Breaking — Senate Floor Session Halted, June 18, 2026
The Alaska Landmine reports that several senators are now in possession of a draft of the confidential agreement between AGDC and Glenfarne. The 11 AM Senate floor session has been delayed to a call of the chair. The document that AGDC told the legislature it could not share — the document that has driven every transparency dispute in this series — is now in the building.
The question is no longer whether senators can see it. They have it. The question is what it means legally that they do — and whether the confidentiality Glenfarne has claimed for a year was ever as enforceable as it appeared.
For more than a year, the confidentiality agreement between AGDC and Glenfarne has been the wall that blocked every legislative demand for transparency. AGDC told the Senate Resources Committee it could not share governance documents without Glenfarne's permission. AGDC told legislators it could not reveal the operating agreement, the clawback conditions, the minority protections, or the cost information. The confidentiality agreement was the answer to every question the legislature asked.
This morning, that wall developed two large cracks. The first opened months ago and has gone largely unnoticed. The second opened this morning on the Senate floor.
Both deserve to be examined carefully — because together they suggest the confidentiality Glenfarne has used to prevent legislative oversight may have been legally compromised long before today.
1
Indirect Waiver Through Public Legislative Testimony
When Glenfarne voluntarily testified before the Alaska Legislature in open public sessions — presenting cost information, project economics, and governance details — it may have waived confidentiality over that subject matter. You cannot disclose information publicly and then claim it remains confidential. The label on the slide does not survive the public forum.
2
The AGDC Agreement Under Alaska Public Records Law
AGDC is a public corporation of the State of Alaska. Its agreements are public records under AS 40.25.110. A private confidentiality clause in a contract between a public body and a private developer does not override Alaska's public records statute. Courts have consistently held that administrative decisions to keep records confidential cannot override the legislature's explicit public disclosure requirements.
Point One: The Testimony That May Have Waived It All
Confidentiality is not a label. It is a legal status. And under well-established contract and evidentiary law, voluntary public disclosure of confidential information destroys the confidentiality of that information — regardless of what is written on the document or in the agreement.
The legal doctrine is called subject matter waiver. When a party voluntarily discloses part of a protected communication in a public forum, the protection over the entire subject matter may be waived. The rationale is straightforward — you cannot selectively use confidential information to your advantage in a public proceeding and then invoke confidentiality to prevent the other side from examining it fully.
Now apply that to what Glenfarne and AGDC did in open legislative testimony throughout this session.
Adam Prestidge, Glenfarne Alaska President — Senate Resources Committee, May 2026
"The company can share financial details with lawmakers if the state takes a stake in the project, under confidentiality agreements or confidential executive sessions. Publicly releasing the project's cost estimate would put the project at a competitive disadvantage."
Significance: Prestidge publicly disclosed that a cost estimate exists, that Glenfarne controls it, and described its commercial sensitivity — in an open public hearing. The existence and nature of the withheld information was itself disclosed publicly.
Glenfarne — Senate Finance Committee, June 16-17, 2026
Glenfarne publicly stated the project costs "as much as $54.5 billion" in Senate Finance Committee testimony — the first public cost figure ever released by Glenfarne. Cost slides were presented to the committee marked confidential.
Significance: A cost figure presented in open legislative testimony — even on a slide marked confidential — is a public disclosure. The $54.5 billion figure is now in the public record of a legislative hearing. Glenfarne cannot simultaneously disclose a cost figure in public testimony and claim cost information remains confidential.
Matt Kissinger, AGDC Commercial Director — Senate Resources Committee, February 2026
"There are usually some provisions that require unanimous consent and there are provisions that rely on the minority member to approve. We have all of those in there." When asked to produce the document: "We're unable to share those agreements. Those agreements are confidential and we'd need the permission of Glenfarne to do that."
Significance: AGDC publicly described the content and structure of the confidential governance provisions — unanimous consent requirements, minority member approvals — in open testimony. Having described what the document contains publicly, AGDC's claim that the document itself cannot be disclosed is legally weakened.
Adam Prestidge, Glenfarne Alaska President — Senate Finance Committee, June 17, 2026
"If Glenfarne were to determine the project had failed, or if Glenfarne were to decide to abandon the project, we wouldn't have any way to seek any recourse or any reimbursement for what we have done."
