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Vol. 9, No. 47 Week of November 21, 2004
Providing coverage of Alaska and northern Canada's oil and gas industry


Marathon tells Alaska commission CIGGS’ issues are commercial, not regulatory

In response to Agrium filing, pipeline operator says change in regulation won’t solve inlet’s gas supply problems, and asks who would pay millions for work and equipment required to convert pipeline to common carrier

Kristen Nelson

Petroleum News Editor-in-Chief

Agrium, which owns the fertilizer plant at Nikiski, is arguing to the Regulatory Commission of Alaska that if the Cook Inlet Gas Gathering System were a common carrier pipeline, Agrium would have access to natural gas from the west side of the inlet (see story in Oct. 17 issue of Petroleum News). Ag....

    [additional news subjects in this story]

Who will bear the costs?

Issue is gas

Capacity also an issue

Vexatious litigation

Aurora wants in on Agrium application, says it has gas stranded on west side of Cook Inlet


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