Thursday, June 04, 2026

Alaska Policy Commentary  ·  June 3, 2026

Alaska LNG and the Lessons of 2008: When Fiduciary Responsibility Is Abandoned, Everyone Pays

The financial structure being built around Alaska LNG shares five precise structural parallels with the conditions that caused the 2008 financial crisis — self-certified valuations, obscured risk, institutional failure, authoritative cover without independent analysis, and permanent commitments with no exit. Alaska's citizens are the ones holding the bag.

By Tom Lamb  ·  HB 381 · Special Session 2026

In 2008, the global financial system collapsed because institutions that should have known better accepted self-certified valuations, obscured risk through complexity, and created permanent financial commitments without independent stress-testing. Regulators had excessive confidence in measures they had in place. Executives believed their own projections. And when the underlying assets proved worthless, there was no exit — only losses that fell on those least able to bear them.

Sixteen years later, Alaska is replicating that structure — not in mortgage-backed securities, but in the financial architecture being built around the Alaska LNG project. The parallels are not rhetorical. They are structural, precise, and deeply concerning for anyone who remembers what happened the last time fiduciary responsibility was abandoned at scale.

"In 2008, authoritative endorsement substituted for independent analysis. In Alaska, the same substitution is happening — with public money, under legislative time pressure, for a private developer who refuses to disclose independent cost figures."

Parallel One: Self-Certified Valuations Accepted Without Independent Verification

The 2008 crisis was driven by mortgage originators accepting self-certified income statements — borrowers declaring their own income without documentation, lenders accepting those declarations because the incentive structure rewarded volume over accuracy. The underlying asset values were never independently stress-tested.

Today, Glenfarne presented the Alaska Senate Finance Committee with a slide labeled "Glenfarne Estimates 2026" — the company's own internal cost figures, ranging from $44.5 to $54.5 billion. These were not produced by an independent engineering firm hired by the Legislature. They were not benchmarked publicly against comparable projects. They were prepared by the developer seeking the tax concession and presented as the answer to the cost question the Legislature has been asking for months.

The low end — $44.5 billion — is essentially unchanged from the 2018 AGDC estimate of $46.2 billion, despite eight years of construction cost inflation that drove comparable infrastructure costs 40–50% higher across North America. Independent analysts at Rapidan Energy Group put the export phase alone at up to $60 billion.

In 2008, lenders accepted what borrowers told them about their own income. Alaska is being asked to permanently restructure its tax code based on what the developer says about its own costs. The structure is identical.

2008 vs. Alaska LNG: The Valuation Parallel

2008: Mortgage borrowers self-certified income. Lenders accepted without verification. Ratings agencies assigned AAA without independent stress-testing underlying assets.

Alaska LNG: Glenfarne self-certifies project costs. Legislature asked to accept without independent validation. AGDC board and Governor's office assign credibility without independent stress-testing the cost basis.

Parallel Two: Complexity Used to Obscure Risk

In 2008, mortgage-backed securities were structured through layers of financial engineering — tranches, derivatives, credit default swaps — that made the underlying risk nearly impossible for any single party to see clearly. Each layer seemed manageable in isolation. The aggregate exposure was catastrophic.

Alaska's exposure to Alaska LNG is structured the same way. Consider the layers:

Alaska's Layered Exposure — Each Individually Manageable, Collectively Undisclosed

Layer 1: 75% of all project assets — permits, rights-of-way, engineering studies, decades of public investment — transferred to a private New York company for $150 million in development spending.

Layer 2: 25% equity stake in a Delaware LLC whose operating agreements the Legislature cannot see, with no governance transparency for a minority owner of a public asset.

Layer 3: Option to invest up to 25% of construction costs across all three subprojects after FID — potentially $11–17 billion of state capital against unvalidated costs.

Layer 4: Permanent elimination of property tax authority through HB 381 — the one remaining financial lever — before a single independent cost figure has been validated.

Layer 5: A proposed stabilization clause recommended by GaffneyCline — if future tax increases or regulatory changes hurt investor profits, taxpayers cover the losses. Open-ended. No ceiling.

No single layer appears catastrophic in isolation. Together they represent an uncapped, unvalidated, permanently committed exposure of public resources to a private project whose cost basis has never been independently verified. That is precisely the structure that made 2008 possible.

Parallel Three: Institutional Fiduciary Failure

The 2008 crisis was ultimately a fiduciary failure — not primarily corruption or willful fraud, but institutions acting with excessive confidence in their own risk management, abandoning the independent verification standards that fiduciary duty requires. Regulators trusted the system. Executives trusted their models. Nobody independently stress-tested the underlying assumptions.

The Alaska record shows the same pattern. AGDC was granted sweeping unilateral authority to negotiate and execute the Glenfarne agreement — transferring 75% of publicly funded assets under a secret agreement without independent cost validation, without legislative approval, and without disclosed governance terms. The AGDC board chairman declared in April 2025 that no additional feasibility studies were required for private investment. The Governor's office characterized deal terms publicly that the lead developer subsequently contradicted.

A fiduciary entrusted with Alaska's interests was required to act with full information, independent verification, transparency, and undivided loyalty to the state's citizens. At every step, the opposite occurred. That is not necessarily corruption — it may well be, as the Hoover Institution concluded about 2008, a case of self-deception rather than willfulness. But self-deception at the fiduciary level produces the same losses as fraud. The citizens who bear the consequences cannot distinguish between them.

Parallel Four: Authoritative Cover Without Independent Analysis

In 2008, rating agencies provided AAA cover for instruments whose underlying value had never been independently stress-tested. Their authoritative imprimatur substituted for the independent analysis that investors should have demanded. The AAA rating was the answer to every question about underlying risk — until it wasn't.

In Alaska, the AGDC board, the Governor's office, and now a special legislative session provide authoritative cover for a project whose cost basis has never been independently validated. When Senator Giessel asked for disclosed governance agreements, the answer was no. When the Legislature asked for independent cost figures, it received a self-prepared Glenfarne spreadsheet stamped "Strictly Private and Confidential" — in a public hearing.

The Governor publicly claimed a legally binding deal with South Korea was imminent in late 2025. Glenfarne subsequently clarified that the LNG portion of the agreement remained non-binding. The authoritative cover and the underlying reality were not the same thing. They rarely are when fiduciary standards have been abandoned.

"In 2008, the AAA rating was the answer to every question about underlying risk — until it wasn't. In Alaska, the special session is being used the same way: as authoritative cover for a decision that hasn't been independently validated."

