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Last updated on May 31, 2012 at 7:52 EDT

Alaska group sues oil majors in gas dispute

December 20, 2005
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By Yereth Rosen

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters) – A group of Alaska local
governments aiming to build a natural gas pipeline filed a
federal lawsuit on Monday accusing BP and Exxon Mobil Corp of
violating antitrust laws.

The Alaska Gasline Port Authority filed its lawsuit in U.S.
District Court in Fairbanks, Alaska, alleging that the oil
majors had tried to prevent it from securing a deal for the new
pipeline by keeping North Slope natural gas off the market.

The group, representing local governments from the North
Slope, Fairbanks and Valdez, plans to build and operate an
800-mile (1,287-km) natural gas pipeline that would parallel
the existing trans-Alaska oil pipeline.

The group aims to use its lawsuit to “acquire gas in a free
market environment, nothing more, at a fair market value,” said
Jim Whitaker, mayor of the Fairbanks North Star Borough.

“That’s all we’ve ever asked.”

The group’s pipeline project, known as the “All-Alaska”
pipeline, would transport natural gas to Valdez, where it would
be chilled and liquefied and shipped by tankers to U.S. and
Canadian ports.

BP, Exxon Mobil and ConocoPhillips are in talks with Alaska
Gov. Frank Murkowski to build a rival pipeline that would run
from Prudhoe Bay through western Canada into the U.S. Midwest.

The project would cost at least $20 billion and deliver at
least 4 billion cubic feet of natural gas a day, according to
state officials.

The lawsuit alleges BP and Exxon Mobil engaged in illegal
agreements, mergers and acquisitions that allowed them to
prevent the sale of natural gas from the North Slope, which
holds about 35 trillion cubic feet of known natural gas.

The lawsuit also claims that BP breached state law by
violating a charter it signed with Alaska in 1999 as a
condition of its acquisition of Atlantic Richfield.

Officials from BP Exploration (Alaska) Inc. and Exxon Mobil
were not immediately available for comment.

The lawsuit does not name Alaska’s biggest oil producer,
ConocoPhillips. Whitaker declined to say why.


Source: reuters