Wednesday, April 22, 2026

The Announcement Economy Goes to War

The Announcement Economy Goes to War | Thomas A. Lamb
Energy · Law · Policy
Thomas A. Lamb

The Announcement Economy Goes to War

Sullivan's 100-Year Alliance Bet, the Ghost of the Shah, and Why Wartime Law Cannot Survive the Historical Record It Ignores

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Senator Dan Sullivan has spent the better part of a decade building what might be called the Alaska LNG announcement economy — a carefully orchestrated sequence of declarations, testimonials, and political milestones designed to create the appearance of inevitability before the underlying economics arrive to spoil the party.

The architecture is deliberate. A USINDOPACOM admiral testifies that Alaska LNG would be a "game changer" for Indo-Pacific security. The Trump administration lists it as a Day One executive priority. The One Big Beautiful Bill creates an Energy Dominance Financing Program Sullivan describes as purpose-built for the project. And on April 20, 2026 — the culmination — President Trump invokes the Defense Production Act, wartime industrial law written during the Korean War, to authorize federal financing for a project whose developer will not disclose its true cost to the legislators overseeing the state's 25% ownership stake.

Each announcement feeds the next. Each milestone makes the project feel more real than the numbers justify. That is the announcement economy's primary product — not gas, not energy security, but momentum. Momentum that outpaces scrutiny. Momentum that converts political will into legal authority before anyone can honestly examine whether the statutory requirements are met.

The DPA invocation is where the announcement economy becomes legally consequential. It is no longer just politics. It is a presidential certification — a legal document making specific factual findings that must survive judicial review. And it is at precisely this point that the announcement economy collides with history.

I
Section I

The Three Certifications — and Why Each Fails

The Defense Production Act's Section 303 is not a general grant of emergency financing authority. It is a specific statutory mechanism with three mandatory presidential certifications that must be satisfied before a single dollar of federal financing can flow. The Trump administration's April 20 determination checked all three boxes. A serious examination of the underlying facts suggests none of them hold.

The First Certification: A Domestic Industrial Base Shortfall

The administration certified that the United States faces a domestic industrial base shortfall in natural gas transmission, processing, storage, and LNG capacity. The inconvenient fact sitting directly beneath that certification: the United States set a record LNG export record in 2025, shipping 111 million metric tons to 43 countries. The world's largest LNG exporter has certified a shortfall in LNG capacity. These two facts cannot coexist in the same legal document without inviting the question a reviewing court will eventually ask — what shortfall, precisely, is being averted?

The answer the administration cannot give is the honest one: there is no domestic shortfall. There is a private developer's financing problem. The DPA is being used to solve Glenfarne's capital stack, not America's energy security.

The Second Certification: Private Industry Cannot Meet the Need

This certification requires that private industry, acting alone, cannot reasonably be expected to provide the needed capability in a timely manner. Sullivan and the administration offer this as self-evident — of course private capital needs federal support for a $44 billion project in the Alaskan wilderness.

What they do not say is why private capital walked away. ExxonMobil examined Alaska LNG. BP examined it. ConocoPhillips examined it. All three are among the most sophisticated energy investors on the planet. All three walked away. The administration's certification treats their departure as market failure requiring government intervention. The more legally honest reading is that three major oil companies independently reached the same conclusion about the project's economics — and that conclusion was not favorable.

Private industry's rejection of Alaska LNG is not evidence of market failure. It is the market functioning exactly as intended, delivering a verdict the announcement economy cannot afford to acknowledge.

The Third Certification: Most Cost-Effective Solution

This is where the certification becomes legally indefensible. Section 303 requires the President to certify that government financing is the most cost-effective, expedient, and practical alternative method for meeting the identified need. That certification is a legal finding. Legal findings require factual grounding.

The true cost of Alaska LNG is proprietary. Glenfarne will not release it. Alaska's own Senate Resources Committee chair — a Republican — publicly declared in March 2026 that she has lost confidence in the developer after it refused to provide updated cost figures to legislators overseeing a state-owned asset. Official estimates place the project at $44 billion. Independent analysts suggest the number exceeds $70 billion. The gap between those figures is larger than the entire annual budget of most states.

A presidential certification of cost-effectiveness made without access to the actual cost figure is not a legal finding. It is a guess dressed in statutory language. Under the Administrative Procedure Act's arbitrary and capricious standard, a reviewing court examining that certification would find either that the true cost was incorporated — making the cost-effectiveness finding untenable at $70 billion — or that it was not incorporated, meaning the certification was made without the information necessary to make it. Either path leads to the same destination.

Congress wrote the Defense Production Act so the government could guarantee Americans could defend themselves in a crisis — not so a private developer from New York could use emergency wartime subsidies to build export infrastructure for Japanese and Korean gas buyers.

— Thomas A. Lamb
II
Section II

The Ghost of the Shah — Why Sullivan's 100-Year Alliance Bet Fails History's Most Basic Test

Senator Sullivan stood before the Alaska Legislature in February 2026 and declared that the economic, strategic, and military justifications for Alaska LNG "get stronger by the day." The project, he told lawmakers, would provide America's Pacific allies a 50 to 100 year supply of energy security. USINDOPACOM's commander testified before Congress that it would be a "game changer" for the Indo-Pacific. The national defense certification embedded in the DPA determination assumes, as its foundational premise, that the allies receiving that gas will remain allies.

History has a pointed response to that assumption.

In 1975, Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi was America's most important strategic partner in the Middle East. Iran under the Shah was the anchor of American energy and security policy in the region — a massive oil producer, a purchaser of American military hardware, and a counterweight to Soviet influence. American policymakers did not merely assume the alliance would hold. They built their entire regional architecture around it. They called it the Twin Pillars policy. They sold the Shah billions in advanced weapons. They trained his military. They treated the relationship as permanent.

