Murkowski stresses urgency in building gas pipeline

Published Wednesday, March 19, 2008

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JUNEAU — U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski said time is running short — while competing natural gas projects are gaining ground — for Alaska to get a gas line project moving.

She wouldn’t criticize Gov. Sarah Palin’s Alaska Gasline Inducement Act, but the tone of urgency in her annual speech to the Legislature was clear.

“We are slipping and cannot afford to slip any further,” she told members of the House and the Senate. “Our competitors are moving ahead. Our oil production is dropping. Steel and construction prices just climb higher every year.”

Getting a gas line was the thrust of Murkowski’s sweeping message to the Legislature, but she also touched on health care, education and the Arctic.

The former state representative spoke in familiar tones, often referring to lawmakers by their first name, and was clearly versed on what priorities the Legislature faces this session.

A gas line topped Murkowski’s list and will likely be addressed in a special session after the Legislature adjourns from a 90-day session April 13.

So far, the state believes it may have found the company that can build a pipeline to ship 35 trillion cubic feet of North Slope reserves into Midwest markets.

TransCanada was the only application the state says so far has complied with the regulations set forth under AGIA. The Legislature continues to wait to see if the Palin administration will recommend the company for a state license.

If the Legislature gets Palin’s proposal — she’s not offered any timeline — it has 60 days to approve or reject it.

Houston, Texas-based ConocoPhillips, however, says it’s got a plan outside the state’s bid requirements if the state would just negotiate what it calls fiscal certainty. Its sets long-term tax and royalty terms for the North Slope leaseholders who have wanted these terms negotiated before a pipeline license gets awarded.

The approach failed under the senator’s father, former Gov. Frank Murkowski. Last month, U.S. Sen. Ted Stevens stressed the need to establish the fiscal terms.

ConocoPhillips still has plans to begin more than $40 million worth of field work this summer for its plan.

Murkowski told lawmakers the competition is strong and in varied locations, stretching from projects in Texas and Appalachian states to those close to U.S. borders in Mexico and Canada.

She placed equal onus on the state; North Slope leaseholders ConocoPhillips, Exxon Mobil Corp, and BP PLC; pipeline companies, and the federal government to keep things moving. After her address, Murkowski said she believes progress is being made, even as competing projects seem to be emerging, but still wants to see substantive work being done this summer.

“I think we clearly have a track that is moving forward,” Murkowski said. “I appreciate that. I recognize the value of the AGIA process.

“But, clearly Conoco is on its own track. Is it wrong to have a duel track? In my opinion, anything that will get us a gas line sooner is worthwhile.”

Murkowski also hit on several other forefront issues, including:

• Health care: Murkowski expressed concern about caring for the senior citizens, the fastest growing population.

She said Medicare needs a “payment formula needs to be so that physicians can afford to take on new clients and not drop existing patients. It is unacceptable that many of our seniors cannot find a doctor who will see Medicare patients.”

• Education: Murkowski praised the Legislature for passing an education funding package estimated to inject an extra $180 million into education over the next five years. She stressed its potential value in beefing up the state’s work force.

“Alaska has one of the highest unemployment rates in the nation,” she said, “yet I am constantly hearing from employers that they cannot find the workers that they need.”

• The Arctic: Murkowski implored lawmakers to keep an eye on Arctic development, whether it’s environmental protection or resource development.

“The United States is an Arctic nation because of Alaska,” she said. “We shouldn’t let the federal government even think about Arctic issues without consulting Alaska.”

Murkowski said the state has to do its part if it’s to be a key player nationally, whether it’s funding education or forcing its way to the table of global and national debates.

“She’s right,” said House Rules Chairman John Coghill, R-North Pole. “We have to take a leadership position on some of these issues. That’s up to us.”

Community Discussion

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  1. este
    3/19/2008, 8:16 a.m.
    Suggest removal

    Kudos to our junior senator. She knows that the foreign route will be DOA and we need to get past it to arrive at a tenable plan. Meanwhile, other projects will dilute our market position. So we need to get moving! Good job, Senator Murkowski.

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