Significance: Prestidge publicly described the clawback conditions — or more precisely, the absence of meaningful ones — in open testimony. The substance of the confidential clawback provisions was characterized publicly by Glenfarne's own president.
Each of those disclosures — made voluntarily, in open public legislative hearings, by parties to the confidentiality agreement — potentially constitutes a waiver of the confidentiality over the subject matter disclosed. The cumulative effect of months of open testimony about the governance structure, the cost information, the clawback conditions, and the commercial sensitivity of the withheld data is that Glenfarne and AGDC have been selectively disclosing the parts of the confidential information that support their argument — while invoking confidentiality to prevent examination of the parts that might not.
That is precisely the conduct subject matter waiver is designed to prevent. You cannot use a sword and a shield simultaneously. If you disclose the existence, nature, and partial content of confidential information to advance your position in a public proceeding, you cannot then claim the full document remains protected.
Glenfarne disclosed enough to make its argument. It invoked confidentiality to prevent the legislature from checking the argument. That is not how confidentiality works. That is how a shell game works.
Point Two: The Agreement Under Alaska Public Records Law
The second argument is grounded not in contract law but in Alaska statute. And it may be the more powerful of the two.
AGDC is not a private company. It is a public corporation of the State of Alaska, created by statute, funded by the state, and charged with serving the public interest. Its records are public records.
AS 40.25.110 — Alaska Public Records Act
Every person has a right to inspect a public record in the state, including public records in recorders' offices, unless the record is expressly exempted from public inspection by statute. The right to inspect includes the right to copy or obtain a copy of the public record.
Alaska Court Precedent on Confidentiality vs. Public Disclosure
Alaska courts have consistently held that administrative decisions to keep records confidential cannot override the legislature's explicit public disclosure requirements. By not allowing an exception to the public disclosure requirement based on state administrative regulations alone, Alaska courts have refused to deny access to records on the basis of administrative regulations purporting to make them confidential.
The AGDC-Glenfarne agreement is a contract entered into by a public corporation. It governs the disposition of public assets — assets that AGDC's own president acknowledged represent over $1 billion in public investment since 2014. Under AS 40.25.110, that contract is presumptively a public record subject to inspection.
AGDC has been treating the confidentiality clause in its private agreement with Glenfarne as though it overrides Alaska's Public Records Act. It does not. A private contractual clause cannot exempt a public record from Alaska's statutory public disclosure requirements. The legislature did not authorize AGDC to enter agreements that place its records beyond the reach of public inspection law. That authorization was never sought and never given.
What the Public Records Argument Means in Practice
→
The AGDC-Glenfarne operating agreement is a record of a public corporation. Any Alaskan — not just a senator — has a right to request it under AS 40.25.110.
→
AGDC's refusal to produce the document is not protected by the confidentiality clause. The clause binds AGDC contractually to Glenfarne — it does not create a statutory exemption from Alaska's public records law.
→
If AGDC refuses a properly submitted public records request for the agreement, that refusal is subject to challenge in Alaska Superior Court. The burden falls on AGDC to identify a specific statutory exemption — not a contractual confidentiality clause — justifying the denial.
→
The Worley cost estimate — if it was produced under AGDC's oversight, using AGDC resources, or delivered to AGDC as a party to the project — may itself be a public record subject to the same analysis.
→
Alaska law makes no distinction as to who may request public records. A journalist, a legislator, an advocacy organization, or any private citizen has the same right of access.
The Document in Senators' Hands — What It Means
The draft AGDC-Glenfarne agreement is now in the possession of several Alaska senators. The floor session has been stopped. The immediate legal question is not whether senators can read it — they have it. The question is what they can do with it.
Senators are not parties to the confidentiality agreement between AGDC and Glenfarne. They never signed it. A confidentiality agreement binds only the parties who agreed to it. Alaska senators are under no legal obligation arising from a private contract between two other entities to treat that document as confidential.