Four years later it was gone. Not gradually. Not through negotiation. Through revolution. The Shah fled in January 1979. The hostage crisis followed in November. The alliance that American policymakers had treated as a permanent strategic foundation inverted completely within a single presidential term — and has remained hostile for 45 years since.

The Pattern Sullivan's Argument Cannot Survive

Germany — America's most destructive enemy in 1917, and again in 1941. Today the cornerstone of NATO. Japan — attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941. Today hosts the largest concentration of American military forces in the Pacific. Vietnam — cost 58,000 American lives. Today a trading partner courted as a counterweight to China. Iran — America's closest Middle East ally in 1975. Today its most persistent regional adversary.

The pattern is not that alliances occasionally shift. The pattern is that they shift completely, repeatedly, and on timelines that make a century-long infrastructure bet not merely optimistic — but historically illiterate.

Sullivan is asking the American taxpayer to finance $44 to $70 billion in export infrastructure on the assumption that Japan, South Korea, and Thailand will remain stable, friendly, and economically aligned with the United States for 50 to 100 years. He is asking Alaska to commit its most significant natural resource corridor to that assumption. He is asking the Defense Production Act — a statute written to defend Americans — to guarantee it.

The Shah was not an aberration. He was a pattern.

Which brings us to George Patton.

In the summer of 1945, with Germany defeated and the war in Europe won, General George S. Patton stood among his closest wartime allies — the Soviet forces with whom American troops had fought side by side — and said what Washington did not want to hear. "Sooner or later," Patton told anyone who would listen, "we're going to have to fight them anyway." He recommended against demobilizing the American army. He was relieved of command for saying it publicly.

He was vindicated within two years. The Iron Curtain descended across Eastern Europe. The Cold War began. The alliance that had just defeated Nazi Germany became the defining adversarial relationship of the next half century.

Patton's insight was not military genius. It was historical literacy. He understood that alliances are transactional, that common enemies create temporary alignments, and that the moment the common purpose disappears the underlying interests reassert themselves. He was relieved for saying it. History proved him right within 24 months.

Sullivan's 100-year alliance argument requires Patton to have been wrong. It requires the Shah's fall to have been an anomaly. It requires Japan, South Korea, and Thailand to remain not merely friendly but committed offtake partners for a pipeline that will not reach full operation until the 2030s and whose financing assumes alignment through the 2120s.

This is not energy policy. It is historical faith — and it is faith that history has not earned.

The DPA certification's "essential to national defense" finding is built on this foundation. Strip away the alliance stability assumption and the national defense justification does not merely weaken — it disappears entirely. Gas flowing exclusively to foreign buyers under long-term offtake agreements with foreign companies cannot be essential to American national defense on any honest reading of that phrase. It can only be essential to the national defense of Japan, South Korea, and Thailand — nations whose governments, as history repeatedly demonstrates, are not guaranteed to remain allies for the duration of a pipeline's operational life.

III
Section III

What Sullivan's Argument Actually Requires

Strip the Alaska LNG campaign to its essential components and what remains is a single load-bearing assumption: that the United States military and its Pacific allies will maintain sufficiently stable relationships over the next century to justify treating export infrastructure as a domestic defense necessity. Every other element of Sullivan's argument — the USINDOPACOM testimony, the DPA certification, the Energy Dominance Financing Program, the Day One executive priority — is superstructure built on that foundation.

Sullivan has never stated this assumption explicitly. That is the announcement economy's most important function — it keeps the foundational assumption from being examined by ensuring the next announcement arrives before the last one is scrutinized.

Consider the sequencing. Admiral Paparo's USINDOPACOM testimony that Alaska LNG would be a "game changer" for Indo-Pacific security was not offered as analysis. It was offered as momentum. A combatant commander testifying about civilian export infrastructure is not a military assessment — it is a political event staged to attach the credibility of American military authority to a private developer's financing problem. The announcement economy converted Paparo's testimony into a headline. The headline converted into political pressure. The political pressure converted into the DPA determination. The DPA determination converted into federal financing authority.

At no point in that chain was the foundational assumption examined. At no point did anyone in the announcement economy ask Admiral Paparo the question his testimony implicitly requires answering: which specific American military capability is degraded by the absence of Alaska LNG? The answer, on current offtake agreements serving zero domestic consumers, is none.

Sullivan knows this history. He is not an uninformed actor. He has traveled four times to Japan and Korea promoting Alaskan gas. He has hosted dozens of meetings with Asian LNG importers and government leaders. He has pitched the project personally to Defense Secretary Hegseth and his deputy. He has shepherded the Energy Dominance Financing Program through the One Big Beautiful Bill. He is the most informed advocate Alaska LNG has.

Which makes his silence on the alliance stability question not an oversight. It is a choice.

A senator who has spent years studying Pacific energy markets knows that Japan's domestic politics have produced significant foreign policy shifts within living memory. He knows that South Korea's relationship with the United States has been repeatedly tested by peninsular politics that Washington does not control. He knows that Thailand's government has changed hands through military coup as recently as 2014. He knows that the offtake agreements his office celebrates as milestones are letters of intent — non-binding expressions of commercial interest that dissolve the moment the economics or politics shift.

He knows all of this. And he has built a legal architecture — culminating in a wartime emergency determination — that depends on none of it being true for 100 years.

Patton was relieved of command for stating the obvious about an ally. The obvious, in Sullivan's case, is this: the nations receiving Alaska's gas are today's allies. The Shah was yesterday's. The distance between those two sentences is not reassuring. It is the entire argument.

