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Alaska LNG project could tap Defense Production Act for federal support
The Alaska Senate Resources Committee heard testimony Thursday on how the Defense Production Act could provide federal support for the proposed $47 billion Alaska LNG project, marking what an expert called uncharted territory for the Korean War-era law.
President Trump invoked the Defense Production Act on April 20, 2026, declaring a national emergency and delegating authority to the Secretary of Energy to support natural gas and LNG capacity expansion. The move opened the door for federal grants, loan guarantees, or offtake agreements for projects like Alaska LNG, which would include a gas treatment facility, an 800-mile pipeline, and an LNG export terminal.
Philip Rossetti, a senior fellow at the R Street Institute who testified before the committee, said the scale of potential federal involvement would be unprecedented. Traditional Defense Production Act projects receive tens of millions of dollars in aid and rarely exceed $100 million.
"Traditionally, these projects are in the tens of millions of dollars in terms of receiving DPA aid and rarely exceeds $100 million," Rossetti said. "So for these sort of large-scale projects, I think we are starting to enter into some uncharted territory of how the DPA can be utilized."
The Defense Production Act was first adopted in 1950 during the Korean War to give the president authority to prioritize contracts and activities in the private sector for national defense. The law has evolved over decades, with recent administrations expanding its use beyond traditional defense procurement.
Rossetti warned that using the act for a project of this magnitude could set a precedent for future presidents to deploy it for massive infrastructure projects unrelated to traditional national defense.
"When you look at the recent applications during the Trump administration of the DPA, that is actually what we are really seeing is the Biden administration and their expansion of the use of the DPA is essentially what leads the current administration to conclude that they can use it in a similar and perhaps even larger fashion," Rossetti said.
Senator Forrest Dunbar asked whether federal support at this scale would create a new tool for future administrations to fund projects like massive wind farms.
"If the federal government did come in and somehow infused a tremendous amount of capital, would you see that, and it was not challenged, would you see that as an expansion of the DPA's current understanding?" Dunbar said. "The next president and the president after that, would they have a new tool on their hand to say, I do not know, build a mega gigantic wind farm or anything else?"
Rossetti said yes. He said if Congress does not limit the authority and continues to fund the Defense Production Act fund, the next president will be able to use it in similar or larger ways.
This article was drafted with AI assistance and reviewed by editors before publishing. Every claim can be verified against the original transcript. If you spot an error, let us know.
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