Parallel Five: Permanent Commitments With No Exit

The final and most damaging parallel is the exit problem. In 2008, when the underlying assets proved worthless, holders of previously AAA-rated securities found them unmarketable. They could not exit positions that had been structured as permanent commitments. The losses were locked in.

HB 381 creates the same trap for Alaska. Once passed, the property tax restructuring is permanent — a statute, not a contract, with no bilateral termination rights, no recapture provisions, no performance conditions, and no clawback if the project fails to deliver. The 2040 sunset is a binary cliff, not a renegotiation mechanism — and as it approaches, it creates pressure on Alaska to extend rather than walk away.

If the project's true cost makes the economics unworkable — if the Rapidan analysis is closer to correct than Glenfarne's self-prepared estimate — Alaska cannot recover the tax revenue it permanently surrendered. The concession is gone regardless of whether the project is ever built, whether gas ever flows, whether a single Alaskan household ever benefits.

The Critical Distinction: Who Bears the Downside

In 2008, institutions that created the instruments also held them — executives lost along with everyone else, which is why historians concluded it was self-deception rather than pure fraud. The losses were shared.

In Alaska, Glenfarne's downside is capped at $150 million in pre-FID development costs. Alaska's downside is not capped at all — 25% equity exposure to $44–70 billion in construction costs, permanent elimination of property tax authority, and an open-ended stabilization clause. The asymmetry is complete. If the project fails, Glenfarne loses $150 million. Alaska loses everything it committed — permanently.

What the Legislature Must Do Before Voting

The 2008 crisis produced the Dodd-Frank Act, stress-testing requirements, independent valuation standards, and mandatory disclosure rules — all designed to prevent institutions from accepting self-certified valuations, obscuring risk through complexity, and making permanent commitments without independent verification. The world learned that lesson at catastrophic cost.

Alaska is about to repeat it on a smaller but locally devastating scale. The Legislature has the opportunity — and the fiduciary obligation — to stop it. Three things must happen before any vote on HB 381:

The Minimum Standard of Fiduciary Responsibility

1. Independent cost validation. The Legislature must commission or require an independent engineering estimate — not Glenfarne's self-prepared figures — benchmarked against comparable completed projects and reconciled with the Rapidan analysis.

2. Governance transparency. The operating agreements of 8 Star Alaska must be disclosed to the Legislature before it votes to permanently restructure the tax code for that entity's benefit. A minority owner of a public asset cannot be denied visibility into its own investment.

3. Committed financing in place. Tax certainty is one FID condition. It is not a substitute for a committed financing stack. The Legislature should not deliver its permanent concession until the global capital markets have delivered theirs.

The project may well be worth building. The energy security argument is real. North Slope reserves need a route to market. But Alaska LNG will not be the first energy project in history to be worth building and still structured in a way that exposes the public to unacceptable risk.

In 2008, the world learned that fiduciary responsibility cannot be waived under time pressure, that self-certified valuations are not a substitute for independent analysis, and that permanent financial commitments made without stress-testing produce losses that fall on those who had no voice in the decision.

Alaska's Legislature has a voice. It should use it — before the vote, not after.

Tom Lamb  ·  June 3, 2026  ·  Alaska Policy Commentary

Wednesday, June 03, 2026

Alaska Policy Commentary  ·  June 3, 2026

Glenfarne Just Released Their Cost Estimates. Would a Serious Financing Institution Accept Them?

Today's Senate Finance hearing revealed Glenfarne's self-prepared 2026 cost figures for Alaska LNG. The numbers don't survive contact with project finance reality — and the global capital markets have already signaled their answer by staying silent.

By Tom Lamb  ·  HB 381 · Special Session 2026

Glenfarne presented their 2026 cost estimates to the Alaska Senate Finance Committee today. The headline figures: $44.5 billion on the low end, $54.5 billion on the high end. The Legislature was apparently expected to find this reassuring. It shouldn't. These numbers create more financing problems than they solve — and they reveal why, fifteen months after Glenfarne became lead developer, there is still no committed financing for this project.

Project finance is not a field that takes developer self-estimates at face value. It is a field built on independent verification, benchmarking, and stress-testing every assumption a developer makes. What Glenfarne presented today will not survive that process intact.

"The global capital markets have seen Glenfarne's numbers. They haven't committed. That silence is the most honest assessment of this project's financibility available."

The Numbers Glenfarne Released Today

Glenfarne's own 2026 internal cost estimate, presented in public session to the Senate Finance Committee:

Asset Low ($MM) High ($MM)
Pipeline (Phase I) $13,200 $16,900
LNG Export Terminal (Phase II) $23,600 $28,400
Gas Treatment Plant (Phase II) $7,700 $9,200
Total $44,500 $54,500

Three problems with these figures are immediately apparent to anyone who works in project finance.

First, the low end is implausible. $44.5 billion in 2026 is essentially the same as the 2018 AGDC estimate of $46.2 billion — somehow lower after eight years of construction cost inflation, COVID supply chain disruption, and the steepest materials cost escalation in a generation. The Engineering News-Record Construction Cost Index rose approximately 40–50% over that same period. Every comparable infrastructure mega-project built or estimated since 2018 came in dramatically higher than pre-COVID projections. Glenfarne is asking the financing market to believe Alaska LNG is the exception.

Second, the $10 billion range is itself a financing problem. Lenders don't finance ranges. They finance fixed costs with defined contingency buffers, established through independent engineering to a level of precision sufficient for bankable debt service modeling. A $10 billion spread — 22% of the low-end estimate — signals that the cost basis is not yet at the level of detail required to close project financing.

Third, the independent benchmark gap is unresolved. Rapidan Energy Group, an independent energy consultancy, puts the export terminal phase alone at up to $60 billion — against Glenfarne's $23.6–$28.4 billion for the same component. That is a $30+ billion gap on a single line item. No project finance bank will close without reconciling that discrepancy through their own independent technical review.

What Project Finance Lenders Actually Require

Project finance for a mega-project like Alaska LNG is non-recourse debt — meaning lenders can only be repaid from the project's own cash flows. That structure demands extraordinary due diligence on costs, because if the project costs more than projected, there is no corporate balance sheet backstop.

Every major project finance lender — commercial banks, export credit agencies, the U.S. Export-Import Bank — requires independent engineers to validate cost assumptions and benchmark them against comparable completed projects. This is not optional. It is a standard condition of the due diligence process, applied regardless of how credible the developer appears to be.

