
Matt Kissinger
15:16 - 16:13
"I think everyone knows what I'm talking about with respect to a stolen AGDC document, confidential document. I thought it would be worthwhile just to take a few minutes just to address it openly to let you ask any questions that you have on it, but also to clarify that we've been clear actually about these mechanisms on the record."
“I think everyone knows what I'm talking about with respect to a stolen AGDC document, confidential document. I thought it would be worthwhile just to take a few minutes just to address it openly to let you ask any questions that you have on it, but also to clarify that we've been clear actually about these mechanisms on the record.”
I think everyone knows what I'm talking about with respect to a stolen AGDC document, confidential document. I thought it would be worthwhile just to take a few minutes just to address it openly to let you ask any questions that you have on it, but also to clarify that we've been clear actually about these mechanisms on the record. So this document— and I've seen a copy, but I don't have a copy, I was not given a copy— but in looking through it, it, um, it outlined some of the mechanisms that we've testified about. In particular, it talked about a clawback mechanism, and it being a paid clawback. And this is the difference between us getting to a point where we can't achieve FID and Glenfarm leaving the project, and the state having an option to push Glenfarm out if they don't meet certain milestones.
The HB 381 conference committee failed Friday to adopt either the House or Senate version of the Alaska LNG tax bill, with each body's delegation voting against the other's version. Chair Calvin Schrage announced the committee will proceed under limited powers of free conference to write a compromise from scratch, with a follow-up meeting set for Saturday morning.

A confidential AGDC draft document describing a paid state clawback option over Glenfarne circulated publicly before Friday's conference committee hearing, prompting AGDC and Glenfarne officials to address what Kissinger called a stolen document on the record and raising questions about what legislators knew and when.
