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Consultants warn of megaproject risks as legislators press for LNG cost transparency and independent oversight

January 23, 2026 | 2026 Legislature Alaska, Alaska


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Consultants warn of megaproject risks as legislators press for LNG cost transparency and independent oversight
Consultants who have reviewed large energy infrastructure projects told the Alaska Senate Resources Committee on Jan. 23 that the state should press for greater transparency, independent verification and oversight as the Alaska LNG project approaches a final investment decision.

Jeremy Clark of Pegasus Global Holdings, citing lessons from Trans‑Alaska Pipeline System (TAPS) and other megaprojects, warned that extended development timelines make projects vulnerable to "black swan" events and ripple effects that produce schedule slips and cost escalation. Clark noted industry standard front‑end loading (FEL) phases: early estimates can be ±50% while a Class 3 estimate used to support an FID typically targets ±10–15% accuracy.

"It's very common for megaprojects to go over budget and be off schedule," Clark said, pointing to historical examples including TAPS (initial estimate about $4 billion, completion about $8 billion) and a U.S. nuclear project whose costs rose from roughly $14 billion to more than $36 billion.

Committee members repeatedly raised the confidentiality of financial data for the current Alaska LNG effort. Senator Willikowski asked who would bear downside risk if markets soften or costs rise; Pegasus said allocations depend on the project's contracts and agreements and that, at present, consultants lacked access to the full confidential information to determine specific exposures. Several senators warned that if costs increase, consumers could face higher tariffs and that the state needs tools to evaluate whether tax concessions would simply pad investor returns or are necessary for project viability.

Nicholas Fulford, senior director at Gaffney Klein (the legislature's consultant and a Baker Hughes subsidiary), opened his remarks by reading a written statement about internal safeguards intended to maintain Gaffney Klein's independence despite corporate ties. He told the committee that the firm restricts client data to team members directly engaged on a client and said additional separations could be implemented if the committee required them in writing.

Chair Senator Giesel and others pressed Fulford about potential conflicts given Baker Hughes's announced agreement with Glenfarn (the project's majority owner). Fulford compared Gaffney Klein's work to expert‑witness practice and said the firm's commercial integrity depends on objective advice; he also suggested legal colleagues could provide further clarity on fiduciary duties.

On tax precedents, Fulford described examples from other jurisdictions: Louisiana statutes that have provided up to 80% property tax relief for major industrial projects for up to 10 years (the presentation cited Magnolia LNG as an example with an estimated property tax benefit on the order of $500 million), Texas reforms that limited some exemptions, and Maryland's use of payment‑in‑lieu‑of‑tax (PILOT) arrangements at Cove Point with mixed fiscal effects for local school budgets.

Both consultants recommended state oversight measures: third‑party estimate validation, quantitative risk analysis, an independent project monitor or advisory committee paid by the project, and the use of an "open‑book" economic model that allows the state and stakeholders to run scenarios without requiring disclosure of proprietary inputs.

The committee requested written clarifications on separations between Gaffney Klein and Baker Hughes and scheduled a continuation of Gaffney Klein's testimony for Monday, March 30 (committee materials including the Pegasus 2019 report and a 2024 Wood Mackenzie report were cited as available on the committee website). The hearing adjourned at 5:02 p.m.

Next steps: committee staff to collect follow‑up materials; Gaffney Klein to return for additional testimony; senators signaled interest in requiring an open‑book model or other mechanisms before agreeing to tax concessions or other fiscal commitments.

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