Those independent engineers will run Glenfarne's figures against the global database of comparable LNG and pipeline construction costs. They will find the Rapidan analysis. They will apply post-COVID inflation adjustments. And their conclusions will determine whether the debt service math works — not what Glenfarne put in a slide deck.

What Lenders Require — What Alaska LNG Has Today

Independent validated cost estimate: Required by every major lender as a condition of due diligence. Alaska LNG has a self-prepared internal estimate with a $10 billion range that hasn't been independently validated.

Fixed EPC contract with locked cost: Required to model debt service with certainty. Alaska LNG has a provisionally selected contractor. No fixed lump-sum contract exists.

Finalized take-or-pay offtake agreements: Lenders require executed contracts covering minimum debt service quantities. Alaska LNG has 13 MTPA in preliminary LOIs with TotalEnergies, JERA, Tokyo Gas, CPC, PTT, and POSCO. None are finalized.

Committed equity: Lenders require credible equity partners with skin in the game. Alaska LNG has $50 million in development capital from Danaos Corporation — development funding, not construction equity.

Committed debt financing: Alaska LNG has none. The CEO confirmed today that financing arrangements are still being assembled and are contingent on tax legislation passing.

Glenfarne's Own Texas Project Shows What Committed Financing Looks Like

Glenfarne is simultaneously developing Texas LNG — a 4 MTPA export terminal in Brownsville, Texas, roughly one-tenth the cost of Alaska LNG. The contrast in financing progress is stark.

Texas LNG assembled a $5.7 billion committed bank group from leading financial institutions. It has a fixed lump-sum turnkey EPC contract with Kiewit — a known, bankable number that lenders could model. It was on schedule for early 2026 FID. That is what a financeable project looks like.

Alaska LNG — fifteen times larger, infinitely more complex, in a remote Arctic environment — has $50 million in development capital, preliminary letters of intent, a provisionally selected contractor, and a self-prepared cost estimate with a $10 billion range. These are not equivalent situations. The financing gap between what Texas LNG achieved and where Alaska LNG stands today is not a minor procedural difference. It is the entire problem.

"Texas LNG closed a $5.7 billion committed bank group with a fixed EPC contract. Alaska LNG — fifteen times larger — has $50 million in development capital and a self-prepared range. These are not comparable situations."

Tax Certainty Is Necessary — But Not Sufficient

To be fair to Glenfarne's core argument: tax certainty is a genuine condition of FID for LNG projects. International project finance lenders do require regulatory and tax stability before committing capital. On this narrow point, Glenfarne is correct.

But tax certainty is one condition among several that must be satisfied simultaneously. Passing HB 381 delivers Alaska's piece of the puzzle. It does not produce a validated cost estimate. It does not generate a fixed EPC contract. It does not close the Rapidan gap. It does not finalize 16 MTPA in take-or-pay offtake agreements. It does not assemble a committed bank group.

All of those conditions remain open — and the CEO confirmed today that financing won't close without them. The Legislature is being asked to deliver a permanent, irrevocable tax concession as a precondition for Glenfarne to begin assembling the rest of the financing stack. That stack may or may not come together. If it doesn't, Alaska has permanently restructured its tax code for a project that was never built.

The Question the Legislature Should Be Asking

If Glenfarne's $44.5 billion figure is credible and the project is financeable at that cost, the financing should be closeable now — or very soon. The offtake agreements are substantial. The federal permits are in place. The national security tailwind is real. Baker Hughes and POSCO are credible partners.

So why isn't there a committed bank group? Why has FID slipped from end of 2025 to sometime in 2026 — and now potentially into 2027? Why did Glenfarne extend cost evaluation another year if the numbers are solid?

The most parsimonious answer is that the financing market has seen these numbers and found them insufficient. Project finance banks don't stay silent out of politeness. They stay silent because the deal isn't bankable yet.

The Legislature should demand answers to these questions before passing HB 381 — not after. A permanent tax restructuring enacted before the financing closes is a concession Alaska can never take back, given to a project that may never get built. That is not a deal. That is a gift.

Tom Lamb  ·  June 3, 2026  ·  Alaska Policy Commentary

Alaska Policy Commentary  ·  June 3, 2026

"Strictly Private and Confidential": Glenfarne's Numbers Don't Add Up — And They've Just Bought Themselves Another Year to Avoid Saying So

Today Glenfarne presented cost figures to the Alaska Legislature stamped "Strictly Private and Confidential" — in a public hearing, on a document now posted on akleg.gov. The numbers don't survive contact with construction cost reality. And the timeline just slipped another year.

By Tom Lamb  ·  HB 381 · Special Session 2026

Today at the Alaska Senate Finance Committee, Glenfarne presented a slide deck with the words "STRICTLY PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL" printed on every page. It was a public hearing. The document is now posted on akleg.gov. The confidentiality stamp is theater — but what's inside the document is a more serious problem.

Glenfarne showed the Legislature their own internal cost estimates — labeled "Glenfarne Estimates 2026" — presented as if they answer the cost question the Legislature has been asking for months. The numbers don't survive contact with construction cost reality. And the timeline just slipped another year.

"The Legislature is being asked to permanently restructure Alaska's tax code based on Glenfarne's own self-prepared internal estimates."

What the Slide Actually Shows

Glenfarne's own 2026 cost estimate, presented today in public session:

Asset Low ($MM) High ($MM)
Pipeline (Phase I) $13,200 $16,900
LNG Export Terminal (Phase II) $23,600 $28,400
Gas Treatment Plant (Phase II) $7,700 $9,200
Total $44,500 $54,500

The low end — $44.5 billion — is essentially identical to the 2018 AGDC estimate of $46.2 billion. Eight years later. Through COVID. Through the worst construction cost inflation in a generation. Through supply chain disruptions that sent materials costs soaring across every major infrastructure project in North America.

Glenfarne is asking Alaska to believe that inflation did not happen.

What Construction Costs Actually Did Between 2018 and 2026

The Engineering News-Record Construction Cost Index — the standard benchmark for major infrastructure — rose approximately 40–50% between 2018 and 2026. Steel prices, labor costs, and remote logistics in Alaska have all increased substantially. Every comparable mega-project built or estimated in this period came in dramatically higher than pre-COVID projections.

The Cost Reality Gap

2018 AGDC estimate: $46.2 billion

Glenfarne 2026 low estimate: $44.5 billion — somehow lower than 8 years ago

Glenfarne 2026 high estimate: $54.5 billion

Rapidan Energy Group independent estimate: Export phase alone up to $60 billion — total well above $70 billion

Independent analysts at Rapidan Energy Group put the export terminal phase alone at up to $60 billion. Glenfarne puts the same phase at $23.6–$28.4 billion. That is not a rounding difference. That is a $30+ billion gap between Glenfarne's self-prepared estimate and an independent analysis — on a single component of the project. Nobody in the Legislature today asked Glenfarne to reconcile that gap.

