BP and ExxonMobil commit up to $20 million to Alaska LNG

An LNG tanker fills up at the ConocoPhillips liquid natural gas export facility in Nikiski, Alaska. When it opened in 1969, it was the only facility of its kind in the U.S. to get a license to export its gas to Japan. For more than forty years, the state has attempted to develop similar projects to bring natural gas from the North Slope to market, none of those projects have broken ground. (Photo courtesy of ConocoPhillips)
An LNG tanker fills up at the ConocoPhillips liquid natural gas export facility in Nikiski, Alaska. When it opened in 1969, it was the only facility of its kind in the U.S. to get a license to export its gas to Japan. For more than 40 years, the state has attempted to develop similar projects to bring natural gas from the North Slope to market, but none of those projects have broken ground. (Photo courtesy ConocoPhillips)

BP and ExxonMobil have committed up to $20 million to the state-run Alaska LNG project.

It’s the first time in years that private industry in the state has pitched in money to move the gasline project forward. Both companies, and ConocoPhillips, were investors in the project but backed out in 2016 citing unfavorable market conditions.

Lt. Gov. Kevin Meyer told a crowd at an oil and gas conference in Anchorage that the money will be used to get the project through the federal environmental review process. Meyer said Thursday that the two companies will also help the state determine whether the project can be more competitive.

“When the governor took office, he made it clear that we needed participants with the credentials and the resources necessary in order to make a project of this scope work. The involvement of BP and Exxon provides confidence that all future decisions regarding Alaska LNG will be rooted in world-class LNG experience,” Meyer said.

The Alaska LNG project would pipe natural gas from the North Slope to Nikiski, then transport it to Asian markets.

Damian Bilbao, vice president of commercial ventures for BP in Alaska, said the company has at least one big reason to put money into the project.

“Alaska gas remains BP’s single largest global undeveloped resource,” he said.

Bilbao said it’s significant that industry and the state are collaborating on the project again.

He credits Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s administration with working to bring private industry back into the process of getting the state’s natural gas to market.

“The governor talks about being open for business, and big businesses like ExxonMobil and BP step forward when both the project and opportunity make sense, but also when the right relationship exists with the sovereign,” he said.

Still, that doesn’t mean that the company believes the Alaska LNG project is more economically viable now than it was when BP stepped away from it.

“The state has made good progress over the last several years. And, working together with Exxon and (the Alaska Gasline Development Corporation), we think we can unlock some additional opportunities. But we’ll just have to see in a few months — after some work gets done — where the project is relative to other opportunities around the world,” he said.

The state’s gasline corporation will have about $23.5 million in the bank at the end of the current fiscal year. But corporation spokesperson Jesse Carlstrom wrote in an email that it will likely cost about $30 million to get through the environmental review with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. If that process stays on schedule, the state could get the final federal go-ahead by 2020.

Still, the project needs final engineering and design work as well as investors and customers to be economically viable.

Rashah McChesney

Daily News Editor

I help the newsroom establish daily news priorities and do hands-on editing to ensure a steady stream of breaking and enterprise news for a local and regional audience.

Sign up for The Signal

Top Alaska stories delivered to your inbox every week

Site notifications
Update notification options
Subscribe to notifications