Monday, May 18, 2026

Alaska's Gold and Oil: From American Companies to Foreign Corporations

Alaska Resources • Advocacy

Alaska's Gold and Oil:
From American Companies
to Foreign Corporations


The companies extracting Alaska's irreplaceable wealth have changed. Have Alaskans noticed?

When Prudhoe Bay was discovered in 1968, American companies developed it. Atlantic Richfield. Humble Oil — later part of Exxon. Standard Oil of California. Mobil. Texaco. Outside money, yes — but American outside money. The profits went to shareholders in New York, Los Angeles, and Houston.

When Fairbanks gold was dredged for decades through the mid-1960s, an American company did it — USS&M, the United States Smelting, Refining and Mining Company. The name says it all. American company. American shareholders. From 1928 to 1965, their dredges pulled 4.2 million ounces of gold out of Alaska's interior.

That was then.

Today

Who's Drilling Alaska's Oil?

North Slope • Oil • Now Producing

Santos & Repsol — Pikka Project

Australia's Santos (51%, operator) and Spain's Repsol (49%) own the biggest new oil development on the North Slope. Target: 80,000 barrels per day — roughly 20% of Alaska's entire oil output. Santos told its shareholders the project will "underpin stronger shareholder returns into the future." Those shareholders are in Sydney and Madrid.

The Pikka Project just came online in 2026. It is Alaska's most significant new oil development in a generation. It is majority-owned and operated by an Australian company.

80,000 Barrels per day at peak production — Pikka Project
51% Santos (Australia) ownership stake in Pikka

Who's Mining Alaska's Gold?

Delta Junction • Gold • Record Production

Northern Star Resources — Pogo Mine

Alaska's second-largest gold mine, owned by an Australian company headquartered in Perth. Pogo produced nearly 280,000 ounces of gold in 2024. At today's gold prices — above $5,000 an ounce — that's over a billion dollars of gold per year from a single mine. Northern Star's CEO told investors that Pogo "will be generating strong U.S. dollar cash flow for the next decade plus." That cash flows to Australia.

Fairbanks • Gold • Alaska's Largest Mine

Kinross Gold — Fort Knox Mine

Alaska's largest gold mine, 20 miles north of Fairbanks, owned by a Canadian company headquartered in Toronto. Fort Knox accounted for roughly 39% of Alaska's entire gold production in 2024. Since 1996, it has produced nearly 10 million ounces of gold.

"The two biggest gold mines in Alaska are owned by companies in Perth and Toronto. The biggest new oil project is owned by companies in Sydney and Madrid."

What Are Alaskans Getting Back?

Royalties. Taxes. Some jobs — many of them filled by rotating workers from Outside. And a Permanent Fund Dividend that has been shrinking and uncertain for years while foreign shareholders collect record profits from Alaska's ground.

In 2024, gold averaged $2,400 an ounce. In 2025, it averaged $3,400. Today it's above $5,000. Northern Star and Kinross are having the best years in their corporate histories — on Alaska gold. The PFD has not kept pace.

Alaska's nonrenewable resources — oil, gold, minerals — leave the ground once. They don't come back. Every barrel Santos ships from Valdez, every ounce Northern Star pulls from Pogo, is gone forever.

The Shift That Nobody's Talking About

This isn't about shutting down development. Alaska needs investment, and resource development supports real jobs and real communities. But the historical shift matters.

In the early 1970s, when BP — a British company — moved onto the North Slope, it felt compelled to operate through an American subsidiary called Sohio. Why? Because there were real political sensitivities about how a foreign company would be perceived in Washington, where important pipeline decisions were being made. Even Britain knew it needed to obscure its foreign ownership to be politically acceptable in Alaska.

Nobody hides anything today. Australian and Canadian corporations operate openly as Alaska's dominant resource extractors, and Alaska's political establishment cheers them on.

Alaskans have become coupon clippers on their own land — collecting a modest cut while foreign shareholders capture the real wealth created by Alaska's irreplaceable resources.

The Ask Is Simple

Higher royalties tied directly to a larger Permanent Fund Dividend. When foreign companies profit from Alaska's nonrenewable wealth, every Alaskan should share in that windfall — transparently and directly. Alaska's resources belong to Alaskans. The companies extracting them, wherever they're headquartered, should reflect that in what they pay.

It's time to renegotiate the deal.

Heads ConocoPhillips Wins, Tails They Lose Nothing
North Slope Notebook  ·  Energy & Politics in Alaska

May 2026
HEADS
vs.
TAILS
Alaska LNG · Analysis

Heads ConocoPhillips Wins,
Tails They Lose Nothing

The latest Alaska LNG "commitment" is a masterclass in risk-free positioning — and the only ones who can't walk away are Alaskans.

ConocoPhillips has signed a gas supply agreement with Glenfarne Alaska LNG, becoming the last of the major North Slope producers to do so. The press release was effusive. The headlines were favorable. And ConocoPhillips didn't risk a single dollar.

That, in a sentence, is the Alaska LNG story in 2026. A parade of agreements, commitments, letters of intent, and milestone announcements — and underneath it all, a project that still has no binding purchase contracts, no disclosed cost estimate, and no financing in place.

To understand just how carefully ConocoPhillips — and every other player in this drama — has structured their involvement, it helps to go back to the last time Alaska's North Slope producers were asked to really commit.

Governor Murkowski's Wager

In the early 2000s, Governor Frank Murkowski sat down with BP, ExxonMobil, and ConocoPhillips under the Stranded Gas Development Act and tried to negotiate something real: the producers as equity partners in the pipeline itself. Alaska would take a 20% ownership stake, collect royalties in kind, and the three majors would have actual skin in the game as co-owners of the infrastructure.

It never happened. The Legislature rejected the fiscal terms. Murkowski lost his primary to Sarah Palin. Then came AGIA, then Denali, then AGDC, then iteration after iteration of a project that always seemed to be five years away from breaking ground.

What the producers learned from two decades of failed attempts was a simple lesson: never be the one holding the bag.

"You know you have a project when you have take-or-pay contracts and you have access to capital and people willing to step in and lend the money."

— Alaska Senate Finance Co-Chair, January 2026

The Perfect Coin Flip

A gas supply agreement — which is what ConocoPhillips, ExxonMobil, Hilcorp, and Pantheon Resources have all signed — is essentially a conditional, non-binding gesture. It says: if you build it, and if the commercial terms work, we can sell you gas. It is not a take-or-pay contract. It is not equity. It is not a guarantee of delivery at a price.