The Confidentiality Stamp on a Public Document

Every slide in today's deck is stamped "STRICTLY PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL." The deck was presented in an open public hearing of the Alaska Senate Finance Committee. It is now publicly available at akleg.gov for anyone to download.

This is not a minor irony. It tells you something important about how Glenfarne operates: the confidentiality posture is performative. It is designed to signal that information is proprietary even when it is being handed to a public legislative body in open session — creating the impression of restricted access while presenting self-prepared figures as a substitute for independent analysis.

"Glenfarne stamped 'confidential' on a document presented in a public hearing, now posted on akleg.gov. The confidentiality is theater. The numbers are the problem."

The Timeline Just Slipped — Again

Here is the FID timeline as Glenfarne has presented it:

Glenfarne's Sliding FID Timeline

March 2025: Glenfarne becomes lead developer. FID anticipated "in 2025."

May 2025: Final engineering and cost analysis commences. FID expected year-end 2025.

November 2025: Baker Hughes agreement signed. FID "anticipated soon after" December cost completion.

December 2025: FID milestone missed. No public cost estimate released.

January 2026: Duval says project is "progressing from planning to building." No FID.

June 2026: Glenfarne tells contractors to be ready for Q1 2027 mobilization. Cost evaluation extended into 2027. FID slipped at least one full year from original target.

The Legislature is being asked to pass a permanent tax restructuring bill — today, in a special session — for a project whose developer has just extended its own cost evaluation into 2027. A project that has missed every self-imposed deadline it has set since taking over in March 2025.

GaffneyCline, the independent advisory firm that testified before the House Finance Committee last week, noted there were "a number of unresolved features of the Phase 1 gasline project that would typically put the timeframe for FID much further out than the project developers have indicated." That testimony came before the 2027 extension was announced.

What the Legislature Should Have Asked Today

When Glenfarne presented slide 9 — the cost table — the questions that should have followed are straightforward:

Questions the Legislature Should Ask

1. These are labeled "Glenfarne Estimates 2026" — who prepared them and were they independently validated?

2. How does the low-end figure of $44.5 billion compare to the 2018 estimate of $46.2 billion, given 8 years of construction cost inflation?

3. Rapidan Energy Group estimates the export phase alone at up to $60 billion. Your figure for the same phase is $23.6–$28.4 billion. What explains the $30+ billion gap?

4. You have now extended cost evaluation into 2027. Why should the Legislature set a permanent tax rate today for a project whose costs you cannot finalize for another year?

5. Who specifically absorbs the $10 billion difference between your low and high estimates — and does Alaska's 25% AGDC equity stake expose the state to any of that risk?

The Bottom Line

Glenfarne stamped "confidential" on a public document, presented their own self-prepared cost figures instead of the independent engineering estimate, and has now extended their cost evaluation into 2027 — all while asking the Legislature to pass a permanent tax restructuring bill this week.

The project may well be worth pursuing. The energy security argument is real. But a company that withholds independent cost estimates, presents internally-prepared figures as a substitute, stamps public legislative documents "confidential," and cannot meet a single self-imposed deadline is not a company that has earned a permanent blank check from Alaska's tax code.

The Legislature should table HB 381 until the Worley estimate is released, independently reviewed, and reconciled with the Rapidan analysis. That is not opposition to Alaska LNG. That is basic due diligence — the same standard every comparable project in Louisiana and Texas was held to before a single dollar of tax revenue was committed.

Alaska deserves to know what it is signing before it signs it. Right now, it doesn't.

Tom Lamb  ·  June 3, 2026  ·  Alaska Policy Commentary

Tuesday, June 02, 2026

The Northern Dispatch — Separating Signal from Noise: The NRSC's Legal Campaign Against Mary Peltola
The Northern Dispatch
Fact-Check Series  ·  Alaska Senate Race 2026
Voter Fact-Check

June 2026  ·  Alaska Senate Race 2026  ·  Source: NRSC

Separating Signal from Noise: The NRSC's Legal Campaign Against Mary Peltola

The National Republican Senatorial Committee has filed an FEC complaint and a 25-page ballot-removal letter targeting Democratic Senate candidate Mary Peltola. This fact-check examines what is confirmed, what is alleged, and what the evidence actually supports.

Part of a continuing series  ·  Previously in this fact-check series
Checking the Alaska GOP's Claims About Mary Peltola's Congressional Record

In April 2026, this series examined five claims made by the Alaska Republican Party about Peltola's congressional record — including allegations that she is "far-left," passed "zero bills," and voted "lockstep" with Biden on Alaska energy. Four of the five claims were rated Inaccurate, Partially True, or Needs Context. The one accurate element — that Schumer urged her to run — was found to be standard electoral politics rather than evidence of misconduct.

Claim (April 2026) Finding
"Far-left, anti-Alaska policies" Inaccurate
"Zero bills signed into law" Partially True
"Voted lockstep on ANWR / NPR-A" Partially True
"Alaskans fired Mary in 2024" Needs Context
"Will do the same for Schumer" Needs Context

Read the full April fact-check →

Since March 2026, the NRSC has pursued a coordinated multi-front legal strategy targeting Mary Peltola ahead of Alaska's August 18 primary. The campaign consists of two major actions: an FEC complaint filed March 27, 2026, alleging misuse of campaign funds, and a June 1, 2026 letter to Alaska election officials demanding that a same-named candidate — Daniel J. Sullivan of Petersburg — be removed from the ballot on the grounds that his candidacy was orchestrated to benefit Peltola.

Each action is assessed below on the evidence actually in the public record.


Charge 01
"Peltola coordinated the Petersburg 'Dan Sullivan' candidacy to rig the election."
Source: NRSC Letter to Alaska Lt. Governor, June 1, 2026
⚠ Noise Against Peltola
✓ Confirmed

Press release metadata for Petersburg Sullivan's campaign announcement identified the author as Amber Lee, an Alaska Democratic political strategist. Lee has publicly supported Peltola in the past, describing her as "a real challenger" with "a real chance to win." FEC records show Lee's firm, Amber Lee Strategies, received payments from a PAC that supported Peltola. When asked directly about her involvement, Lee responded: "No comment."

