The Road Not Taken
Alaska has a statute specifically designed for this moment — a structured, transparent pathway to negotiate tax certainty for a North Slope gas project. It has been on the books since 1998. Glenfarne bypassed it entirely. The road not taken has more protections for Alaska than the road Dunleavy chose.
In July 2006, I wrote about a statute most Alaskans had never heard of — the Alaska Stranded Gas Development Act, codified at AS 43.82. I was writing about Frank Murkowski's attempt to use it to negotiate a secret tax deal with BP, ExxonMobil, and ConocoPhillips. The legislature rejected that deal. Murkowski lost his primary. And Alaska moved on to AGIA, SB 138, and eventually to Glenfarne.
What nobody noticed in all of that transition is that AS 43.82 never went away. It was never repealed. It was never superseded. It sits in Alaska statute today — operative, available, and carrying more transparency and legislative oversight than anything the Dunleavy administration has proposed in the current special session.
The Stranded Gas Development Act was not the problem in 2006. The secret deal Murkowski made under it was the problem. The statute itself — its application process, its qualified project review, its cost evaluation requirements, its mandatory legislative ratification — was built precisely to prevent Alaska from giving away tax certainty without understanding what it was giving it away for.
Glenfarne bypassed it entirely. And in doing so, bypassed every protection it was designed to provide.
What AS 43.82 Actually Requires
The Alaska Stranded Gas Development Act was enacted in 1998 and amended several times since. Its purpose was specific: to create a formal, structured pathway for the state to negotiate tax certainty with the sponsor of a qualified North Slope gas project — including the ability to offer payment in lieu of one or more taxes — subject to rigorous review and legislative approval.
The commissioner may determine that a proposal is a qualified project only if it would produce at least 500 billion cubic feet of stranded gas within 20 years of commercial operations and is capable of making gas available to meet reasonably foreseeable in-state demand within economic proximity of the project. Crucially — this determination must be based on information available to the commissioner. Cost information is central to that determination.
If the commissioner approves an application and proposed project plan, the commissioner may develop proposed terms for periodic payment in lieu of one or more taxes — including oil and gas production taxes, property taxes, and income taxes — that would otherwise be imposed by the state or a municipality on the qualified sponsor as a consequence of participating in an approved qualified project.
The term of any contract developed under AS 43.82.020 may not exceed 35 years from the commencement of commercial operations of the approved qualified project.
Read those provisions together. AS 43.82 anticipated exactly the current situation — a major North Slope gas project seeking tax relief from the state and municipalities. It created a pathway for that relief. And it built in safeguards at every step: a formal application, a qualified project determination requiring cost information, proposed terms developed by the commissioner, and mandatory legislative ratification before any contract takes effect.
The Process Glenfarne Never Went Through
The Dunleavy administration did not file an application under AS 43.82. It did not seek a qualified project determination from the commissioner. It did not go through the structured cost review that a qualified project determination requires. It introduced a standalone property tax bill in the legislature — bypassing the entire framework the Stranded Gas Development Act created for exactly this purpose.
That process was never initiated. Instead the governor introduced a property tax bill, applied pressure through a special session, and asked the legislature to ratify terms derived from cost information nobody has been allowed to see.
The Irony That History Demands We Notice
In 2006, the legislature rejected Frank Murkowski's deal made under AS 43.82. The lesson Alaska drew was that the process needed more transparency and more legislative oversight — which is exactly what AGIA and SB 138 added. The Stranded Gas Development Act itself, with its application process and legislative ratification requirement, was not the problem. It was the secret negotiation that preceded the formal process that the legislature found unacceptable.
The current property tax bill asks the legislature to provide tax certainty — including payment in lieu of property taxes — without a formal application, without a qualified project determination, without commissioner-developed terms grounded in verified costs, and without the municipal accommodation requirement that AS 43.82 explicitly mandates.
The borough property tax dispute — which has consumed weeks of legislative debate and nearly killed the bill repeatedly — exists precisely because AS 43.82's municipal accommodation requirement was bypassed. That requirement was written into the statute after decades of experience with exactly this conflict. Glenfarne's route around AS 43.82 walked directly into the problem the statute was designed to prevent.
What the Producers Know
The North Slope producers — ConocoPhillips, ExxonMobil, Hilcorp — negotiated under AS 43.82 with Murkowski in 2003 and 2004. They know this statute. They know what a properly structured tax certainty contract looks like and what process produces one that survives legislative scrutiny.
They also know what happens when that process is shortcut. They watched Murkowski's deal collapse. They watched the legislature reject it. They watched AGIA replace it with a more transparent framework. And they have watched that framework gradually erode — through SB 138, through the AGDC-Glenfarne confidentiality agreement, and now through a standalone property tax bill that bypasses AS 43.82 entirely.
Their precedent agreements are structured as safety nets — conditional on FID, conditional on tax certainty, conditional on every prior commitment being properly completed. A properly completed tax certainty commitment, in the producers' institutional memory, looks like AS 43.82. It has an application. It has verified costs. It has legislative ratification. It has municipal accommodation. It has ongoing reporting and audit rights.
What is currently before the special session does not look like that. Which is precisely why the producers signed precedent agreements rather than binding supply contracts.
A Direct Comparison
Every protection AS 43.82 built into the tax certainty process has been bypassed in the current approach. Every conflict that has consumed the special session — the borough dispute, the lack of cost information, the absence of independent economic review — was anticipated and addressed in the statute that was never used.
The Question Nobody Has Asked
Why didn't Glenfarne pursue the AS 43.82 pathway?
The answer the statute itself suggests is uncomfortable. AS 43.82 requires a formal application with cost and economic information sufficient for the commissioner to evaluate the project. That evaluation cannot be completed without verified project costs. And Glenfarne has acknowledged those verified costs won't exist until mid-2027.
A developer who cannot complete a qualified project determination under AS 43.82 because it lacks verified cost information cannot honestly seek tax certainty through any process that requires those costs to be known. The Dunleavy administration's decision to bypass AS 43.82 and introduce a standalone tax bill was not a choice between two equivalent pathways. It was a choice to avoid the pathway that would have required Glenfarne to open its books.
The Statute Is Still There
AS 43.82 has been on the books since 1998. It survived AGIA. It survived SB 138. It survived every iteration of this project's development. It is available today.
The legislature does not need to invent new transparency requirements for the Alaska LNG project. It does not need to negotiate novel municipal accommodation provisions. It does not need to construct ad hoc audit rights from scratch. Alaska already has a statute that does all of those things — specifically for this type of project, specifically for this type of tax concession.
The path to durable, legally defensible tax certainty for Alaska LNG runs through AS 43.82. It requires a formal application. It requires verified project costs. It requires commissioner review. It requires municipal accommodation. It requires legislative ratification of terms Alaska can actually evaluate.
That is not obstruction. That is the road Alaska built twenty years ago — after learning the hard way what happens when tax certainty is negotiated without it. The legislature should insist on taking it.