— Thomas A. Lamb
IV
Section IV

The Legal Convergence — When the Announcement Economy Meets the Courthouse

The Defense Production Act has been invoked 75 times in its history. It has financed titanium for jet engines, rare earth processing facilities, semiconductor manufacturing capacity, and medical countermeasure stockpiles. In every prior invocation of Section 303, the industrial capability being financed served an identifiable American defensive need. In every prior invocation, the beneficiary of the federal financing was American defensive capability.

April 20, 2026 is the first time in 75 years that Section 303 has been used to finance infrastructure whose entire commercial purpose is export to foreign buyers.

That fact alone is legally significant. Courts interpreting statutory authority treat consistent historical practice as powerful evidence of congressional intent. Seventy-five years of Section 303 determinations financing domestic defensive capability, followed by a single determination financing foreign export infrastructure, is not evolution. It is departure. And departure of this magnitude — from a statute with a documented legislative history explicitly limiting export authority — triggers the Supreme Court's major questions doctrine with considerable force.

The doctrine's application here is straightforward. In a series of decisions since 2022, the Court has held that when an executive agency claims authority to resolve questions of vast economic and political significance, Congress must have clearly authorized it. The question being resolved by the April 20 determination is not small: whether wartime industrial capacity law authorizes multi-billion dollar federal financing of export infrastructure for foreign energy buyers. The 1980 energy amendment to the DPA explicitly withheld export authority. The legislative record contains no authorization for this use. The 75-year practice of the statute contradicts it.

The administration's answer to the major questions challenge will be national security. It always is. But national security is not a magic phrase that dissolves statutory limitations. It is a factual predicate that must be grounded in actual defensive necessity. And the factual predicate here — allied energy security over a 100-year horizon — does not survive the historical record that Sections II and III of this analysis establish.

A reviewing court examining the April 20 determination under the Administrative Procedure Act's arbitrary and capricious standard will confront a specific and uncomfortable sequence of facts. The domestic shortfall certification contradicts the United States' own 2025 export record. The private industry certification ignores the market verdict delivered by ExxonMobil, BP, and ConocoPhillips. The cost-effectiveness certification was made without access to the true project cost. And the foundational national defense justification rests on alliance stability assumptions that the Shah's fall, Patton's vindication, and 80 years of alliance history demonstrate cannot support a 100-year infrastructure commitment.

Each of these failures is independently sufficient for an arbitrary and capricious finding. Together they describe a certification process that was not designed to satisfy the statute. It was designed to satisfy the announcement economy.

The multistate attorneys general who challenged Executive Order 14156 in May 2025 have a straightforward path to amend their complaint. Unlike the emergency declaration itself — which courts have treated as largely non-justiciable — Section 303 agency actions are expressly subject to judicial review. The Alaska determination is a concrete, identifiable agency action with a documented factual record that contradicts every statutory finding. It is the strongest Administrative Procedure Act target the challengers have yet encountered.

The stronger case, however, may not require the full weight of the APA challenge. It may rest on the simpler and more direct question that the Shah and Patton together answer: can infrastructure that sends every molecule of gas to foreign buyers — buyers whose governments history demonstrates will not remain allies for the duration of the project's operational life — satisfy the statutory requirement that the financed capability be essential to American national defense?

The statute says national defense. The determination says allied energy security. Those are not the same thing. They were not the same thing when Congress wrote the DPA in 1950. They were not the same thing when Congress added energy to the statute in 1980. And they are not the same thing today, regardless of how many admirals testify, how many letters of intent are announced, and how many times Senator Sullivan declares that the justifications get stronger by the day.

Patton was relieved of command in 1945 for telling an uncomfortable truth about an ally. The uncomfortable truth in 2026 is simpler and requires no military genius to state: you cannot invoke wartime law to defend a nation by building infrastructure that serves a different nation — particularly when history's most instructive lesson is that today's ally is under no obligation to remain one.

Alaska deserves a gas pipeline. Alaska deserves honest accounting of what it will cost, who it will serve, and what legal authority actually exists to finance it. What Alaska does not deserve — what the law does not permit — is a private developer from New York using emergency wartime subsidies, a classified cost estimate, and a century-long alliance bet that history has already graded to convert the announcement economy's momentum into federal financing authority.

The courthouse is where momentum runs out of road.

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Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Who Does the System Serve?

Who Does the System Serve? | Thomas A. Lamb
Thomas A. Lamb  /  thomasalamb.blogspot.com April 21, 2026

Investigative / Alaska Politics & Finance

Who Does the System Serve?

A chain of financial conflicts runs from the White House through Wall Street to Alaska's 2026 Senate race — documented in the reporting of the BBC, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and others.

This morning, President Trump appeared on CNBC and told the nation it would be "brilliant" if companies like Apple and Amazon chose not to seek refunds for tariffs the Supreme Court ruled were illegally imposed on them. "If they don't do that," Trump said, "I'll remember them."

The refunds in question total $166 billion — money U.S. companies overpaid on imports under tariffs the Supreme Court struck down in February as unconstitutional. These companies are legally entitled to that money. Trump is publicly pressuring them to give it up.

It is a striking moment. But to understand its full significance, it helps to follow a thread that runs from the White House through Wall Street, through Congress, and all the way to Alaska's 2026 Senate race.

The Man Who Built the Tariffs

Howard Lutnick, Trump's Secretary of Commerce, was one of the principal architects of the tariff policy that the Supreme Court ultimately voided. Before joining the cabinet, Lutnick spent 30 years as chairman and CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald, the Wall Street investment bank. He transferred ownership to his sons Brandon and Kyle upon taking office, as required by federal ethics rules.

In July 2025 — while Lutnick was publicly championing the tariffs and assuring the American public they were legally sound — Wired magazine obtained internal documents showing that Cantor Fitzgerald was approaching importers with an unusual offer: sell us your right to a future tariff refund now, for 20 to 30 cents on the dollar.