It costs ConocoPhillips nothing to sign. They're not putting up capital, not taking on project risk, not committing to a price. If Glenfarne fails to secure financing and the project collapses — as this project has collapsed before — ConocoPhillips loses nothing. If the project somehow gets built, they're already at the table with a favorable position.

Alaska LNG Scorecard — Who Loses What If This Fails?
ConocoPhillips (gas supply agreement) LOSES NOTHING
ExxonMobil, Hilcorp, Pantheon (same) LOSES NOTHING
Asian buyers (letters of intent) LOSES NOTHING
Glenfarne (walks away) COLLECTS $50M BACKSTOP
State of Alaska & Taxpayers HOLDS THE BAG

This is what a heads-I-win, tails-I-lose-nothing deal looks like. And it isn't just ConocoPhillips. Every player has structured their involvement the same way. Asian buyers have signed non-binding letters of intent. Glenfarne itself negotiated a $50 million backstop payment from the state if it chooses to walk away from its final investment decision.

Field of Dreams on the North Slope

The announcement language from Glenfarne President Adam Prestidge — "all major North Slope producers have now committed enough natural gas to support a Phase One final investment decision" — is doing extraordinary work. The word "committed" is carrying a meaning it cannot support.

What Alaska is being offered is a Field of Dreams proposition: if you build it, they will come. The producers will sell gas. The Asian utilities will buy LNG. The investors will appear. But only if you build it first — and only Alaska is being asked to take that risk, through tax concessions, potential equity investment, and enabling legislation passed before anyone knows what the project actually costs.

And that cost remains stubbornly secret. The official estimate has ranged from $12.7 billion to $45 billion over the years. Independent analysts put the current true figure potentially north of $60 billion. Glenfarne commissioned an updated estimate from engineering firm Worley — then announced the number would "most likely not be made public."

"How much is that pipeline in the window?"

— The question nobody is asking loudly enough

The One Party That Can't Walk Away

Governor Dunleavy has called the project "closer to reality than ever." President Trump has made it a centerpiece of his energy dominance agenda and a bargaining chip in trade negotiations with Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan. Senator Sullivan has spent years building political support for it in Washington.

None of that changes the fundamental arithmetic. Political will is not a financing plan. Press releases are not take-or-pay contracts. And a gas supply agreement from ConocoPhillips does not make a banker write a check for $40-plus billion in a remote Alaskan wilderness.

ConocoPhillips signed last, after watching every other major producer go first and seeing which way the political winds were blowing. It was the safest possible moment to make the cheapest possible gesture. And the headlines rewarded them for it.

In the Alaska LNG game, the coin always comes up the same way for the producers. Heads they win. Tails they lose nothing.

The only question is who's on the other side of that coin flip — and the answer, as it has always been, is Alaska.


Sources: Anchorage Daily News, Alaska Beacon, Natural Gas Intelligence, Engineering News-Record, Inletkeeper, Alaska Gasline Development Corporation, U.S. Senate Energy Committee records.

Alaska LNG ConocoPhillips Glenfarne North Slope Energy Policy Alaska Politics

An analysis of the Alaska Survey Research poll released May 17, 2026 showing 3:1 support for the Alaska LNG project among Alaskans.

A poll released today by Alaska Survey Research shows 67.5% of Alaska adults support the Alaska LNG gasline project, with support rising to 74.9% among likely general election voters. The numbers are being cited by project supporters as proof that Alaskans are firmly behind the gasline and that legislative hesitation is out of step with the public.

Before those numbers are used to drive a multi-billion dollar policy decision, they deserve a closer look.

The Question Wording Is the Story

The survey asked 1,680 Alaska adults the following question:

"There have been ongoing discussions recently concerning the Alaska LNG pipeline project, which proposes to tap our North Slope natural gas for Alaskans to use and to produce LNG, or liquefied natural gas, to sell to Asian markets. Right now, we have no way to access natural gas on the North Slope. The Alaska LNG proposal includes building an 800-mile, 42-inch gas pipeline from the North Slope to the Kenai Peninsula. A private company, Glenfarne, owns 75% of the Alaska LNG project and the State of Alaska owns 25%. Alaskans will be able to access natural gas from several points along the pipeline route including the greater Anchorage and Fairbanks regions. Based on what you have heard, do you support or oppose the development of the Alaska LNG project?"

This is not a neutral question. It is a project brochure presented as a poll.

The question tells respondents the project will deliver gas to Anchorage and Fairbanks. It does not tell them what that gas will cost or who pays if the project runs over budget. It tells them a private company owns 75%. It does not tell them that private company has never built a pipeline, that the Final Investment Decision is still pending and months behind schedule, or that no gas supply agreements have been signed with ExxonMobil, ConocoPhillips, or BP — the companies that actually own the North Slope gas.

Most critically, the question contains no cost information whatsoever. The official 2020 cost estimate of $38.7 billion is not mentioned. The likelihood that the real cost in today's tariff environment is $75 billion or more — a figure critics close to the project have raised and the state has not publicly rebutted — is not mentioned. The fact that Alaska is currently running a $1.8 billion annual budget deficit while considering giving up over $1 billion in annual property tax revenue to attract the project is not mentioned.

Asking Alaskans if they support a pipeline that brings them cheap gas and sells the surplus to Asia, without mentioning what it costs or who pays, is not measuring public opinion. It is confirming that Alaskans like good things.

Who Commissioned This Survey?

The poll release does not disclose who commissioned it. That is a significant omission for a survey released at the precise moment the Alaska Legislature is deadlocked over the gasline tax structure — a debate in which showing broad public support is a powerful political tool for one side.

The timing — May 14-17, the final days of the legislative session — and the question wording that reads like AGDC promotional material raise an obvious question: was this survey commissioned by a party with a financial or political stake in the outcome of the legislative debate?

Alaska Survey Research is a legitimate and well-regarded firm. But legitimate firms conduct surveys for clients with interests. Until the commissioning party is disclosed, the poll's political context cannot be properly evaluated.

We are asking Alaska Survey Research directly who commissioned this survey and will update this post when we receive an answer.

What Alaskans Actually Support

The 67.5% support number does tell us something real — just not what its promoters claim.

Alaskans have supported the concept of a North Slope gasline for fifty years. Every poll on the subject, conducted by every firm under any question wording, has shown the same thing: Alaskans want the gasline. That is not news. It has never been in question.

What the poll cannot tell us — because the question didn't ask — is whether Alaskans support the gasline at any cost, under any tax structure, with any developer, regardless of whether it pencils out financially. Those are the actual questions before the legislature right now.

