
Dan Stickel
85:27 - 86:08
"for that midstream operator, we're estimating $29 million in 2036. That's the first year of expected revenues. That increases to $65 million in 2041 and then up to $358 million in 2051. And what that shift from the 2041 to the 2051 represents is the exhaustion of those carryforward net operating losses."
“for that midstream operator, we're estimating $29 million in 2036. That's the first year of expected revenues. That increases to $65 million in 2041 and then up to $358 million in 2051. And what that shift from the 2041 to the 2051 represents is the exhaustion of those carryforward net operating losses.”
And then separately, we, we analyze the estimated impact on the midstream operator, and that's where we see significant losses and appreciation for building out the pipeline and the treatment facility and the export facility. So for that midstream operator, we're estimating $29 million in 2036. That's the first year of expected revenues. That increases to $65 million in 2041 and then up to $358 million in 2051. And what that shift from the 2041 to the 2051 represents is the exhaustion of those carryforward net operating losses.
The Alaska Senate added a corporate income tax on oil and gas pass-through entities like Hilcorp to the AK LNG gas-pipeline bill (HB 381), effective 2028 regardless of the project.

State economist Dan Stickel told a legislative conference committee Friday that the Senate version of HB 381 reduces the Alaska LNG export break-even price from $9.05 to $8.62 per thousand cubic feet — still above current futures market prices near $8 — prompting Rep. Justin Ruffridge to say the project simply "doesn't work."