The logic was straightforward. If the courts struck down the tariffs, those discounted rights would become worth full dollar value. The firm told prospective clients it had "the capacity to trade up to several hundred million" of these claims.

Key Facts — Tariff Refund Market

The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 in February 2026 that Trump's IEEPA tariffs were unconstitutional.

The U.S. government opened a refund portal on April 20, 2026. Total refunds owed: approximately $166 billion plus interest.

Cantor Fitzgerald denied executing any transactions in the tariff refund market. Wired's documents showed at least one $10 million trade had been completed.

Rep. Jamie Raskin opened a formal investigation in February 2026. As a minority member, he cannot unilaterally subpoena records.

Cantor Fitzgerald denied executing any transactions. But Wired's documents showed the firm had already put through at least one $10 million trade. When Rep. Jamie Raskin — ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee — pressed Cantor on this contradiction in a February letter, he noted the firm's denial was "debunked by the documents Wired reviewed." Cantor subsequently claimed a salesman had "erroneously" believed the firm would proceed.

Semafor, reporting independently, found that Cantor did seriously consider the product before ultimately declining due to "political sensitivities." That framing — stepping back because of optics, not because of the absence of a conflict — is its own kind of acknowledgment.

A Deeper Conflict: Tether and the Treasury

The tariff refund story is significant. But it may not be the most consequential financial question surrounding the Commerce Secretary.

Since 2021, Cantor Fitzgerald has served as the primary custodian of U.S. Treasury securities held by Tether — the company that issues the world's most widely used stablecoin. According to the Wall Street Journal, Cantor also acquired a 5 percent ownership stake in Tether. As of December 2025, Tether held a record $141 billion in U.S. Treasury exposure — ranking 17th among all holders of U.S. government debt globally, ahead of South Korea.

When Lutnick divested Cantor Fitzgerald to comply with ethics requirements, his family trust — Dynasty Trust A — borrowed an undisclosed sum from Tether to finance the purchase of his ownership stake. A public UCC filing from October 2025 confirms Tether as the collateral agent for all assets in that trust, including a convertible bond giving Cantor the right to acquire a 5 percent equity stake in Tether.

The divestiture designed to eliminate the conflict was financed by the very company Lutnick was supposed to be distancing himself from.

— The structural arrangement, as reported by Bloomberg and confirmed by public UCC filings

Lutnick also sits on Trump's Working Group on Digital Asset Markets — the body tasked with writing the nation's first regulatory framework for stablecoins. When asked at his confirmation hearing whether he would recuse himself from stablecoin policy given his Tether ties, he declined to commit.

The New York Times concluded in November 2025 that "never in modern U.S. history has the office intersected so broadly and deeply with the financial interests of the commerce secretary's own family, according to interviews with ethics lawyers and historians."

The Washington Post had earlier reported that Treasury officials spent months weighing sanctions against Tether for allegedly facilitating illicit financial activities — a probe that was quietly shelved after Lutnick's confirmation.

The BBC Investigation

The Lutnick conflicts sit within a broader pattern that a BBC investigation documented this week. Examining trade volume data across oil futures, stock markets, and prediction platforms, the BBC found a consistent pattern of unusual trading spikes in the minutes and hours before Trump made his most significant market-moving announcements.

Five specific episodes were documented. On March 9, unusually large bets on falling oil prices were placed 47 minutes before Trump told CBS News the Iran war was "very complete, pretty much" — a statement that sent Brent crude down roughly 15 percent. On March 23, trading volumes spiked 14 minutes before Trump's Truth Social post about a resolution with Iran. Unusual activity also preceded Liberation Day's tariff announcement and its subsequent 90-day pause.

Some analysts told the BBC the activity bears the hallmarks of illegal insider trading. Others argue traders have grown adept at anticipating the president's moves. A professor cited in the BBC's report noted that even if trades clearly showed someone was privy to what Trump was about to declare, "there is a strong chance that no-one will be prosecuted."

Alaska's Senator and the Confirmation He Approved

Dan Sullivan, Alaska's Republican senator, is a member of the Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee — the body that vetted Lutnick's nomination and voted 16-12 to advance it to the full Senate. Sullivan voted in favor. The full Senate confirmed Lutnick 51-45 on February 18, with the vote split entirely along party lines.

There is no public record of Sullivan raising questions about Lutnick's Tether ties during the confirmation process. The senators who pressed Lutnick on crypto conflicts — including recusal from stablecoin policy — were Democrats.

Sen. Dan Sullivan — Financial Record

Nearly 80 stock trades reported between 2015–2024, worth between $550,000 and $2.08 million — the only Alaska congressional delegation member to report any stock trades in this period.

Portfolio performance: +47.5% in 2024 (S&P: +24.9%). +60.5% in 2023 (S&P: +26.29%).

Net worth grew 176% since joining the Senate — from $3M to $8.29M (Quiver Quantitative).

2022: Violated the STOCK Act by failing to disclose two trades, including shares of Mowi — the world's largest farmed salmon company — within the 45-day deadline. Fine: $200.

Holds $1M–$5M in RPM International (his family's company), traded while sitting on the chemical safety subcommittee that oversees RPM's products.

Did not cosponsor or publicly endorse any of the multiple bipartisan stock trading reform resolutions introduced since 2018.

Alaska's Congressman and the Law That Helped Tether

Nick Begich, Alaska's Republican congressman, emerged in 2025 as one of Congress's most prominent voices on cryptocurrency policy. He was a key figure in crafting and championing the GENIUS Act — which passed 308-122 and created the first federal regulatory framework for stablecoins, requiring issuers to hold reserves in U.S. Treasuries. The law directly benefited Tether, whose Treasury holdings grew to $141 billion by year's end.