A more informative poll would ask:

  • Do you support the gasline if the actual cost is $75 billion rather than the 2020 estimate of $38.7 billion?
  • Do you support the gasline if Alaska taxpayers are required to backstop construction costs if Glenfarne cannot secure private financing?
  • Do you support eliminating over $1 billion in annual property tax revenue — currently funding schools, municipalities, and public services — to make the project financially viable for the developer?
  • Do you support the gasline if ExxonMobil, ConocoPhillips, and BP — the companies that own the gas — do not sign supply agreements before construction begins?
  • Do you support the gasline knowing that steel tariffs have increased construction costs by 20-50% since the last cost estimate was published?

None of those questions were asked. Their absence is the most important data point in the entire survey.

What the Legislative Debate Actually Involves

The poll is being used to pressure legislators. But the legislature is not debating whether to support the gasline concept. It is debating specific, consequential financial terms that will bind Alaska for generations.

The governor's proposal would reduce property tax revenue by approximately 90% once the pipeline reaches full capacity, according to the Alaska Department of Revenue's own analysis. The Senate and House have each produced substitute bills with significantly higher tax structures — the Senate version generating roughly $610 million annually at full operation compared to the governor's roughly $75 million peak projection.

The Anchorage Daily News editorial board — which supports the gasline — put it directly last week: before lawmakers rewrite tax law, the governor and Glenfarne need to show Alaskans the math. That is not opposition to the gasline. That is the minimum standard of fiscal responsibility.

Meanwhile the Alaska Beacon has reported that Glenfarne gave 75% of AGDC's assets — including permits, rights of way, years of research and data accumulated at public expense — in exchange for a commitment to pursue a final investment decision. That FID was due at the end of 2025. It is still pending, months behind schedule, with no public explanation.

The Information Gap Is the Problem

The central issue in the Alaska LNG debate is not public support for the concept. It is the systematic withholding of financial information from the public and the legislature.

The project's own supporters have argued in print that "many details are confidential" and that Alaskans must trust the process. Critics including former state Revenue Commissioner Bruce Tangeman have raised specific concerns about project readiness and cost transparency that project proponents have responded to with accusations of bad faith rather than data.

The Alaska Landmine has reported that the actual revised cost estimate — which the state has not published — may be $75 billion minimum, and that this figure is being withheld from Alaskans while the governor simultaneously demands the legislature surrender billions in future tax revenue.

A poll conducted on incomplete information measures support for an incomplete picture. The 67.5% who said they support the Alaska LNG project were not told what it actually costs, who actually pays, or what Alaska actually gives up. If they had been, the number might be 67.5%. Or it might not. We don't know — because nobody asked.

What Informed Consent Actually Looks Like

Alaskans deserve to make this decision with full information. That means the state should immediately publish:

  • The current revised cost estimate, incorporating tariff impacts and 2025-2026 construction cost inflation
  • A full accounting of what Alaska has already transferred to Glenfarne — permits, rights of way, data, and research — and what the state's recourse is if FID is not made
  • The DOR's analysis of the full range of tax scenarios, not just the governor's preferred version
  • The status of gas supply negotiations with North Slope producers
  • Glenfarne's financial backing and capitalization — who is actually funding the developer

When that information is public, commission another poll. Ask Alaskans whether they support the project with the full picture in front of them. That result would be meaningful.

Until then, a survey asking Alaskans if they want a pipeline that brings them gas and generates revenue — without mentioning the cost, the risk, or what they give up — tells us only what we already knew: Alaskans want the gasline to work.

So does everyone. The question is whether this version of it will — and on what terms.


Sources: Alaska Survey Research poll release May 17, 2026; Alaska Beacon reporting on Glenfarne structure and FID delay; Anchorage Daily News editorial May 16, 2026; Alaska Landmine reporting on revised cost estimates; Alaska Department of Revenue fiscal analysis of governor's tax proposal; Northern Journal gubernatorial candidate survey March 2026; Alaska Beacon reporting on property tax reduction analysis.

Sunday, May 17, 2026

A research statement on the Pikka oil field, Alaska's SB21 production tax structure, and the foreign ownership of Alaska's North Slope resources. Published May 17, 2026.

What We Know — And What the Data Confirms

Over the past several weeks, we have been examining the financial structure of the Pikka oil field on Alaska's North Slope — who owns it, what was invested, what Alaska receives, and what the companies take home. What follows is a statement of what the confirmed data shows, and an honest disclosure of where further research is still needed before we publish specific figures.

Every claim in this statement is sourced to primary documents: Santos Ltd. financial filings, Alaska Department of Revenue analyses, state statutes, and confirmed public records.

The Core Facts

The Pikka oil field is owned entirely by two foreign companies. Santos Ltd., headquartered in Adelaide, Australia, operates the field with a 51% working interest. Repsol S.A., headquartered in Madrid, Spain, holds the remaining 49%. No Alaska company, no US major, and no American independent holds any ownership stake in what is described as the largest onshore conventional oil discovery in the United States in thirty years.

The confirmed investment to bring Pikka to first oil is at least $3.65 billion. This includes $400 million paid by Oil Search (now Santos) in February 2018 to acquire initial stakes from Armstrong Energy and GMT Exploration, $450 million paid in June 2019 to exercise an option for the remaining Armstrong and GMT interests, and approximately $2.8 billion in Phase 1 construction capital — the original $2.6 billion FID commitment revised upward by approximately $200 million Santos-share due to tariff-driven cost increases on steel and production modules, labor inflation, and logistics costs along the Mackenzie River transit.

At the state of Alaska's own long-term oil price forecast of $65 per barrel, Santos and Repsol recover that entire investment in approximately three years. At the elevated prices driven by the current Middle East conflict — ANS averaged $111 per barrel in April 2026 — payback compresses to under two years. After payback, the companies collect essentially pure profit for the remaining 27 years of the field's projected 30-year life.

Alaska receives zero production tax from Pikka until fiscal year 2034 — eight years after first oil. This is confirmed directly by the Alaska Department of Revenue's own fiscal analysis of the project. It is not a projection by critics. It is the state's own number. The mechanism is Alaska's SB21 oil tax structure, which allows Santos to stack three separate tax elimination tools simultaneously: a Gross Value Reduction that excludes 20-30% of gross wellhead revenue from the tax calculation, a $5 per-barrel credit that can reduce tax liability below even the 4% minimum tax floor — to zero — during the first seven years of GVR-eligible production, and carried-forward annual loss credits equal to 35% of all pre-production development costs that continue drawing down any production tax liability until approximately FY2039-2040.

There is no make-up provision. The production taxes Alaska does not collect during the first eight years of Pikka's production — its peak production years, when the field will be generating its highest volumes at the highest price environment — are gone permanently. The state's own Department of Revenue projects that by the time full production taxes begin in FY2034, roughly 75% of projected Pikka volumes will already have been produced.