✗ Not Confirmed

No evidence in the public record establishes that Mary Peltola personally directed, requested, encouraged, or coordinated Petersburg Sullivan's candidacy. When asked directly whether the Peltola campaign was "involved in asking, encouraging or soliciting" Petersburg Sullivan to run, campaign spokesperson Harry Child said: "no."

~ Context

The NRSC's letter never claims direct evidence of Peltola's involvement. Instead it sent preservation demands to her campaign — a legal mechanism used when seeking evidence that does not yet exist. That is how you act when you hope to find proof, not when you already have it. A consultant who supports a candidate acting independently does not constitute the candidate's personal direction. By the same logic, any Republican candidate whose press release was authored by a GOP consultant could be said to be "orchestrated" by Mitch McConnell.

Charge 02
"Petersburg Sullivan's candidacy is an illegal sham designed to confuse voters."
Source: NRSC Letter to Alaska Lt. Governor, June 1, 2026
~ Real Tactic, Overstated Legal Case
✓ Confirmed

Petersburg Sullivan copied visual elements of Sen. Sullivan's long-established campaign logo, including color scheme, font treatment, and the Alaska North Star. He lists a party affiliation of Republican despite Alaska voter records showing his registration as "undeclared." He donated $130 to Peltola's prior campaign and a total of $650 to various Democratic candidates nationally.

✗ Overstated

Under Alaska's open primary and ranked-choice voting system, Petersburg Sullivan is not running "as a Republican" in the traditional sense — all candidates appear on the same ballot regardless of party. The party affiliation technicality the NRSC emphasizes is therefore a weaker legal argument than the letter implies. On the trademark claim: color schemes and fonts are notoriously difficult to trademark, and courts are extremely reluctant to remove candidates from ballots over intellectual property disputes. The NRSC's strongest legal ground — voter confusion — has never been used by any U.S. court to remove a same-name candidate from a ballot.

~ Context

Something coordinated likely happened at the operative level — Amber Lee's involvement is too deliberate to be coincidental. The more defensible conclusion is that a Democratic consultant acted on her own initiative to create confusion, not that Peltola personally directed a conspiracy. There is a significant difference between a mid-level dirty trick and the "election rigging" framing the NRSC deploys throughout its 25-page letter.

"The NRSC sent preservation demands to Peltola's campaign fishing for a direct link they do not yet have. That is not how you act when you have evidence."
Charge 03
"Peltola used her House campaign committee as a personal slush fund."
Source: NRSC FEC Complaint, March 27, 2026
⚠ Real Questions, Overstated Conclusion
✓ Confirmed

After her November 2024 House defeat, Peltola spent more than $230,000 from her House campaign committee on travel, meals, and related expenses through the end of 2025, a period during which she gave no public indication she was actively running for office. The NRSC complaint documents 218 travel expenses and 166 catering and meal expenses over a 13-month period. Federal law prohibits conversion of campaign contributions to personal use.

~ Context

Peltola had filed a Statement of Candidacy for the 2026 House race, which provides a legal basis for continued campaign spending. It is not uncommon for candidates to maintain campaign committees and spend on travel, speaking, and outreach while assessing future races — activities that can be legitimate campaign expenses. The FEC's own "testing the waters" doctrine permits such spending. However, the scale of the spending and its apparent disconnect from any active campaign activity does raise genuine questions that the FEC would be within its mandate to examine.

✗ Overstated

The NRSC's characterization — "personal slush fund," "gravy train," "cash-strapped" — goes well beyond what the documented facts establish. Spending on travel to speaking engagements (including her University of Chicago fellowship) may constitute legitimate campaign-adjacent activity. The FEC has been unable to act on the complaint due to a prolonged lack of the minimum commissioners required for enforcement, meaning the allegations remain unresolved and unproven. Calling it a "slush fund" is political framing, not a legal finding.

Charge 04
"National Democrats, led by Chuck Schumer, are trying to elect Peltola to flip the Senate."
Source: NRSC Letter, June 1, 2026
✓ Accurate But Unremarkable
✓ Confirmed

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer urged Peltola to enter the race, according to Axios reporting from January 2026. Democratic Party organizations are funding her Senate campaign. The Alaska race is widely considered one of a handful of seats that could determine Senate majority control in 2026.

~ Context

This is standard electoral politics, not evidence of wrongdoing. Senate campaign committees supporting candidates in competitive races is precisely their function — the NRSC itself is doing exactly the same for Sen. Dan Sullivan. The framing in the NRSC letter presents ordinary Democratic Party support as evidence of a corrupt conspiracy, which it does not establish.

Charge 05
"Machiavellian Mary" personally orchestrated the Petersburg candidacy — her fingerprints are all over it.
Source: Suzanne Downing, The Alaska Story, May 30, 2026 — "The Curious Case of Machiavellian Mary and Decoy Dan"
⚠ Opinion Stated as Fact
✓ What Downing Gets Right

Downing correctly identifies the core suspicious facts: Peltola visited Petersburg days before Petersburg Sullivan announced; Amber Lee's name appeared in press release metadata; Lee has deep ties to Democratic campaigns and has publicly supported Peltola. These are legitimate observations that raise reasonable questions.

✗ Where the Column Overstates

Downing's piece moves directly from "raises eyebrows" to "her fingerprints" to "Machiavellian Mary" without establishing the connective tissue. The column presents circumstantial proximity — Peltola was in Petersburg, Lee wrote a press release — as proof of personal direction. "Coincidence? Think again" is rhetorical assertion, not evidence. Downing herself never produces a direct link between Peltola and Petersburg Sullivan's decision to run.

~ Context

Downing is a conservative commentator and founder of The Alaska Story, a right-leaning outlet. Her column is labeled commentary, not news reporting. Notably, Downing's strongest factual claim — that Peltola visited Petersburg just before the announcement — was already in the public record and does not itself constitute coordination. Candidates visit communities across Alaska constantly. The column's real contribution is coining "Machiavellian Mary" and "Decoy Dan," framing that was subsequently picked up by national conservative outlets including Fox News and Townhall, amplifying the narrative well beyond what the underlying evidence supports.


The Broader Pattern

Assessed individually, each NRSC action contains a kernel of legitimate concern buried under a substantial layer of political framing. The FEC spending questions are real but unresolved and unproven. The Petersburg Sullivan candidacy is suspicious at the operative level but does not implicate Peltola directly. The "election rigging" and "sham candidacy" language throughout both filings is prosecutorial rhetoric without prosecutorial evidence.