Begich has publicly disclosed holding Bitcoin since 2013, turning an initial investment of approximately $5,100 into an asset now worth roughly $760,000. He also co-sponsored the BITCOIN Act, which would require the U.S. government to purchase 200,000 Bitcoin per year for five years — legislation that would directly increase the value of the cryptocurrency he personally holds.

This raises all sorts of red flags. Even assuming Begich's motives are pure, the bill would increase the value of the specific cryptocurrency Begich owns. It's legal — but not a good look.

— Noah Bookbinder, President, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW)

Begich addressed the concern directly, telling Alaska Public Media: "I'm a homeowner who would benefit from lower interest rates, but I advocate for lower interest rates." He noted he has not purchased additional Bitcoin since becoming a congressman.

There is no public record of Begich raising concerns about Lutnick's Tether conflicts, either during the confirmation process or since.

The Enforcement Void

Each of the conflicts described in this piece has been raised — by journalists, ethics watchdogs, and members of Congress. None has resulted in formal accountability.

Raskin's investigation into Lutnick and Cantor has no subpoena power while Democrats remain in the minority. The STOCK Act fine for late disclosure is $200, rarely enforced. The BBC's insider trading findings have prompted no announced investigation. Tether's Treasury probe was quietly shelved.

Right now, you have a situation where the inspector general's office is not either willing or able to act, the DOJ is not willing or able to act, Congress is not willing or able to act — then you're left with an enforcement void.

— Legal expert quoted by Salon, April 2025

The 2026 Race

Mary Peltola, the Democrat challenging Sullivan for his Senate seat, has made this enforcement void the central argument of her campaign. Her "Fixing the Rigged System" platform calls for a ban on stock trading by members of Congress and their immediate families, 12-year term limits, passage of the DISCLOSE Act requiring public reporting of donations over $10,000, and a constitutional amendment to overturn Citizens United.

"DC politicians will not put working people first until we ban them from trading individual stocks," she said in an April post on X.

A recent Alaska Survey Research poll has Peltola leading Sullivan by 5 points. Analysts note that Sullivan's alignment with the Trump administration means the race will largely track how Alaskans feel about the administration's record come November.

This morning's CNBC moment — Trump publicly calling it "brilliant" for corporations to voluntarily forfeit $166 billion in legal refunds — is the latest data point voters will weigh.

Sources

Reporting drawn from: BBC News, New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Fortune, Wired, NOTUS, Semafor, Anchorage Daily News, Alaska Public Media, Business Insider, CNBC, Reuters, Bloomberg, and primary source documents including Rep. Raskin's February 2026 letter to the Lutnicks and Howard Lutnick's Senate confirmation hearing transcript (January 29, 2025). Congressional financial data via Quiver Quantitative and Capitol Trades.

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The Announcement Economy Goes National — Thomas A. Lamb
The Announcement Economy Series
Part IV · Defense Production Act · April 20, 2026

The Announcement Economy Goes National

Washington has used wartime emergency law to declare a domestic energy crisis — while the projects it finances are owned by Qatar, the UAE, Canada, and France. The playbook Alaska voters know from Palmer is now running at presidential scale.

Defense Production Act Foreign Ownership Alaska LNG
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There is a playbook. We documented it across three pieces this week — the gap between announcement and outcome in Alaska infrastructure, in fisheries policy, in the Senate race. The press release that substitutes for a result. The credit claimed before the problem is solved. The complexity that obscures who made what decision and when.

On April 20, 2026, that playbook went national.

The Trump administration issued five presidential determinations invoking Section 303 of the Defense Production Act of 1950 — a wartime industrial capacity law written during the Korean War — to declare a national energy emergency and authorize federal financing for coal plants, LNG terminals, petroleum infrastructure, and grid equipment. The announcement was sweeping, the language urgent, the legal authority invoked dramatic.

The gap between announcement and reality is equally sweeping.

— ❄ —

The Pattern — Applied at Presidential Scale

The Announcement The Reality
A national energy emergency — insufficient domestic production threatening national defense The US set records for oil, gas, and LNG production in 2025. The US was already the world's largest LNG exporter at 111 million metric tons.
Wartime industrial capacity law protecting the American domestic industrial base The projects eligible for financing include a facility 70% owned by the government of Qatar, infrastructure partially owned by UAE sovereign wealth funds, and a pipeline whose output is contracted exclusively to Japan, South Korea, and Thailand.
Alaska LNG — a national security priority, a gigantic pipeline serving American energy needs Every offtake agreement signed is with a foreign buyer. The project's updated cost estimate exists but will not be publicly released. The developer has never built an LNG facility. Major oil companies walked away from it.
Mat-Su coal plant — addressing Alaska's energy needs, creating jobs, protecting the grid Owned by an Alberta, Canada company with Australian investors. No mine exists. No road to the mine exists. No power purchase agreements signed. 75% of Mat-Su residents opposed the underlying road infrastructure in borough surveys.
— ❄ —

The Statute and What It Actually Says

The Defense Production Act was enacted in September 1950, one month into the Korean War. Its purpose was unmistakable — ensuring American industry could produce enough critical materials to defend the United States. Steel for tanks. Aluminum for aircraft. Titanium for jet engines.

Section 303 requires the President to personally certify three things before federal financing can flow. That there is a domestic industrial base shortfall. That private industry cannot meet the need. And that government action is the most cost-effective solution.

Every word points inward. Domestic. American. Defense.

The 75-year history of Section 303 use confirms this reading. Every prior presidential determination — across Republican and Democratic administrations — targeted domestic production for domestic consumption. Not one precedent exists for using Section 303 to finance export infrastructure. The 1980 amendment that added energy to the DPA explicitly stated it created no new authority for export-oriented projects.