If Santos proceeds with Pikka Phase 2 — which it is already planning — SB21 allows the tax credits generated by Phase 2 to be applied against Phase 1 production. Under that scenario, the DOR's own analysis suggests full production taxes may not be realized until well beyond FY2040, and may never be fully realized during the life of the field.

What Alaska does receive is royalties. The state's royalty rate is 12.5% of wellhead value — the gross price minus approximately $10.50 per barrel in Trans-Alaska Pipeline System transportation costs. At $65 per barrel, that produces approximately $201 million per year in total royalty revenue from Pikka. The DOR's own analysis projects approximately $200 million per year in state revenues from Pikka in its first year, growing to approximately $300 million by 2034, almost entirely from royalties rather than production taxes. Over the full 30-year life of Phase 1, the state projects approximately $4.6 billion in total net cash flow.

Meanwhile Santos and Repsol retain the overwhelming majority of gross revenue. At $65 per barrel over 30 years at 80,000 barrels per day, gross revenue from Pikka approaches $57 billion. Alaska's confirmed $4.6 billion lifetime take represents approximately eight cents on every dollar of gross revenue generated from the state's own constitutionally owned resources.

The same construction costs that generate Alaska's carried-forward loss credits also qualify for US federal tax deductions. Under Section 263 of the Internal Revenue Code, intangible drilling costs — labor, fuel, site preparation, chemicals, and other non-salvageable items that typically represent 65-80% of total drilling costs — are deductible against US federal taxable income. For integrated oil companies, 70% is deductible in the year incurred and 30% is amortized over 60 months. Both Santos and Repsol, as foreign corporations conducting a US trade or business, file Form 1120-F and pay US federal corporate tax at the 21% rate on effectively connected income — and claim these deductions against that income. The state of Alaska allows the same costs as the basis for credits that eliminate production tax. The federal government allows those same costs as deductions that reduce federal tax. The same dollar works twice — at both levels — simultaneously.

Alaska is running a $1.8 billion annual budget deficit while its largest new oil field generates zero production tax for eight years, its oil tax credits are being consumed by foreign companies at both the state and federal level, and its legislature debates whether to surrender over $1 billion in annual property tax revenue to attract a gasline builder that hasn't yet committed to the project.

Under Article 8, Section 2 of the Alaska Constitution, the standard for management of the state's natural resources is whether Alaskans are receiving the "maximum benefit" from their development. The confirmed data raises a legitimate and serious question about whether that standard is being met.

What We Are Still Researching

We are committed to accuracy. The following figures appeared in our earlier analysis but require additional primary source verification before we will publish them as established facts. We are actively pursuing that research.

Repsol's pre-2018 exploration investment. Repsol has been active in Alaska since 2011 and led 16 exploration and appraisal wells before the 2022 Final Investment Decision. We have estimated this expenditure at $300-400 million based on industry cost benchmarks, but have not located a primary Repsol financial disclosure confirming the specific figure. Until we do, total confirmed investment remains $3.65 billion, not the $4.1 billion figure cited in earlier drafts.

The precise federal IDC tax savings. We calculated an estimated $267-330 million in federal tax savings from IDC deductions applied to Phase 1 construction costs. This calculation is methodologically sound — applying confirmed IDC percentages and the 21% federal rate to confirmed construction costs — but it is an estimate based on typical industry ratios, not a figure disclosed in Santos or Repsol financial filings. We are seeking confirmation of the actual IDC percentage claimed.

Santos' Australian tax treatment of US profits. The US-Australia tax treaty eliminates branch profits tax on Santos' repatriation of US earnings, and Australia's foreign tax credit system would generally allow Santos to credit US taxes paid against Australian tax obligations. The practical effect is that Santos likely pays tax on Pikka profits once, at the US 21% rate, with minimal additional Australian tax. However, we have not reviewed Santos' Australian tax filings or obtained a definitive legal opinion on their specific structure. We will not characterize the Australian tax outcome as confirmed until we have done so.

Repsol's specific withholding rate on repatriated profits. The US-Spain tax treaty limits withholding on dividends to 5% for qualifying corporate shareholders. Repsol's 49% ownership interest in Pikka would normally qualify, but the specific structure of their US holding entity and whether it meets treaty qualification tests requires confirmation we do not yet have.

The total production tax foregone. We estimated Alaska is foregoing between $600 million and $1 billion in production tax from Pikka over the zero-tax period. This range is calculated from the confirmed 4% minimum tax floor applied to confirmed production and price assumptions. It is a reasonable estimate — and the DOR's own statewide data showing a 75% plunge in production tax revenues from $974 million to $218 million between FY2024 and FY2032 supports its general magnitude. But a Pikka-specific figure requires the DOR's full fiscal model, which we are requesting.

Our Commitment

The core narrative — that two foreign companies are recovering a $3.65 billion confirmed investment in approximately three years, collecting essentially pure profit for 27 more years, paying zero Alaska production tax for the first eight, while the state runs a $1.8 billion deficit — is fully supported by primary source documentation and we stand behind it entirely.

The additional figures under further research would, if confirmed, strengthen that narrative further. But we will not publish them as established facts until they are. We expect to have answers on each of the open items within the coming weeks and will update this analysis accordingly.

If you have access to primary source documents that confirm or contradict any of the figures under research, we welcome that information.


Primary sources: Santos Ltd. FID announcement August 2022; Santos Q4 2025 Report; Santos Q1 2026 Report; Alaska Department of Revenue Fiscal Analysis of Pikka Phase 1; Alaska Department of Revenue Spring 2026 Revenue Forecast; Alaska Landmine / Brad Keithley analysis of DOR production tax data; Alaska Beacon reporting on ANS prices May 2026; Oil Search Alaska acquisition filings February 2018 and June 2019; Repsol Pikka FID statement August 2022; Alaska Policy Forum oil tax history; IRS Form 1120-F foreign corporation filing requirements; Section 263 Internal Revenue Code; US-Australia Tax Treaty protocol; Article 8 Section 2 Alaska Constitution.

A response to "Canada races ahead on major oil pipeline to West Coast, while Alaska lawmakers stall over gasline taxes" by Suzanne Downing — thealaskastory.com, May 17, 2026

Suzanne Downing's May 17 article presents a tidy narrative: Canada is boldly acting on energy infrastructure while Alaska's Democrat-controlled legislature fumbles over gas taxes. It's a compelling political frame. It's also incomplete in ways that matter enormously to Alaskans trying to understand the real state of both projects.

Let's lay out the fundamentals.

