Alaska's senators look to beef up federal office to spur gasline
Washington (Platts)--12Apr2007 platts.com
Alaska's two US senators Wednesday introduced legislation to beef up and give more power to the Office of Federal Pipeline Coordinator in an effort to jumpstart consideration of a proposed pipeline that would bring natural gas from Alaska's North Slope to the lower 48 states.
The bill, introduced by Lisa Murkowski and Ted Stevens, both Republicans, seeks to give the agency more flexibility in hiring staff by waiving the provision that requires the pipeline coordinator to follow time-consuming executive branch procedures of employing workers.
The legislation also would let the office establish filing and service fees, which would be identical to those charged by the US Bureau of Land Management, and it would specify that any legal challenges related to the pipeline be filed in the DC Court of Appeals.
Congress in 2004 created the Office of Federal Pipeline Coordinator to oversee the 15 federal agencies that will play a role in the construction and financing of a pipeline system. At the same time, Congress also provided tax credits and loan guarantees to improve the chances for construction of an Alaska gas pipeline system, and it set up a streamlined permitting and expedited court review process to limit unnecessary delays in the project.
"Expediting the Alaska natural gas pipeline construction process is critically important to our state and nation," Stevens said in a statement. "In order to get Alaska's gas to market in time to compete with foreign LNG, we must ensure the federal review process is not overburdened or unnecessarily prolonged. A fully functioning office for our federal Pipeline Coordinator is essential to achieving this goal."
Murkowski added that the pipeline was "too important" to national energy security and Alaska's economy "to be delayed any further."
Alaska's legislature is currently considering Governor Sarah Palin's Alaska Gasline Inducement Act, a bill that defines a competitive process by which the state will choose a gasline project, provides inducements for the construction of a gasline, and contains certain requirements that need to be met by any proposal. Palin has indicated that, if the state legislature passed her bill this spring, requests for application could be out by July, proposals for the project could be received in October and a winning project could be selected by January.
--Cathy Landry, cathy_landry@platts.com |