"Congress wrote the Defense Production Act so the government could guarantee Americans could defend themselves in a crisis — not so a private developer from New York could use emergency wartime subsidies to build export infrastructure for Japanese and Korean gas buyers while withholding the project's true cost from elected legislators."

— Thomas A. Lamb
— ❄ —

The Foreign Ownership Problem

The administration invoked wartime emergency law citing hostile foreign actors who have weaponized America's energy dependence. The projects eligible for emergency financing under that determination include infrastructure owned by the very category of foreign state-controlled entities it claims to be defending against.

Who Owns America's LNG Infrastructure
  • Golden Pass LNG — Texas: State-owned QatarEnergy holds 70% ownership and offtakes 70% of capacity. ExxonMobil holds 30%. A foreign government controls the majority of a facility potentially eligible for DPA emergency financing.
  • Rio Grande LNG — Texas: Shareholders include Singapore's sovereign wealth fund GIC, France's TotalEnergies, Abu Dhabi's ADNOC, and Abu Dhabi state investment vehicle Mubadala. ADNOC increased its equity stake in January 2026.
  • Alaska LNG: South Korean infrastructure private equity firm KOREIT has committed $500 million in equity. TotalEnergies signed a 2 million tonne per year offtake letter of intent in February 2026. Saudi Aramco holds offtake positions in multiple US LNG projects.
  • Mat-Su Coal Plant — Alaska: Terra Energy Center is a subsidiary of Flatlands Energy, itself a subsidiary of Alaska Asia Clean Energy Corporation — incorporated in Alberta, Canada, with Australian mining investment from Nova Minerals.

The DPA is simultaneously the legal basis for blocking foreign control of domestic industrial assets — through CFIUS, the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, which operates under DPA authority — and the legal basis for potentially subsidizing foreign-controlled domestic industrial assets. The statute is being used in direct tension with itself.

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The Chain Nobody Will Trace Out Loud

Readers of this series will recognize the structure. In the fisheries piece, we traced the chain from ocean warming to NOAA defunding to enforcement collapse to empty fish racks. Nobody in Washington would present it as a chain because doing so requires assigning responsibility.

The DPA energy chain works the same way.

1
The Emergency Is Declared

January 20, 2025 — EO 14156 declares a national energy emergency citing insufficient production and hostile foreign actors weaponizing energy markets. The declaration is made on the same day US production is at record highs.

2
The Statutory Certifications Are Made

April 20, 2026 — Five Section 303 determinations certify a domestic industrial base shortfall in coal, LNG, petroleum, and grid infrastructure. The certifications must survive APA review. The factual record contradicts each one.

3
Congressional Authorization Is Bypassed

The 303(a)(7) emergency waiver eliminates the requirement for congressional authorization on projects over $50 million and the 30-day notification period. Billions can flow without a vote.

4
Foreign-Controlled Projects Become Eligible

The broad language of the determinations — covering all LNG capacity, all coal supply chains — creates an umbrella under which foreign state-owned infrastructure can access domestic emergency financing.

5
The Announcement Is Made — The Credit Is Taken

Energy dominance. American jobs. National security. The press release is written. The results — who actually benefited, what was actually built, what the costs were — will arrive years later, after the next election cycle.

— ❄ —

Alaska LNG — The Mat-Su Microcosm

For Alaska readers, the DPA story has a local face. The Mat-Su Borough Assembly voted 6-1 in March 2026 to override Mayor DeVries' veto and partner with Terra Energy Center — the Canadian-owned coal company — to market borough land for a data center and coal plant scheme. More than a dozen residents testified against it. About three spoke in support.

The assembly overrode the public. The mayor overrode the assembly. The assembly overrode the mayor.

Now federal emergency financing — authorized under a wartime law meant to protect the American domestic industrial base — potentially backstops exactly this project. A Canadian coal company. An unbuilt mine. An unbuilt road. An unproven carbon capture system. A hypothetical data center. A borough facing a $22 million school district deficit that the project is seeking to exempt from property taxes.

75% Mat-Su residents opposed West Susitna road in borough survey
$0 Binding power purchase agreements for the coal plant
$70B+ Independent estimate of Alaska LNG true cost — not publicly disclosed
100% Alaska LNG offtake contracted to foreign buyers — zero domestic consumers

Senate Resources Chair Cathy Giessel — a Republican — publicly declared in March 2026 that she has lost confidence in Glenfarne, the Alaska LNG developer, after months of refusal to share cost estimates or governance documents with legislators overseeing a project in which the state holds a 25% ownership stake. When senators asked to see those documents, AGDC told them the documents were confidential — requiring the private developer's permission to disclose.

A private New York company is deciding what Alaska's elected representatives can know about a state-owned asset. The federal government is preparing to finance that same project with emergency wartime authority. The Alaska Landmine noted it immediately when today's determinations were released: the language covers every component of Alaska LNG without naming it. The umbrella was deliberately broad.

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The Legal Exposure

Unlike the underlying emergency declaration — which courts have treated as a largely non-justiciable political question — Section 303 agency actions are expressly subject to judicial review under the Administrative Procedure Act. The multistate coalition of attorneys general that challenged EO 14156 in May 2025 has strong grounds to amend their complaint specifically targeting today's determinations.

The strongest argument is also the simplest. The presidential certification under Section 303(a)(5) is a legal document making specific factual findings. Those findings must survive the APA's arbitrary and capricious standard. The factual record does not support them.

The Supreme Court's major questions doctrine adds further exposure. When an executive agency claims authority to resolve questions of vast economic and political significance, Congress must have clearly authorized it. Using wartime industrial capacity law to finance export infrastructure for foreign buyers — bypassing congressional authorization through emergency waiver — is precisely the kind of major question requiring explicit congressional authorization that the legislative record does not provide.