Assessed together, the actions form a coherent pre-campaign strategy: establish a "corrupt Democrat" narrative around Peltola before she gains traction, force her campaign to spend time and resources defending allegations, and ensure that any Peltola victory can be framed as tainted regardless of outcome. The preservation demands sent directly to her campaign serve no immediate legal purpose in a ballot certification proceeding — their function is to attach her name to the word "fraud" in news coverage.

None of this means the underlying concerns are fabricated. It means the evidence has been systematically overstated to serve a political objective that precedes any concern for electoral integrity.


Charge Finding Key Gap
Peltola coordinated Petersburg Sullivan candidacy Noise Against Peltola No direct evidence of Peltola's personal involvement; consultant's action ≠ candidate's direction
Petersburg candidacy is an illegal sham Partial Suspicious at operative level; legal case for ballot removal is novel and weak
Peltola misused campaign funds as "slush fund" Noise Against Peltola Real questions exist; "slush fund" framing goes beyond documented facts; FEC has not ruled
Schumer/Democrats funding Peltola to flip Senate Accurate Standard electoral politics; applies equally to NRSC support for Sullivan
Sources NRSC Letter to Alaska Lt. Governor Nancy Dahlstrom and Director Carol Beecher, June 1, 2026  ·  NRSC FEC Complaint against Mary Peltola for Alaska, March 27, 2026  ·  Anchorage Daily News  ·  Alaska Story  ·  Alaska Beacon  ·  NOTUS  ·  New York Times  ·  Washington Times  ·  Fox News Digital  ·  The Alaska Landmine (@alaskalandmine)  ·  Alaska Division of Elections, My Voter Portal  ·  FEC.gov disbursement records  ·  Ballotpedia, Recall of Wisconsin State Senators (2011)
Whose Ocean Is It? — The Blue Economy Credit War
Alaska Blue Economy Watch  ·  June 2, 2026
Analysis

Whose Ocean Is It?

Dan Sullivan chaired a blue economy hearing today on Capitol Hill. Mary Peltola helped build that record. Now they're running against each other — and both want full credit.

2026 Senate Race — Blue Economy Stakes
Dan Sullivan
Republican · Incumbent
Subcommittee chairman. Holds the Senate gavel, the Coast Guard bill, the NOAA appropriations. Frames the ocean economy as his domain.
vs
Mary Peltola
Democrat · Challenger
Former House rep. Pried loose hundreds of millions from OMB. Banned foreign trawled fish. Built her entire identity around fish and coastal communities.

This morning, Senator Dan Sullivan convened a subcommittee hearing titled The Blue Economy: Advancing American Fisheries, Maritime Industry, and Coastal Economies. Three Alaska witnesses. A Trump administration framing. His name in the chairman's chair. Mary Peltola's name nowhere in the room.

That absence is the story.

For two years — from August 2022 to January 2025 — Alaska's congressional delegation operated as a unified team on ocean issues. Sullivan in the Senate. Lisa Murkowski in the Senate. Mary Peltola in the House. Different parties, same fisheries. They announced disaster packages together, co-authored reform legislation, and jointly pressured the executive branch to release funds it had been sitting on for years. The result was well over a billion dollars flowing into Alaska's blue economy.

Now Peltola is challenging Sullivan for his Senate seat, and the collaborative record they built together has become a battlefield of competing narratives. Both are planting their flags on the same ocean.

I

What Sullivan's Hearing Is Really About

Today's hearing wasn't just policy — it was positioning. Sullivan used his chairmanship of the Senate Commerce Subcommittee on Coast Guard, Maritime, and Fisheries to convene witnesses from Alaska's seafood marketing world, ocean technology sector, and university research community — and to tie the blue economy explicitly to the Trump administration's maritime agenda.

That agenda is real and substantial: a sweeping Maritime Action Plan targeting China's dominance of global shipbuilding, new fees on Chinese-built vessels entering U.S. ports, and what Sullivan has called the largest Coast Guard investment in American history. He's not wrong to claim ownership of much of it. The $15.5 billion Coast Guard authorization, the $25 billion reconciliation investment, the NOAA funding wins — these flowed through Sullivan's Senate leverage.

But the framing erases something important. When the $277 million in fishery disaster relief was announced last year, Sullivan stood at a podium with Peltola and Murkowski. When the FISHES Act was drafted to fix the broken disaster relief pipeline, Peltola introduced the House companion bill. The ocean victories that Sullivan is now highlighting as solo achievements were, functionally, delegation achievements.

We just don't have the luxury of being deeply partisan. We have too much to get done.

— Mary Peltola, addressing the Alaska Legislature, February 2023
II

The Record, Unspun

Here is what the two of them actually did together on the blue economy — and who can most credibly claim credit for each piece:

Issue / Win Sullivan's Claim Peltola's Claim
$277M fishery disaster relief (2024) Joint
Announced jointly; Sullivan worked Senate appropriations
Peltola Edge
Credited with pressuring OMB to release funds held since 2018
FISHES Act — streamlining disaster relief Joint
Introduced Senate version with Murkowski
Joint
Introduced House companion; drove it through committee
$115M port infrastructure grants (2026) Sullivan Edge
Secured MARAD rule changes that made Alaska eligible
Joint
Joint delegation announcement; Peltola advocated from House
Ban on foreign trawled fish Sullivan
Pushed through defense authorization language on Chinese seafood
Peltola
Claims credit for the broader foreign trawl ban after "5 years of delays"
Coast Guard / maritime investment Sullivan
Authored; $25B reconciliation + $15.5B authorization
Bycatch reduction legislation Peltola
Introduced Bycatch Reduction Act and Bottom Trawl Clarity Act
$216M disaster package (2023) Joint
All three co-announced
Joint
All three co-announced
III

The Structural Advantage Sullivan Won't Mention

There is one thing Sullivan has that Peltola never did: a Senate gavel. Committee chairs set the agenda. They call the hearings. They decide which bills get a vote and which die in markup. Today's blue economy hearing exists because Sullivan chairs the relevant subcommittee. That's not a small thing.

Peltola served in the House minority for almost her entire tenure. She couldn't chair anything. The bills she introduced — bycatch reform, bottom trawl restrictions, Bristol Bay protections — passed committee but faced headwinds in the Republican-controlled House. Several were reintroduced by her Republican successor, Nick Begich, after she lost her seat in 2024 and then passed. The ideas were hers. The credit went elsewhere.

Sullivan's campaign knows this asymmetry and uses it. His hearing today — three Alaska witnesses, Alaska-first framing, not a single mention of bipartisan history — is a clean attempt to own the blue economy narrative heading into November.

