Dunleavy creates new task force to develop plan for energy produced and delivered within Alaska
Gov. Mike Dunleavy on Thursday launched a new task force to help craft the state’s overall energy policies.
The Alaska Energy Security Task Force is “to develop a comprehensive statewide energy plan that will evaluate energy generation, distribution, and transmission for the state of Alaska and its communities,” an administrative order issued by Dunleavy said.
The task force, with 13 voting members and five non-voting members, is to deliver an initial report by May 19, the order said.
“Despite Alaska’s position as a leading producer of energy, the cost of energy in Alaska, especially in our rural communities, is extremely high,” the governor said in a statement. “As everyone has been reminded by the war in Ukraine, access to and cost of energy are influenced by global events. I’m establishing this task force to create a plan that will reduce Alaska’s vulnerability to
fluctuating energy markets by securing dependable and affordable energy for Alaskan residents.”
The task force will be focused on in-state needs, said Dunleavy spokesman Grant Robinson. “Part of the plan the task force will produce includes identifying policies, programs, regulatory changes, and funding that could accelerate the adoption of energy strategies that the task force identifies. That work could be the basis for future legislation,” he said by email.
The 13 voting members are to include heads of relevant state departments and agencies and representatives of utilities, urban and rural communities, the energy and mining industries and other sectors, the order said. There is to be at least one member from a community dependent on Power Cost Equalization, the state program that subsidizes power in remote sites where electricity is costly.
The non-voting members of the task force are to be legislators and representatives of the federal Denali Commission, the Regulatory Commission of Alaska and the U.S. Department of Energy’s Arctic Energy Office, the order said.
The order creating the Alaska Energy Security Task Force comes five months after Dunleavy issued a different administrative order creating an Alaska Office of Energy Innovation. Among the stated responsibilities of that organization, created within the governor’s office, was development of policies to lower Alaskans’ energy costs. That includes research into non-fossil-fuel
sources like nuclear and renewable energy sources like wind and solar and study of carbon-capture technology, according to that Sept. 30 administrative order.
The Office of Energy Innovation will oversee and provide support for the new Alaska Energy Security Task Force, Robinson said.