Filter
Exclude
Time range
-
Near
Replying to @TheDamiForeign
From sango to gasline 😂😭
3
Replying to @IAPonomarenko
Just like MH17 and the gasline 🤡
14
ManChurch retweeted
The House passed the gasline bill, the Senate will take it up but it's not clear what they will do with days left in the special session, @ak_elections disqualified Decoy Dan from challenging @SenDanSullivan, and a Loose Unit who is a real idiot. #akleg alaskalandmine.com/landmines…
1
2
347
msnatalie retweeted
Gasline Bill Passes House; Senators Wielechowski and Kawasaki Spread False “90% Tax Break” Claim Today, June 12, 2026, the House passed the Alaska LNG gasline bill, HB 381, with a vote of 34 yea, 4 nay, 1 excused. Prior to the vote, representatives highlighted the bill’s price cap provision, Renewable Energy Grant Fund provision, and the importance of pushing the Alaska LNG project forward. Representatives also repeatedly attributed the urgency of passing gasline legislation to supposed natural gas shortage in Alaska’s Cook Inlet. However, Alaska-owned producer HEX, LLC stated in a press release, May 29, 2026: “According to U.S. Geological Survey, the Cook Inlet has 19 Trillion Cubic Feet (Tcf) of natural gas, which is about 244 years of consumption at today’s energy-use rates.1 The Cook Inlet basin has the critical energy infrastructure supplying the 100% of Railbelt natural gas demand.” Despite claims perpetuated by Senators Bill Wielechoswki (D-Anchorage) and Scott Kawasaki (D-Fairbanks) that HB 381 gives producers a “90% tax break,” the actual analysis provided by the Department of Revenue’s Acting Tax Director Brandon Spanos and Chief Economist Dan Stickel reveals no more than a 22.8% State revenue decrease and up to a 13.5% revenue increase for municipalities under the version of HB 381 passed by the House. Full story in reply! @AKHCoalition @alaska_senate #AKLNG
6
10
18
1,181
#PANR $PANR $PTHRF #PTHRF #OOTT #Alaska #AKLNG #AlaskaLNG Crucial vote in the Alaska Senate this week. If the tax restructuring bill passes, the Alaska LNG project likely moves forward to FID. If gasline is greenlit, Pantheon Resources is, by far, the most leveraged way to play.
Today, the gasline bill passed the House of Representatives in a 34-5 vote. It now gets transmitted to the Senate, which meets Monday. “For communities across Alaska, the Alaska LNG project represents a critical step toward long-term energy security and lower heating bills for our families,” said Minority Leader Rep. DeLena Johnson, R-Palmer. “Developing our own natural resources is the most responsible way to power our state, fuel local economies and create high-paying jobs. We have the resources right under our feet. We just need the infrastructure to deliver them."
5
299
Replying to @draffaniello
Again thank you for the details. "Q: because the AVT is tied only to throughput, if volumes fall, borough revenue falls." Not sure the concern about volumes at this point in time. Perhaps I am not understanding the 'volume' issue. The Gasline is designed to carry 3.3BCFGPD. The North Slope has an excess resource of gas. The pipeline would need replaced long before the gas ever runs out. Anyway, than you for the conversation - it is appreciated.
1
1
12
Replying to @Downing907
Maybe the gasline ought to be passed with the stipulation that it is all non-union work? That would benefit all of Alaska instead of just a few and a bunch of outsiders.
1
10
Missy retweeted
The House just passed the gasline bill 34-5. It will now go to the Senate, who will come in on Monday. The Senate has very different ideas about this bill so it’s not clear what will happen. #akleg A lot of bills are due back from @GovDunleavy on Thursday (1 day before the end of session). The Senate might wait to see if he goes nuts on vetoes. The bill in its current form won’t pass the Senate.
The House is in hearing amendments to the gasline bill. The Landmine is boots on the ground in Juneau! Rep. Vance is up first with an amendment to prevent human trafficking for things like prostitution during a boom. #akleg
3
3
15
2,844