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{Alaska} Gas line construction likely to start in 2011
Fairbanks Daily News-Miner ^ | Tuesday, April 04, 2006 | R.A. DILLON

Posted on 04/04/2006 6:52:49 AM PDT by thackney

JUNEAU--Resource Commissioner Mike Menge said permitting for a natural gas pipeline from the North Slope to the Lower 48 will likely begin in 2008 with construction to start by 2011.

Menge made the comment Monday during a meeting in Juneau with Northwest Territories Minister Brendan Bell, who was in town to talk with Gov. Frank Murkowski about the role of Arctic gas in supplying North American energy markets.

Canada is pursuing its own gas pipeline project in the Mackenzie Valley, which has 7 trillion cubic feet of known reserves.

The 700-mile Mackenzie line in the Northwest Territories is in the permitting and public hearing phrase and is expected to start delivering gas by 2011.

Murkowski announced in February that the state had reached a deal with Exxon Mobil, BP and ConocoPhillips to build the 3,500-mile line from the North Slope through Canada to the Lower 48.

The three producers are building both the Mackenzie and the $25 billion Alaska project.

The Alaska line is slated to start construction after the Mackenzie line is completed to avoid competition for labor and steel, which has increased 150 percent since 2000.

The $7.5 billion Mackenzie line is expected to expend 20 percent of the cost on the purchase of steel.

"These two projects are logically sequenced and queued up so that Mackenzie goes first with Alaska behind," he said.

Bell said the timing of the projects will ultimately be decided by the major oil companies.

The Alaska and Canadian lines are not in competition with one another, Bell said. However, the projects are in a race against rising labor and steel costs and the arrival of a rising amount of foreign liquid natural gas or LNG.

"The clock is collectively ticking," Bell said.

"These projects really are mutually compatible because it does create a niche for all Arctic gas," Menge said. "We have to establish our market position as soon as we can."

The two lines are expected to have only a short-term effect on consumer prices when they come online. The Mackenzie Valley will deliver as much as 1.8 billion cubic feet of gas a day, while the Alaska line will produce 4.5 billion cubic feet of gas a day.

The gas would be evenly distributed across North America, resulting in a drop in price of just 25 to 50 cents per thousand cubic feet, Menge said. Consumer prices would likely return to normal in six months to a year, he added.

The relatively small effect on price has Canada supporting construction of the Alaska project.

"In the past we had a concern that if all the Alaskan gas came to market, it might depress the prices somewhat and skew the economics for Mackenzie," Bell said. "I think largely we've now realized that given the bullish price of gas that even if Alaska were to come on first, it wouldn't give us the same concern."

Both projects have a ways to go before the first gas flows.

The Canadian government is still negotiating the fiscal details of a deal with the producers, who aren't expected to make a final decision on whether to start construction until 2008.

In Alaska, Murkowski has said the state will buy a 20 percent equity ownership in the pipeline to make the deal financially feasible for the producers. The producers have asked for no such deal on the Canadian line, though they have requested fiscal certainty on future gas taxes, Bell said.

The state Legislature still has to review and approve the deal the governor has negotiated with the producers. Murkowski has refused to release details of that deal until lawmakers approve reform of the state's oil tax system.

The North Slope project still has to go through the permitting process in Alaska and Canada.

Staff writer R.A. Dillon can be reached at (907) 463-4893 or rdillon@newsminer.com .


TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: Alaska
KEYWORDS: alaska; energy; gas; naturalgas; pipeline
The Alaska Gas Pipeline is going to be a huge project.

Does anybody know of another private (non-governmental) project exceeding $20 billion?

1 posted on 04/04/2006 6:52:51 AM PDT by thackney
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To: thackney

I wish they'd built one across the bering strai as well. Would keep our arab 'freinds' on their toes if we had a pipeline to Russian oil.


2 posted on 04/04/2006 6:59:19 AM PDT by x5452
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To: thackney

"Does anybody know of another private (non-governmental) project exceeding $20 billion?"

That was the approximate cost of the Lunar landing project, however that was in 60s $s.


3 posted on 04/04/2006 7:01:06 AM PDT by Western Phil
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To: x5452
I wish they'd built one across the bering strai as well. Would keep our arab 'freinds' on their toes if we had a pipeline to Russian oil.

The Alaskan side of the Bering Straight is not a market for oil. It is another 600 miles to the Trans Alaska Oil Pipeline. The Trans Alaska Oil Pipeline then runs south another 300 miles or so to Valdez, where the oil is loaded on a Tanker. It is much simplier and cheaper to load the oil on a Tanker in Russia. The US currently imports about 400,000 barrels per day from Russia.

4 posted on 04/04/2006 8:31:08 AM PDT by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer)
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To: Western Phil
That was the approximate cost of the Lunar landing project, however that was in 60s $s.

And that was a governmental, not a private, project.

5 posted on 04/04/2006 8:32:03 AM PDT by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer)
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