The only way you can succeed in Congress is by forging relationships. No one is ever going to help you if they can't stand you or if you've double crossed them.

— Mary Peltola, Alaska Fisheries Debate, 2024
IV

What Peltola Brings That Sullivan Can't Claim

Peltola's argument isn't structural — it's personal and substantive. She is Yup'ik, grew up in Kwethluk and Bethel fishing with her father, and ran the Kuskokwim River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission before going to Congress. Her connection to Alaska's fisheries isn't a policy position — it's a biography.

Where Sullivan legislates the blue economy from a national security and economic competitiveness frame, Peltola approaches it from the subsistence side: what happens to rural communities when the fish don't come back, what it means when disaster relief sits in a federal bureaucracy for six years while families lose their boats. That's a different kind of claim on the issue — and one that resonates differently in coastal and rural Alaska than in the boardrooms of the Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute.

Her bycatch and bottom trawl legislation — which Sullivan has notably never co-sponsored — also draws a real policy line between them. She was the more aggressive advocate for conservation measures that the commercial trawl industry opposed. That cost her the United Fishermen of Alaska endorsement, which went to Sullivan. But it earned her credibility with Alaska Native fishing communities and conservation-minded coastal voters.

V

The Verdict for Alaska Voters

Here is the honest accounting: the blue economy wins that both campaigns are touting were, in large part, built together. The disaster relief billions, the FISHES Act, the port grants — these came from a delegation that functioned as a unit precisely because Alaska can't afford for its two senators and one representative to spend time fighting each other.

Sullivan's current framing — subcommittee chairman, Trump administration priority, America's maritime future — erases that collaboration. Peltola's counter-framing — fish-first, bipartisan champion, grassroots fundraiser — risks overstating what a House minority member can accomplish on her own.

The real question for Alaska voters is forward-looking: which of these two will be more effective in the Senate, in a Republican majority, pursuing the blue economy agenda that they jointly built? Sullivan has the institutional argument. Peltola has the cross-aisle argument.

Sullivan's Strongest Case

Senate committee power is real power. He built the Coast Guard investment, controls the hearing agenda, and has the Trump administration's ear on maritime policy. The blue economy runs through the Senate, not the House.

Peltola's Strongest Case

She moved money that had been stuck for years by pressuring the executive branch from the House. Her fisheries roots are authentic, not political. And in a dysfunctional Senate, cross-party relationships may matter more than committee seats.

Bottom Line

The ocean doesn't care who chairs the subcommittee.

What Alaska's blue economy has needed — and what both of these politicians delivered, together — was a unified delegation that put state interest above party. That model is now broken, replaced by a Senate campaign in which the same shared record is being used as ammunition against the person who helped build it.

Whoever wins in November should probably remember why it worked in the first place.

Alaska Blue Economy Watch  ·  Independent Analysis  ·  June 2, 2026

Sunday, May 31, 2026

Alaska Policy Commentary  ·  May 31, 2026

Rep. Schwanke's Own Evidence Undermines HB 381

She says Alaska must compete with Louisiana and Texas. She's right. But those states knew what their deals were worth before they signed them. Alaska doesn't.

By Tom Lamb  ·  HB 381 · Special Session 2026

Rep. Rebecca Schwanke published a commentary today asking whether Alaska LNG needs property tax breaks. It's a fair question. Her answer, unfortunately, makes the case against HB 381 better than its opponents could.

Her argument is straightforward: Louisiana and Texas gave massive tax abatements to LNG projects, British Columbia is moving fast, and Alaska needs to compete. She's not wrong about any of that. The problem is what she leaves out.

"Louisiana and Texas knew exactly what they were giving up when they gave it up. Alaska doesn't."

The Comparison She's Making — and What It Actually Shows

Schwanke cites Louisiana's Industrial Tax Exemption Program (ITEP) — an 80–100% property tax abatement for up to 10 years — and notes that Sabine Pass received a break worth ~$4.9 billion, Cameron LNG ~$3.7 billion. These are real numbers. They're also the problem with her argument.

Those dollar figures exist because Louisiana knew the asset values. ITEP is a formula-based program applied after construction, once costs are established and property is assessed. Companies apply project-by-project with disclosed capital investment figures. The exemption scales automatically with actual cost. The legislature that created ITEP didn't need to know Sabine Pass's budget in advance — the formula handled it.

HB 381 works nothing like that.

The Structure of HB 381

Sets a fixed volumetric tax of $0.06 per thousand cubic feet — before construction, before costs are known, before assets are assessed.

Permanently replaces all ad valorem property taxes on the project.

Locks in this rate with a 1% annual escalator that likely trails inflation.

Does not require cost disclosure as a condition of the tax structure taking effect.

The Four Tests — Louisiana Passed All of Them. HB 381 Fails All of Them.

Criteria Louisiana ITEP HB 381
Cost known before structure set Yes — applied post-construction No — set before any cost disclosure
Formula-based on asset value Yes — % of assessed value No — fixed volumetric rate
Time-limited Yes — 10 years maximum No — permanent replacement
Public cost disclosure required Yes — per application No — Glenfarne refuses to release updated estimate

The Number Nobody Will Release

This is where it gets hard to ignore. Glenfarne commissioned engineering firm Worley to update the project's cost estimate in 2025. When asked about it, Glenfarne's president told Alaska Public Media the updated figure is "most likely not going to be made public."

The official figure still being cited — $46.2 billion — is based on a 2018 AGDC estimate. Independent analysts at Rapidan Energy Group put the export phase alone at up to $60 billion, suggesting a total well above $70 billion.

Ad valorem property taxes are calculated as a percentage of asset value. If the true cost is $70 billion rather than $46 billion, Alaska is surrendering billions in property tax revenue — permanently — in exchange for a volumetric rate that was set without knowing that number.

"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, April 2026

Cheniere Disclosed Everything. Glenfarne Is Disclosing Nothing.

Proponents keep pointing to Sabine Pass as the model. Let's take that seriously and look at how Cheniere actually handled cost transparency.

Cheniere was a publicly traded company. Every financing round, every construction milestone, every cost overrun or on-budget completion was disclosed in SEC filings and press releases — because federal securities law required it. When the first four trains were financed between 2012 and 2017, the financing totaled over $20 billion drawn from 19 international commercial banks. Every dollar was public record. When all six trains were completed, Cheniere issued a formal press release confirming each train had been delivered ahead of schedule and within budget.

