to build it?                                                               
It  has  always struck  him  that  the  base assumption  is  that                                                               
producers  will just  naturally build  the pipeline,  but in  the                                                               
Lower 48 "you  could probably count on a few  hands the number of                                                               
pipelines that have been built  by producers." One thing that the                                                               
state is  trying to  do by requesting  information, is  to obtain                                                               
either a  commitment or the  beginnings of a commitment  that the                                                               
pipeline  will be  built, or,  if there  is no  commitment toward                                                               
this nine-year  ticking clock-. He  said nine years is  about the                                                               
time it  takes to build a  pipeline, so it seems  only reasonable                                                               
for the state to ask for information on a plan.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
3:34:02 PM                                                                                                                    
MR. COTHAM turned to the topic  of antitrust and said he does not                                                               
believe  it   represents  a  legitimate  reason   to  not  obtain                                                               
information on  marketing. Antitrust  laws, as  committee members                                                               
likely  know,  are  essentially  prohibitions  against  companies                                                               
colluding  to impair  competition.  There  is absolutely  nothing                                                               
about  DNR requesting  producer information  on trying  to market                                                               
this  gas-or  even  to whom-that  encourages  or  involves  anti-                                                               
competitive  behavior. A  government  has a  legitimate need  for                                                               
that type  of information, and  its production would  be entirely                                                               
reasonable, and  it would  not run afoul  of any  antitrust laws.                                                               
Antitrust laws  are subject to  the rules  of reason, and  it has                                                               
been  shown by  precedence  that the  producers withholding  this                                                               
basic information is not a valid position at all.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR GIESSEL said a court  would decide that question. "Is there                                                               
not  the  opportunity for  the  companies  to have  a  reasonable                                                               
expectation  of  profit  in terms  of  determining  their  desire                                                               
market the gas?" Without profit, why force them to produce?                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. COTHAM explained that with  an implied covenant to develop or                                                               
market,  there  is  a  reasonable  expectation  of  profit  as  a                                                               
precondition.  A  majority   of  states  have  held   that  if  a                                                               
sufficient amount  of time passes  and a producer has  not acted,                                                               
it then becomes the producer's  burden of proof to establish that                                                               
they are acting reasonably. It is  no longer the royalty owner or                                                               
lessor  that  has  to  establish   that  there  is  a  reasonable                                                               
expectation of profit.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
3:36:58 PM                                                                                                                    
SENATOR WIELECHOWSKI  asked if Mr.  Cotham's conclusion  that the                                                               
state has a right to  request this marketing information is legal                                                               
is a minority opinion or if it is crystal clear law.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. COTHAM answered  that it would certainly be  his opinion that                                                               
it is  clear. "I have  not read anything  in any of  the producer                                                               
responses  that  were  attempting  to  justify  withholding  this                                                               
information that  would give me  pause to  think that DNR  is not                                                               
fully within its legal rights to obtain that information."                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SADDLER asked  Mr. Cotham to cite a  case in which                                                               
the duty to produce is clearly outlined in law.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. COTHAM said he will  provide his 2005 presentation, which has                                                               
about 40  or 50 such cases.  One case, for example,  is Sauder v.                                                               
Mid-Continent Petroleum Corp.  292 US 272 (1934).  The US Supreme                                                               
Court  explains  what  is reasonably  expected  of  operators  of                                                               
ordinary prudence  having regards for  the interests of  both the                                                               
lessor and the lessee. To  explore this issue, this document will                                                               
give a comprehensive contextual  discussion. He can provide other                                                               
information, "but I do not believe  that the law that I'm talking                                                               
about is at all controversial."                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR GIESSEL said  she has that document and  will distribute it                                                               
to the committee members.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SADDLER  asked Mr.  Cotham to help  him understand                                                               
in what capacity he is speaking.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. COTHAM said he is a contract  employee of the DOL, and he was                                                               
made  available to  testify. He  has no  prior clearance  for his                                                               
opinions today, so he spoke as a private citizen.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
3:41:00 PM                                                                                                                    
CHAIR  GIESSEL  found no  further  business  to come  before  the                                                               
committee and  adjourned the  Senate Resources  Committee meeting                                                               
at 3:41 p.m.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
SRES Mtg Notice for July 19, 2016.pdf SRES 7/19/2016 1:00:00 PM
Meeting Notice for SRES July 19, 2016
2016 gas offtake testimony.pdf SRES 7/19/2016 1:00:00 PM
AOGCC Presentation
PBU IPA 2016 POD Presentation Final_071816_GLO.PDF SRES 7/19/2016 1:00:00 PM
DNR Presentation
SRES July 19, 2016 Agenda.2.pdf SRES 7/19/2016 1:00:00 PM
Agenda SRES 7-19-16
What is a POD from SRES 2-22-2012.pdf SRES 7/19/2016 1:00:00 PM
What is a POD?
20160719_PrudhoeBay_IPA_POD_2016_AllPublicDocsToDate.pdf SRES 7/19/2016 1:00:00 PM
POD Public documents to date SRES 7-19-16
2005-04-20 Hosie and Cothan Duty to Market Testimony.pdf SRES 7/19/2016 1:00:00 PM
Duty to Produce discussion from 2005