Alaska LNG: The Real Numbers

Official cost estimate $38.7 billion (AGDC, June 2020)
Likely real cost today $75 billion or more

That 2020 estimate is now six years old — compiled before any of the following:

  • Post-COVID construction cost inflation
  • Steel tariffs doubling to 50% under Section 232
  • A 20.7% year-over-year rise in steel mill products
  • Fabricated structural metal costs rising over 63%
  • Nonresidential construction input prices surging at a 12.6% annualized rate in early 2026

The project itself — 807 miles of 42-inch diameter pipeline, a North Slope gas treatment plant, and a Nikiski LNG export terminal — is essentially thousands of miles of steel pipe built in one of the most remote and harsh environments on earth. Steel is the core input. Steel costs have been devastated by tariffs. Yet the official cost figure hasn't been updated publicly.

Critics close to the project, including commentary published in the Alaska Landmine, allege the revised internal estimate is $75 billion minimum — and that the Governor's office, Glenfarne, and AGDC are deliberately withholding that figure from Alaskans while simultaneously demanding the legislature agree to give up over $1 billion in annual property tax revenue.

Current project status:

  • Developer: Glenfarne (75% stake), AGDC (25%)
  • No final investment decision made
  • Legislature and governor deadlocked over tax structure
  • No committed upstream gas suppliers — ExxonMobil, ConocoPhillips, and BP have not signed
  • Cost estimate frozen at 2020 figures

Canada's West Coast Oil Pipeline: The Real Numbers

Official cost estimate $20 billion (Premier Danielle Smith)
Independent analyst estimate $35 billion (Studio.Energy/ATB Economics, 2026)
Likely real cost Unknown — no private builder has signed on to validate any figure

Canada's pipeline — provisionally named the West Coast Oil Pipeline — would carry approximately 1 million barrels of oil per day from Alberta to the BC coast for export to Asian markets. An Implementation Agreement was signed May 15, 2026 by Prime Minister Mark Carney and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith, with construction targeted to begin as early as September 2027.

But the headline obscures the same fundamental problems Alaska faces:

  • No private builder. The two companies with the financial scale to build it — Enbridge and TC Energy spinoff South Bow — have stayed completely silent throughout all the political announcements.
  • No route finalized. The pipeline must pass through British Columbia, whose premier has openly opposed it.
  • No Indigenous consent. Coastal First Nations are opposed. Canada's constitutional duty to consult is unresolved.
  • Cost estimates predate the tariff environment. The $20–35 billion range was compiled before the full weight of 50% steel tariffs was priced in.
  • Alberta is acting as its own proponent — having budgeted just $14 million for the role — because no private company will do it.

A former Alberta energy minister has stated there is almost no chance a private company would build the pipeline without significant government financial backstops. That means taxpayers.

The Trans Mountain Warning No One Wants to Hear

Canada just completed a directly comparable project. Here's how the Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion actually went:

Original estimate CAD $5.4 billion
Final cost CAD $34.2 billion — more than six times the estimate
Current status Not recouping costs through tolls
Taxpayer exposure $8.7–$18.8 billion over the project's life — up to $1,255 per Canadian household

Trans Mountain was built in a less severe cost environment than today's. It had an existing right-of-way. It had committed private shippers. It still ran six times over budget.

Both the Alaska LNG project and Canada's West Coast pipeline are greenfield projects, in more remote terrain, with no committed builders, using cost estimates that predate a historic surge in construction material costs. The Trans Mountain outcome isn't just a cautionary tale — it's the baseline expectation.

The Tariff Problem Both Projects Share

This is the piece of context most conspicuously absent from Downing's article.

Trump's tariff policies have fundamentally altered the construction economics of both pipelines:

  • Steel mill products: up 20.7% year-over-year
  • Aluminum mill shapes: up 33% year-over-year
  • Section 232 tariffs on steel and aluminum: 50% on many products
  • Overall nonresidential construction costs: up an estimated 8% aggregate, with tariff-exposed materials running far higher
  • Every month of political delay means procurement costs climb further

For Alaska specifically, there is no domestic steel industry. Every foot of pipe must be imported or sourced domestically at tariff-inflated prices. The remote Arctic construction environment then multiplies those costs through logistics, weather, and permafrost engineering challenges that have no equivalent in the Lower 48 or even northern Canada.

The irony is sharp: the tariff policies that Downing's publication generally supports are simultaneously making both pipelines dramatically more expensive to build.

What the Article Got Right — And What It Got Wrong

What's accurate:

  • Canada has made more political progress on its pipeline framework recently than Alaska has on the gasline tax structure
  • The May 15 Carney-Smith agreement is real and represents genuine political momentum
  • Alaska's legislature has been slow to resolve the gasline tax dispute

What's missing or misleading:

  • Canada's pipeline has no private builder, no route, no validated cost estimate, and no Indigenous consent — the same fundamental gaps Alaska faces
  • Both cost estimates are years out of date and almost certainly dramatically understated
  • The tariff environment has materially worsened the economics of both projects since any official figures were published
  • Canada's last comparable pipeline ran six times over budget and still burdens taxpayers
  • Framing Canada as "racing ahead" when it has only signed agreements — not committed financing or a builder — is generous at best

The Bottom Line

Both projects face the same fundamental realities:

Factor Alaska LNG Canada West Coast Pipeline
Official cost estimate $38.7B (2020) $20–35B (2025–26)
Estimated real cost today $75B+ $50B+ likely
Private builder committed No No
Financing secured No No
Route finalized No No
Indigenous consent Unresolved Opposed
Steel tariff impact Severe Severe
Cost estimate currency 6 years old Pre-tariff surge

Downing's article isn't wrong that Alaska's legislature needs to resolve the tax structure question. That's a legitimate point. But holding up Canada as the model to follow — when Canada's project has nearly identical fundamental problems — doesn't serve Alaskans with an honest picture of where either project actually stands.

Both governments are currently better at announcing pipelines than building them. The fundamentals — costs, builders, financing, steel prices, Indigenous rights — don't care about press releases.

Until both projects can answer the basic questions of who builds it, who pays for it, and at what realistic cost in today's tariff environment, the only thing either government is racing ahead on is the announcement.


Sources: AGDC, Alberta.ca, OilPrice.com, Global News, The Narwhal, Alaska Public Media, Alaska Landmine, Cushman & Wakefield, Associated Builders and Contractors, International Institute for Sustainable Development

Saturday, May 16, 2026

Ukraine · Poland · NATO · Geopolitics

Putin and Trump: The Miscalculation That Changed Europe

Putin assumed Ukraine would fold in days. Trump assumed Zelensky could be bullied into surrender. Poland was supposed to stay quiet and grateful. All three assumptions were wrong — and the consequences are reshaping the global security order.