That public cost record is precisely what allowed Louisiana to calculate the $4.9 billion ITEP exemption with confidence. The state wasn't guessing. It was applying a formula to a certified, publicly verified asset value.

Cheniere vs. Glenfarne: The Disclosure Gap

Cheniere (Sabine Pass): Publicly traded. SEC disclosure required. $20+ billion in construction financing disclosed train by train. All six trains certified on-budget at completion. ITEP applied to verified final costs.

Glenfarne (Alaska LNG): Private company. No SEC disclosure obligation. Updated cost estimate commissioned from Worley in 2025 — actively withheld. Legislature asked to set a permanent tax rate based on a 2018 number while the developer holds the current one in confidence.

This is not a minor procedural difference. Cheniere's transparency was structural — baked into its corporate form. Glenfarne's opacity is also structural, and deliberate. The Legislature has no mechanism to compel disclosure. HB 381 doesn't create one. It simply trusts that $46.2 billion is close enough.

It may not be. And unlike Sabine Pass, Alaska won't find out until it's too late to renegotiate.

What About Texas? They Knew Costs When They Signed — And Built In an Exit If Promises Weren't Kept.

Proponents may point out that Texas isn't as transparent as Louisiana upfront. They'd be partly right. Under Texas Chapter 312, project cost details can be kept confidential during negotiations — closed-door talks between the developer and the county. That's worth acknowledging as a legitimate criticism of Texas practice.

But here's what's critical to understand: Texas Chapter 312 is a negotiated bilateral contract between the developer and the county. Both parties sign it. Both parties know what it says. And Texas law requires that once executed, all cost information becomes public record. The county signed knowing the costs. Texans could see what their county gave up the moment the ink dried.

HB 381 is not a contract. It's a statute — a unilateral act of the Legislature that restructures the tax code in Glenfarne's favor. There is no signing moment. There is no bilateral negotiation. There is no point at which costs must be disclosed to anyone. The Texas transparency trigger never exists at all under HB 381's structure.

But the disclosure gap is only half the Texas story. The more important difference is what Texas kept after signing: the right to walk away.

Texas Chapter 312 is explicit on this. The local government can modify the agreement, reassign it, or cancel it entirely at any time before it expires. If the developer fails to make agreed improvements, the county can recapture every dollar of lost tax revenue. If the project doesn't hit its agreed assessed value, taxes are recaptured with penalties and interest. If jobs aren't created, same result. Texas wrote performance conditions and clawback teeth directly into statute — and required every agreement to include them.

How All Three Compare to HB 381

Louisiana ITEP: Costs certified via affidavit at completion. Formula tied to assessed value. Public record throughout. Time-limited to 10 years.

Texas Ch. 312/313: Bilateral contract — county signs knowing costs. Costs public at execution. Tied to assessed value. Cancellable at any time. Recapture with penalties if performance targets missed. Time-limited to 10 years.

HB 381: Unilateral statute — no bilateral contract, no signing moment, no cost disclosure ever. Fixed volumetric rate with no connection to asset value. No cancellation right. No recapture. No clawback. No performance conditions. Permanent.

Texas signed contracts knowing costs and retained the right to cancel if promises weren't kept. Louisiana applied its formula to certified final costs. Alaska is being asked to pass a permanent law, blind to costs, with no exit, no recapture, and no performance conditions whatsoever. That isn't a variation on what Louisiana and Texas did. It's a different instrument entirely — one that protects only one party.

· · ·

The Competitive Argument Supports Disclosure, Not This Bill

Rep. Schwanke is right that Alaska faces competition. British Columbia's LNG Canada facility in Kitimat is operational and expanding. Asian buyers are signing deals now. The window is real.

But none of that justifies this particular structure. It justifies offering a competitive incentive — which Alaska absolutely should do. The question is whether this incentive, set at this rate, structured this way, is the right one. And that question cannot be answered without knowing the cost.

Louisiana didn't guess at what Sabine Pass was worth and hope the formula worked out. They built a system that automatically calibrated the benefit to the investment. Alaska should do the same — or at minimum, require Glenfarne to disclose the Worley estimate before the Legislature votes on anything.

· · ·

There Is No Adjustment Mechanism. None.

Proponents sometimes argue that companies need certainty of an incentive before breaking ground — and that's fair. ITEP itself acknowledges this: companies factor the program into their investment decisions before construction starts, even though they don't collect the exemption until costs are final.

But there's a critical distinction ITEP preserves that HB 381 abandons entirely: ITEP gives advance certainty of a formula. HB 381 gives advance certainty of a specific number. Those are not the same thing.

Under ITEP, Louisiana could pass its incentive framework without knowing what Sabine Pass would cost, because the formula — a percentage of final assessed value — self-corrects automatically. The state never had to guess. The math did the work.

Read HB 381 carefully and ask: is there anything that adjusts the $0.06/Mcf rate once final construction costs are certified? The answer is no. Here is what the bill actually contains:

What HB 381 Is Missing

No affidavit of final cost. Louisiana requires one before the exemption takes effect. HB 381 has no equivalent.

No formula tied to assessed value. The rate is a fixed number in statute — $0.06 — not a percentage of anything.

No agency authority to recalculate. No board, no Department of Revenue trigger, no mechanism that reopens the rate if actual costs diverge from the $46.2 billion assumption.

No cost-based reset clause. The only adjustment in the bill is a 1% annual escalator — automatic, inflation-blind, and completely disconnected from what the project actually costs to build.

The 2040 sunset is the only leverage point, and it's a blunt instrument: if the project hasn't reached commercial operations by then, the special tax status terminates entirely. That's a binary cliff — not a recalibration mechanism. And as the deadline approaches, it creates pressure on Alaska to extend rather than renegotiate, further weakening the state's hand.

ITEP's genius is that the formula does the work so the legislature doesn't have to. HB 381 has no formula. It has a guess — and Alaska will live with that guess permanently.

A Simple Ask

Nobody opposing HB 381 is opposing the Alaska LNG project. The energy security argument is real. North Slope reserves need a route to market. The geopolitical moment may be genuine.

But a deal structured around withheld information favors the party with more information. That party is not Alaska.

The Legislature should require full cost disclosure before any vote on HB 381. If the project pencils out at $70 billion, set the incentive accordingly. If it pencils out at $46 billion, set it accordingly. Either way, set it with your eyes open.

Rep. Schwanke's evidence makes the case for competing. It doesn't make the case for signing a blank check. Those are very different things.

Tom Lamb  ·  May 31, 2026  ·  Alaska Policy Commentary