The more important question is how the document reached them. If it was sent by AGDC — a party to the confidentiality agreement — that transmission is itself a voluntary disclosure that may constitute a breach of the agreement by AGDC and a waiver of the confidentiality protection. If it was leaked by a whistleblower or insider, the confidentiality agreement between AGDC and Glenfarne remains intact between those two parties — but senators who received it are not bound by it.
Either way, the document is now in the legislative process. And the confidentiality wall that prevented legislative oversight for over a year is no longer standing.
The Waiver Chain — How It Accumulated
1
February 2026 — Open hearing disclosure. AGDC's Kissinger publicly described the governance structure — unanimous consent provisions, minority protections — in open Senate Resources testimony. Subject matter of the confidential agreement disclosed publicly.
2
May 2026 — Cost existence disclosed. Prestidge publicly acknowledged in open hearing that a cost estimate exists, that Glenfarne controls it, and described its commercial sensitivity. The existence and nature of withheld cost information disclosed publicly.
3
June 16-17, 2026 — Cost figure disclosed. Glenfarne presented cost slides to Senate Finance Committee in open session — including a figure of up to $54.5 billion. First public cost figure ever released by Glenfarne. Presented on slides marked confidential in a public legislative hearing.
4
June 17, 2026 — Clawback conditions disclosed. Prestidge publicly characterized the clawback provisions — describing the absence of meaningful state recourse — in open Senate Finance testimony. Substance of confidential clawback terms disclosed publicly by Glenfarne's own president.
5
June 18, 2026 — Draft agreement in senators' hands. The confidential document itself now in possession of multiple legislators. Floor session halted. Confidentiality wall no longer standing regardless of how the document was transmitted.
That is not a single breach. It is a progressive, cumulative erosion of the confidentiality protection — driven largely by Glenfarne and AGDC's own voluntary public disclosures in legislative testimony. Each disclosure reduced the legal defensibility of the confidentiality claim. By the time the draft agreement reached senators this morning, the legal foundation for maintaining confidentiality had already been substantially undermined by the parties who were supposed to be protecting it.
What the Legislature Should Do Right Now
The Senate floor session has been halted while lawyers presumably assess what senators can do with the document they now have. Here is what the law suggests they can do.
First — any senator can submit a public records request to AGDC for the full AGDC-Glenfarne operating agreement under AS 40.25.110. Today. Before the session ends Friday. A denial of that request triggers a right of action in Alaska Superior Court. The clock starts running on AGDC's response obligation the moment the request is filed.
Second — any senator who received the draft agreement is not bound by a confidentiality agreement they never signed. They may read it, discuss it in caucus, and use its contents to inform their vote. They may not be able to read it into the public record without legal risk to whoever transmitted it — but their own conduct in reading and using it is not constrained by a private contract between two other parties.
Third — the subject matter waiver argument means that Glenfarne's own public testimony has already opened the door to examination of the cost information, governance structure, and clawback provisions they described publicly. A legislator who asks Glenfarne in open hearing to confirm or deny the cost figure it presented on a confidential slide is not breaching any confidentiality. Glenfarne already disclosed it publicly.
The Wall Built on Sand
The confidentiality agreement between AGDC and Glenfarne was presented to the Alaska Legislature as an impenetrable legal barrier — the reason why every question about costs, governance, and clawback conditions had to go unanswered. Legislators were told repeatedly that AGDC could not share documents it was legally bound to keep confidential.
This morning, the document is in the building. And the legal arguments that were always available — subject matter waiver through voluntary public disclosure, and the primacy of Alaska's public records law over a private contractual confidentiality clause — suggest the wall may have been built on sand from the beginning.
AGDC never had the legal authority to enter a confidentiality agreement that placed its public records beyond the reach of Alaska's Public Records Act. And Glenfarne waived whatever protection it had by voluntarily disclosing the subject matter of the protected information in months of open legislative testimony.
The legislature has two days left in this special session. It has the document. It has the legal arguments. The confidentiality that stopped every question for over a year may not have been as unassailable as everyone was told.
Alaska deserved to know that a year ago.
Note: This post discusses legal concepts in the context of public policy analysis. It is not legal advice. The author is an Alaska energy policy analyst, not an attorney. Readers seeking legal guidance should consult qualified Alaska counsel.