Analysis · May 2026

History is full of powerful men who mistook silence for weakness, patience for passivity, and economic dependency for submission. Vladimir Putin made that mistake about Ukraine in February 2022. Donald Trump made it again three years later. And Poland — the quiet, grateful eastern ally — turned out to have its own ideas entirely.

The most consequential miscalculation of this era was not a battlefield error or a diplomatic blunder. It was a failure of imagination — the inability of two of the world’s most transactional leaders to conceive that smaller, poorer, more vulnerable countries might respond to pressure not with compliance, but with transformation.

Putin’s Miscalculation

The original plan was three days. Russian forces would sweep into Kyiv, the government would flee or collapse, and Ukraine — which Putin had publicly declared was not a real country — would fold back into Moscow’s orbit. The tanks were fuelled for a short drive. The assumption was total.

What followed was four years of the most intensive military innovation in modern European history. Ukraine, denied the high-end weapons it requested, built its own. It developed interceptor drones costing $1,000–$2,000 that could destroy $6 million missiles. It created GPS-independent navigation systems to defeat Russian jamming. It pioneered swarm tactics that no Western military had tested in real combat. By 2026, a single Ukrainian manufacturer planned to produce more than 3 million FPV drones in a year — ten times the entire U.S. output for 2025.

Putin’s invasion did not erase Ukrainian national identity. It created it — forging in four years a coherence and self-consciousness that might otherwise have taken generations. The country he invaded to prevent from existing became more distinctly, defiantly itself than at any point in its history.

“The country he invaded to prevent from existing became more distinctly, defiantly itself than at any point in its history.”

— Analysis, May 2026

Trump’s Miscalculation

Trump’s error was different in kind but identical in structure. Where Putin underestimated Ukraine militarily, Trump underestimated it strategically. The assumption was that cutting aid, pressuring Zelensky publicly, and cosying up to Moscow would produce a compliant Kyiv desperate for any deal Washington offered.

Instead, Zelensky went to the UN. He addressed the British Parliament. He toured European capitals. And most shrewdly, he walked into a White House meeting with a map of the Middle East and explained to the administration that its Iran problem already had a solution — and Ukraine had built it. The country being pressured into submission turned its battlefield innovations into geopolitical leverage, positioning itself as indispensable to the very war Washington cared about most.

Ukrainian drone operators ended up in Jordan. Ukrainian Sky Map software went to Saudi Arabia. Ukrainian “Shahed Killer” interceptors became the counter-drone system of choice for a Gulf war Kyiv had no part in starting. A country being told to accept defeat was simultaneously being asked for its expertise by the superpower demanding that defeat.

76%
of Trump voters support sanctioning Russia
16%
of Trump voters support Ukraine surrendering territory to Russia

Even Trump’s own base didn’t follow him. The right-leaning Vandenberg Coalition found that 76% of Trump voters support sanctioning Russia while only 16% back Ukraine surrendering territory. Republican Senator Mitch McConnell compared Trump’s peace proposal to Biden’s abandonment of Afghanistan. The transactional president discovered that some things aren’t transactional — including how his own voters feel about rewarding aggression.

Poland’s Defiance

Poland was supposed to be the model of the grateful ally — dependable, deferential, content to host American troops and follow Washington’s lead. It had long positioned itself as America’s most loyal partner in eastern Europe, spending more on defense as a share of GDP than any other NATO member and buying American hardware from Abrams tanks to F-35 jets.

When Hegseth canceled the deployment of 4,000 troops to Poland this week — abruptly, without notifying Congress, with some soldiers already on Polish soil — the expectation presumably was that Warsaw would absorb the blow quietly. Instead Poland accelerated a conversation that is now reshaping the entire European security architecture.

Its president declared himself “a great supporter of Poland joining the nuclear project.” Its prime minister told parliament that “we would be safer if we had our own nuclear arsenal.” Poland is in active talks with France about a European nuclear umbrella. It has built one of Europe’s largest armies and forged a deep defense industrial partnership with South Korea. The “model ally” turned out to have its own strategic agenda — one that no longer depends on Washington’s approval.

Poland’s Response to U.S. Withdrawal

→ Openly declared support for an independent nuclear arsenal

→ Entered active talks with France over a European nuclear umbrella

→ Deepened defense ties with South Korea independent of U.S. procurement

→ Spending 4.7% of GDP on defense — highest in NATO

→ Building one of Europe’s largest standing armies

The Deeper Pattern

What connects these stories is something neither Putin nor Trump appears to have modelled: that sustained pressure on a country with something worth defending produces not submission but transformation. Ukraine didn’t just survive Russian invasion — it became a military innovator that the world’s most powerful nation now depends on. Poland didn’t just absorb American withdrawal — it began building strategic autonomy that will outlast any single U.S. administration.

Both Putin and Trump operate on a fundamentally transactional view of power: that strength is zero-sum, that smaller states have no real agency, and that economic or military leverage will always eventually produce compliance. It is a worldview that has deep roots in how both men have operated throughout their careers.

It turns out to be wrong — not as a matter of idealism, but of geopolitics. Countries facing existential pressure do not always fold. Sometimes they innovate. Sometimes they rearm. Sometimes they reach for the most extreme form of deterrence available and dare you to stop them. The pressure itself becomes the engine of the transformation you were trying to prevent.

“The pressure itself becomes the engine of the transformation you were trying to prevent.”

— Analysis, May 2026

The Historical Echo

This is not without precedent. Finland, invaded by the Soviet Union in 1939 in a war Moscow expected to last eleven days, held out for three months against overwhelming odds and extracted a peace on terms that preserved its sovereignty — and emerged from the experience with a national identity forged in resistance. Israel, surrounded by hostile neighbours and denied support by major powers in its earliest years, built a nuclear deterrent in secret and transformed itself into a regional military power. South Korea, devastated by war, became an economic and technological powerhouse partly through the discipline that insecurity imposed.

Vulnerability, it turns out, is not always weakness. Sometimes it is the condition that produces the most durable forms of strength — the kind that doesn’t depend on an ally’s goodwill or a superpower’s attention.

● ● ●

What Both Men Missed

Putin’s invasion was supposed to extinguish Ukrainian nationhood. Instead it crystallised it. Trump’s pressure was supposed to produce a compliant Kyiv and a grateful Warsaw. Instead it produced a Ukraine that out-manoeuvred him diplomatically and a Poland reaching for nuclear deterrence. The two most powerful men involved in this crisis both failed to account for the same variable: that the people whose fate they were deciding had their own plans. History has a long record of powerful men making exactly this mistake. It rarely ends well for them.

