
Brett Watson
7:37 - 8:08
"over the last 10 years, Pacific LNG prices, which is the market that we would be purchasing gas from, have ranged between about $5 to $15 per thousand cubic feet in what I would call sort of normal time periods."
“over the last 10 years, Pacific LNG prices, which is the market that we would be purchasing gas from, have ranged between about $5 to $15 per thousand cubic feet in what I would call sort of normal time periods.”
Um, or it can be met through some combination of new Cook Inlet development and LNG imports. We don't know exactly what that combination would look like in this no-project case. But suffice it to say, it would be some combination of those two. So what would energy prices look like in this scenario? So over the last 10 years, Pacific LNG prices, which is the market that we would be purchasing gas from, have ranged between about $5 to $15 per thousand cubic feet in what I would call sort of normal time periods.
Enstar Natural Gas faces losing its primary gas supply in 2033 when its contract with Hilcorp expires, leaving Southcentral Alaska utilities with no Cook Inlet producer capable of matching the scale of investment that has kept the basin producing for the past decade.