And the foreign ownership argument may be the most potent of all in the current political environment. An administration that declared a national emergency because hostile foreign actors weaponize energy markets is using the same statute to finance infrastructure controlled by foreign governments. That argument does not require legal expertise to understand. It requires only that someone ask: whose emergency is this, exactly?

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What Accountability Looks Like Here

The antidote to the Announcement Economy at the national level is the same as at the Alaska level. Precision. Specific questions. The refusal to accept a press release as a substitute for a result.

The Questions Every Reader Should Be Asking
  • If this is a domestic energy emergency, why does the primary beneficiary project — Alaska LNG — send 100% of its output to foreign buyers?
  • If wartime industrial capacity law requires a domestic shortfall, how is that shortfall compatible with record US production and record LNG exports in 2025?
  • If the Defense Production Act is meant to protect the domestic industrial base, why are the projects eligible for emergency financing majority-owned by the government of Qatar?
  • Why does the developer of Alaska LNG — a project the state owns 25% of — refuse to disclose its cost estimate to Alaska's legislature?
  • Why does the Mat-Su coal project need federal emergency financing if it is commercially viable? Why did the major oil companies walk away from Alaska LNG if it is essential to national defense?
  • Who benefits from your confusion about the difference between the announcement and the outcome?

This blog has spent the past week tracing the Announcement Economy through Alaska infrastructure, fisheries, and the Senate race. The pattern is the same at every scale. The crisis is real. The announcement is large. The gap between announcement and outcome is obscured by complexity, credit-taking, and cultural narratives that short-circuit factual analysis.

The Defense Production Act determinations issued today are the largest single deployment of this playbook in recent American history — five presidential certifications invoking wartime authority, bypassing congressional oversight, potentially channeling billions toward foreign-controlled export infrastructure, justified by an emergency that the government's own data does not support.

The fish racks in Western Alaska are empty because the federal government documented its own failure and called it someone else's problem. The DPA determinations issued today will produce results — or their absence — in years, not months. By then the announcement will have been made, the credit will have been taken, and the next press conference will already be scheduled.

"Alaska deserves the outcome, not the announcement. So does the rest of the country."

— The Announcement Economy, thomasalamb.blogspot.com, April 2026

Sources & Further Reading

White House Presidential Determinations, Section 303 DPA, April 20, 2026 · EO 14156 Declaring a National Energy Emergency (January 20, 2025) · Congressional Research Service: The Defense Production Act of 1950: History, Authorities, and Considerations for Congress · GAO Report GAO-25-107688: Defense Production Act Information Sharing · EIA Short-Term Energy Outlook, March 2026 · Alaska Public Media: Mat-Su data center and coal plant coverage (March 2026) · Mat-Su Sentinel: Assembly overrides veto (March 2026) · Alaska Business Magazine: Mat-Su Borough Partners with Coal Plant Developer (April 2026) · Alaska Public Media: Senate bill seeks transparency for Alaska LNG (March 2026) · Anchorage Daily News: Lawmakers skeptical of Glenfarne timeline (February 2026) · LSEG / Reuters: US LNG export records 2025 (January 2026) · Rapidan Energy Group: Alaska LNG cost analysis · E&E News: First US coal plant in a decade is on shaky ground (March 2026) · SEC Filing: TotalEnergies Alaska LNG LOI (February 2026) · Golden Pass LNG ownership disclosures · NextDecade / ADNOC Rio Grande equity filings (January 2026)

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Monday, April 20, 2026

The Emergency That Exports Itself: How Wartime Law Is Being Weaponized for Foreign Gas Markets

Thomas A. Lamb — Energy, Law & Policy
Analysis · Defense Production Act

The Emergency That Exports Itself: How Wartime Law Is Being Weaponized for Foreign Gas Markets

The Trump administration has invoked the Defense Production Act to finance fossil fuel infrastructure — but the project at its center sends every molecule of gas to Japan and South Korea. A close reading of the statute suggests this may be its most legally vulnerable use in 75 years.

Defense Production Act Alaska LNG Energy Law
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On April 20, 2026, the White House issued a wave of presidential determinations invoking Section 303 of the Defense Production Act of 1950 — a wartime industrial capacity law written during the Korean War — to authorize federal financing for natural gas pipelines, LNG export terminals, coal plants, and petroleum infrastructure. The legal architecture is straightforward. The emergency implications are not.

At the center of these determinations sits the Alaska LNG project: an 800-mile pipeline from Prudhoe Bay to a liquefaction terminal at Nikiski, with a price tag that official estimates place at $44 billion and independent analysts suggest may exceed $70 billion. The project's developer, Glenfarne — a private New York firm that has never built an LNG facility — holds 75% of the project. Its updated cost estimate exists. It will not be released to the public.

"Congress wrote the Defense Production Act so the government could guarantee Americans could defend themselves in a crisis — not so a private developer from New York could use emergency wartime subsidies to build export infrastructure for Japanese and Korean gas buyers."

— Thomas A. Lamb

A Statute Built for the Opposite Purpose

The Defense Production Act was enacted in September 1950, one month into the Korean War. Its Title III — including Section 303 — was designed for a single purpose: ensuring that American industry could produce enough critical materials to defend the United States. Steel for tanks. Aluminum for aircraft. Titanium for jet engines. The legislative history is unambiguous. Every congressional debate treats "national defense" as meaning American defensive capability, directed inward.

When Congress added energy as a strategic material in 1980, following the second oil shock, it was equally explicit. The enabling language stated that the designation granted no new authority to allocate or price fuel for export purposes. Congress was drawing a clear line between domestic supply security — which the DPA could address — and export policy, which it could not.