Suggested labels: Ukraine · Poland · Trump · Putin · NATO · Nuclear Proliferation · Geopolitics · European Security

Ukraine · NATO · Middle East · Nuclear Proliferation

The Technology Colony Gambit

How Trump and Hegseth are strip-mining Ukraine's battlefield innovations for the Middle East — while simultaneously demanding Kyiv surrender to Russia. And why it’s all backfiring.

Analysis · May 16, 2026

There is a word for a relationship in which one party extracts the resources of another while offering little in return, demands compliance, and punishes resistance. It is not a partnership. It is not an alliance. It is a colonial arrangement. And it is, increasingly, the most honest description of what Washington has constructed with Kyiv.

To understand how America arrived here — pulling troops from Poland, pressuring Ukraine to capitulate to Russia, and simultaneously deploying Ukrainian drone operators to Saudi Arabia — you have to follow not the rhetoric, but the hardware.

The Laboratory

Ukraine has spent four years under existential pressure innovating at a pace no Western military has matched in peacetime. One Ukrainian manufacturer alone plans to produce more than 3 million low-cost FPV drones in 2026. The United States built 300,000 in all of 2025. Ukrainian engineers have developed interceptor drones priced at $1,000–$2,000 each — a fraction of the millions it costs to fire a Patriot missile. They have built GPS-independent navigation to defeat Russian jamming. They have created the Sky Map software now operating at Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia, 640 kilometers from Iran.

The Atlantic Council, an institution close to U.S. power, stated plainly what this means for Washington: the United States has been given “an extraordinary gift: the opportunity to learn these lessons while someone else is paying the cost in blood and treasure. Ukraine is the laboratory.”

“Ukraine is the laboratory. The experiments are ongoing. The data is available.”

— Atlantic Council, March 2026

The experiments are indeed ongoing. And the subjects have no choice but to keep running them, because the war continues — partly because the same administration extracting the technology is blocking the peace terms that might actually protect Ukraine.

The Extraction

The pivot point came in August 2025. Ukrainian officials pitched drone cooperation to the White House after Trump privately praised Operation Spiderweb — a Ukrainian strike that destroyed dozens of Russian warplanes on their tarmacs deep inside Russia. Zelensky, sensing an opportunity, brought a map of the Middle East to a closed-door White House meeting and made the case explicitly: Iran was learning from Russia. Ukraine had already solved the problem Washington was about to face.

3M+
FPV drones Ukraine plans to produce in 2026
300K
FPV drones the US produced in all of 2025

When the U.S.-Israel war on Iran began in February 2026, Washington discovered just how right Zelensky had been. Gulf air defenses were firing eight Patriot missiles at single low-cost drones. SM-6 interceptors costing $6 million were being used against Shaheds. Ukrainian officers, called in to consult, were appalled at the waste — the U.S. had ignored four years of information Kyiv had been offering on exactly this problem.

Ukrainian drone operators were deployed to Jordan. Ukrainian Sky Map software went to Saudi Arabia. Ukrainian “Shahed Killer” interceptors — the Sting, the Bullet, the P1-Sun — became the counter-drone system of choice for a war Ukraine had no part in starting.

The Feedback Loop

→ Disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz drove up global oil prices

→ Higher oil prices increased Russia’s revenues

→ Russia used that revenue to intensify attacks on Ukrainian cities

→ The Iran war simultaneously diverted Patriot missiles Ukraine desperately needed

→ Ukraine was defending a war theater that was actively funding its own enemy

The Hypocrisy

While Ukrainian technology was being integrated into U.S. bases across the Gulf, the Trump administration was simultaneously pressing Zelensky to accept terms that amounted to rewarding Russian aggression. U.S. envoys flew to Moscow. They did not fly to Kyiv. “It’s disrespectful to come to Moscow and not Kyiv,” Zelensky said. “It’s just disrespectful.”

The peace framework being constructed would formally bar Western troops from Ukraine — a demand Putin has made since before the invasion. And when Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth canceled the deployment of 4,000 troops to Poland this week — abruptly, without notifying Congress, with some troops and equipment already in the country — he handed Moscow exactly the territorial logic it has been demanding: NATO pulls back east.

Hegseth had previously called Poland a “model ally.” Trump had told Poland’s president just months earlier, “We’ll put more there if they want.” None of that mattered when the administration decided European reluctance to join the Iran war required punishment.

“The colony is being strip-mined while simultaneously being told to accept a bad peace deal.”

— Analysis, May 2026

The Nuclear Consequence

None of this plays out in a vacuum. Poland — watching U.S. troops disappear, knowing Putin’s original demands included rolling back NATO’s eastern presence, and understanding that Hegseth views Israel as his true strategic priority — is now openly discussing nuclear weapons. Its president calls himself “a great supporter of Poland joining the nuclear project.” Its prime minister told parliament that “we would be safer if we had our own nuclear arsenal.”

France, reading the same signals, has announced it will open nuclear exercises to other European allies and consider stationing nuclear assets in partner countries. The non-proliferation architecture that the U.S. spent decades constructing is creaking under the weight of Washington’s own disengagement.

A Pentagon official stated the U.S. would “strenuously oppose” any European state developing independent nuclear weapons — while the same Pentagon canceled the troop presence that makes such opposition credible. The threat is hollow when the troops that back it up are being sent home.

The Backfire

It is not working. Not on any front.

Zelensky — who was the first world leader to publicly back the U.S. strike on Iran — has now shifted to openly criticizing Washington’s foreign policy. The trust has broken. “It’s clear who we’re dealing with,” one senior Ukrainian official told the Kyiv Independent.

Trump’s own base is not following him on Ukraine. A poll from the right-leaning Vandenberg Coalition found that only 16% of Trump voters support Ukraine surrendering territory to Russia, while 76% support sanctioning Russia. Republican Senator Mitch McConnell compared Trump’s peace proposal to Biden’s abandonment of Afghanistan.

Putin, reading American inconsistency correctly, is holding firm. Russian officials increasingly reference what they call the “Anchorage understanding” — suggesting Trump may have already conceded significant ground to Moscow in their Alaska summit. If so, Zelensky was never a negotiating partner. He was a subject being informed of his fate.

● ● ●

The Own Goal

By squeezing Ukraine into capitulation while extracting its technology, the Trump administration has simultaneously alienated Zelensky, alarmed its own Republican base, emboldened Putin to hold firm, accelerated European nuclear ambitions, and undermined U.S. credibility as a mediator — all in the space of a few months. The battlefield that produced the drone innovations Washington so desperately needed is the very one Trump is trying to wind down on Russian terms. If Ukraine capitulates, that innovation ecosystem — forged under existential pressure, refined in real combat — goes with it. Washington may have secured the technology. It is in the process of destroying the laboratory that made it.