Section 303 requires three presidential certifications before any financing can flow: that there is a domestic industrial base shortfall; that private industry cannot meet the need; and that government action is the most cost-effective solution. All three are legally infirm when applied to Alaska LNG.

The Three Certifications — and Why Each Fails
  • Domestic shortfall: The US set a record LNG export record in 2025, shipping 111 million metric tons to 43 countries. No shortfall exists by any objective measure.
  • Private industry cannot meet the need: ExxonMobil, BP, and ConocoPhillips all examined Alaska LNG and walked away. Private capital's rejection of the project is evidence of uneconomic fundamentals, not market failure.
  • Most cost-effective solution: The true project cost is classified as proprietary. A presidential certification of cost-effectiveness cannot be grounded in a number the certifying authority will not disclose.

The Export License Problem

Alaska LNG is not incidentally an export project. It is exclusively an export project. Every offtake agreement signed to date — with Japan's JERA, Tokyo Gas, South Korea's POSCO, and Thailand's PTT — is with a foreign buyer. The project's own financial modeling, according to analysts who have reviewed it, assumes the project is not economical unless the vast majority of gas is exported. The export licenses are not a feature of Alaska LNG. They are Alaska LNG.

This creates a logical impossibility at the heart of the presidential determination. The administration has certified a domestic industrial base shortfall in LNG capacity — while the project being financed will serve no domestic consumer. A court examining whether this project satisfies the "essential to national defense" standard would have to identify which American military base, utility, or civilian population the gas serves. The answer, on current offtake agreements, is none.


Historical Context

TAPS Was Different — In Every Relevant Way

The Trans-Alaska Pipeline System, completed in 1977, is the most instructive historical comparison. Its construction was authorized using emergency measures in November 1973 — one month after the Arab oil embargo imposed actual gasoline shortages on American consumers. The underlying emergency was real and measurable. The legal bypass of environmental review was genuinely tied to an urgent domestic supply crisis.

More importantly, every barrel that flowed through TAPS went to West Coast refineries serving American consumers. The national defense justification was concrete. TAPS reduced foreign dependence. Alaska LNG inverts every one of these factors: it is triggered by a manufactured emergency, its output serves foreign buyers, and it deepens global LNG market integration rather than reducing import dependence.

Today, TAPS carries approximately 462,000 barrels per day — roughly 2.3% of American consumption, down from 10% at its 1988 peak. The pipeline faces genuine long-term viability questions as throughput approaches minimum operational thresholds. This is the legitimate infrastructure argument for the Alaska gas corridor — not national defense, but keeping a declining pipeline economically viable. That argument, however, does not fit within Section 303's statutory framework.

Transparency as a Legal Question

The opacity surrounding Alaska LNG is not merely a political problem. It has become a legal one. Alaska's own Senate Resources Committee chair — a Republican — publicly declared in March 2026 that she has lost confidence in Glenfarne after the company refused to provide updated cost figures, governance documents, or financial projections to lawmakers overseeing a project in which the state holds a 25% stake.

When senators asked to see the governance agreements covering that ownership stake, AGDC told them the documents were confidential — requiring Glenfarne's permission to disclose. A private New York company is determining what Alaska's elected representatives can know about a state-owned asset.

The legal significance is direct. The presidential certification under Section 303(a)(5) is a legal document making specific factual findings. Those findings must survive review under the Administrative Procedure Act's arbitrary and capricious standard. If the true cost figure — which independent analysts place at $70 billion or more — was incorporated into the certification, the cost-effectiveness finding becomes untenable. If it was not incorporated, the certification was made without the information necessary to make it. Either way, the certification fails.

"The Legislature is being asked to consider enabling legislation while the developer declines to disclose the figure that determines whether any of this works."

— Anchorage Daily News editorial, April 2026

The Major Questions Doctrine

The Supreme Court's recent jurisprudence adds a further layer of exposure. In a series of decisions since 2022, the Court has applied the major questions doctrine with increasing force: when an executive agency claims authority to resolve questions of vast economic and political significance, Congress must have clearly authorized it. The Court requires explicit, unambiguous congressional authorization for transformative exercises of executive power.

Using wartime industrial capacity law to finance multi-billion dollar export infrastructure for foreign buyers — bypassing the $50 million congressional authorization threshold through an emergency waiver — is precisely the kind of major question the doctrine was designed to address. The legislative record of the Defense Production Act contains no authorization for export-oriented financing. The 1980 energy amendment explicitly withheld it. The complete absence of any prior Section 303 determination funding export infrastructure across 75 years of the statute's history is itself powerful evidence that Congress never contemplated this use.

What Comes Next

The multistate coalition of attorneys general that challenged EO 14156 in May 2025 has strong grounds to amend their complaint to address today's determinations specifically. Unlike the emergency declaration itself — which courts have treated as a largely non-justiciable political question — Section 303 agency actions are expressly subject to judicial review. A challenge focused on the Alaska LNG determination would have the benefit of a concrete, identifiable project with a documented factual record contradicting every statutory finding.

The stronger case may ultimately rest not on the emergency declaration's validity, but on the simpler question of statutory authority: whether Section 303 permits the financing of infrastructure whose purpose, design, and commercial structure is entirely oriented toward export. Seventy-five years of consistent practice, an explicit congressional limitation in the 1980 energy amendment, and the plain meaning of "domestic industrial base shortfall" all suggest it does not.

Alaska deserves a gas pipeline. The legal question is whether a private developer from New York, withholding its cost estimates from legislators, selling its output to Asian buyers, and seeking federal emergency financing for a project that major oil companies abandoned, has found the right legal vehicle to build it.

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