Suggested labels: Ukraine · NATO · Trump Foreign Policy · Middle East · Nuclear Proliferation · Poland · Drone Warfare

Friday, May 15, 2026

Alaska Is Playing Oil Company — And Taxpayers Are Footing the Bill



When a state development authority becomes the sole leaseholder, explorer, and would-be sublessor in America’s most controversial wildlife refuge, something has gone seriously wrong.


The Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority (AIDEA) recently approved a $190 million spending plan to conduct seismic exploration in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge’s Coastal Plain — without a public hearing, without a viable return plan, and without any of the technical expertise the work requires.

To understand why this matters beyond the familiar ANWR debate, set aside the politics of drilling in a wildlife refuge for a moment. What’s happening here is a fundamental breakdown in the logic of public finance, federal leasing law, and free-market principle — all at once.


How Federal Oil Leasing Is Supposed to Work

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (P.L. 115-97) mandated a competitive oil and gas leasing program for ANWR’s Coastal Plain. The operative word is *competitive*. Congress designed the program assuming private oil companies would bid against each other, fund their own exploration, develop the resource, and generate royalty revenue for both the federal treasury and the State of Alaska. The Congressional Budget Office projected $946 million in revenue.

Federal leasing law reinforces this with “diligent development” requirements under 30 U.S.C. § 226 — the Mineral Leasing Act. Lessees are legally obligated to actively explore and develop their holdings. The law exists specifically to prevent “warehousing” — sitting on leases without doing the work. Discovery, permitting, and exploration costs fall on the lessee. That is the bedrock assumption of every federal oil and gas lease ever issued.

Nowhere in the statute, the regulatory framework, or the legislative history does Congress contemplate a state development authority acquiring leases, warehousing them for five years, and then asking taxpayers to fund the exploration work the law expects private industry to perform.


What Actually Happened

When the first ANWR lease sale was held in January 2021, the market delivered a clear verdict: every parcel sold at the minimum bid of $25 per acre. Only two private companies participated. Both subsequently relinquished their leases. AIDEA — a public corporation with no oil exploration expertise — was left as the sole leaseholder on 365,000 acres.

The program then stalled under the Biden administration, which canceled the leases. AIDEA sued and prevailed. When the Trump administration restored the program in early 2025, the clock restarted with no legal impediment to development.

Then, in December 2024, a second lease sale attracted *zero private bids*.

The market had now spoken twice. Rather than treat this as a signal, AIDEA responded by proposing $190 million in public funds to conduct the seismic work that would, in theory, convince private companies to show interest they have twice declined to demonstrate on their own.


The Mining Claim Analogy

Consider how this would look in any other extractive industry context.

Alaska’s Division of Mining, Land and Water administers roughly 50,000 mining claims and leasehold locations on state lands. In every case, private claimants fund their own exploration — core drilling, assaying, geological surveys — entirely at their own expense. The state collects rents and royalties. It does not fund exploration on behalf of claimants who lack the capital or expertise to do it themselves.

If a mining company approached Juneau and said: *“We’ve staked a claim, but we can’t afford core sampling. Please give us $190 million in public funds to prove up the resource, and then we’ll find someone to actually mine it”* — the answer would be an unambiguous no.

That is precisely what AIDEA is asking Alaska taxpayers to fund in ANWR. The analogy is exact. The only difference is the resource and the political stakes.


AIDEA Is Playing Oil Company — Badly

AIDEA’s defenders frame the $190 million as catalytic investment — de-risking the resource so private capital will follow. But this framing collapses under scrutiny.

AIDEA has acknowledged it has neither the capital nor the technical expertise to develop the leases on its own. It has stated explicitly that it does not intend to drill — its plan is to conduct seismic work and then sublease the acreage to private companies. This is the business model of a junior exploration company: prove up the geology, then sell or sublease to a major.

The difference is that a junior exploration company raises *private* capital, takes *private* risk, and answers to *private* investors when the geology disappoints. AIDEA is running the same model with public money, no technical staff, no credible return plan, and no accountability mechanism if the seismic results are inconclusive or unfavorable.

No other U.S. state operates this way. In North Dakota, Texas, New Mexico, and every other oil-producing state, state-owned land is leased to private companies who bear all exploration costs. The state collects royalties. The model works because private capital accepts the geological risk in exchange for the upside. AIDEA has inverted this entirely.


The Legislative Intent Problem

Congress passed the ANWR leasing program expecting competitive private development. Instead, it produced a state agency as sole leaseholder spending public money on work the law assigns to lessees — after two lease sales failed to attract meaningful private interest.

One analysis found that nearly half of AIDEA’s investments have been written off as worthless, and that Alaska taxpayers would have been approximately $11 billion better off had that money been invested elsewhere. AIDEA disputes the methodology, but the pattern is consistent: public money flowing into projects private capital declined to fund, with losses socialized and any eventual upside captured by private operators.

The $190 million ANWR plan fits this pattern precisely. If the seismic results are a bust, Alaska taxpayers absorb the loss. If the geology proves promising, private companies will sublease and capture the development upside. Heads industry wins, tails the public loses.


What Should Happen Instead

If the ANWR Coastal Plain is as prospective as AIDEA claims — 4 billion barrels on their leases alone — those leases should be marketable to private buyers right now, without taxpayer-funded seismic work. The failure to attract buyers is itself the market’s answer.

Legislators and oversight bodies should ask four questions:

1. **Why is a state development authority holding federal oil leases at all?** AIDEA was never designed to be an oil company, and federal leasing law was never designed for state agencies to warehouse public-land leases while the private market declines to participate.

1. **What is the specific return mechanism for taxpayers?** Not a general assertion of economic benefit — a specific, auditable plan for how $190 million in public funds generates a return to Alaska’s treasury.

1. **What happens if the seismic results disappoint?** There is currently no public accounting of the downside scenario.

1. **Why was a $190 million expenditure approved without public hearings?** This amount exceeds the annual general fund budget of more than half of Alaska’s executive branch agencies.

The ANWR debate has always been framed around environmental risk. The fiscal and legal risks deserve equal scrutiny — and right now, they’re getting almost none.


-----


*Sources: Alaska Beacon, Northern Journal, Petroleum News, Congressional Research Service, Bureau of Land Management, 30 U.S.C. § 226, P.L. 115-97 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, Taxpayers for Common Sense.*