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The oil price roller coaster and Begich's legislative address

Let's unpack the latest tribulations on oil prices through the very best of metaphors – the roller coaster.

Matt Acuña Buxton
Matt Acuña Buxton
8 min read
The oil price roller coaster and Begich's legislative address

It's Tuesday, Alaska.

In this edition: The latest whiplashes in oil prices have a lot of people saying a lot of things about what it may or may not mean for Alaska's oil-reliant budgeting, so let's unpack it through the very best of metaphors – the roller coaster – and why even at the peaks we shouldn't take our eye off the need to get off this ride. Also, U.S. Rep. Nick Begich delivered a markedly less partisan speech to the Alaska Legislature compared to Sullivan. And the reading list.

Current mood: 🎢

Trump's war on Iran puts oil prices on a roller coaster

(Photo by kunchainub/Adobe Stock)

After a muted initial reaction to Trump kicking off a war with Iran, oil prices soared to nearly $120 a barrel in early trading on Monday amid fears that it was going to be a protracted, directionless conflict.

Then, on the word that the president did, in fact, have a plan, prices “crashed” back down into the $80 range by the end of the day.

And then, by Tuesday afternoon, prices started creeping back up when it turned out a Trump administration claim about the Navy escorting a tanker through the Strait of Hormuz was not only false, but that Iran was in the process of placing naval mines in the critical shipping corridor.  

Since Trump attacked Iran, Alaska's outlook has gone from a tepid nothingburger to looking like a repeat of 2022 – when the state was buoyed by booming oil prices stemming from Russia’s attack on Ukraine that paid for a big PFD just in time for Gov. Mike Dunleavy to ride the $3,000+ cash payment to a second term – to the possibility of something more existentially and economically devastating like the 1970s energy crisis, then back to a moderate bump that won’t greatly change legislators’ budget calculus, to... who even knows.

The roller coaster ride of oil prices over the last few days – which has at least one lawmaker already calling for a full dividend – has been about as good an illustration as any as to why most legislators and budgeters are exercising caution.

“A lot of the excitement – certainly not supportive,” said Senate President Gary Stevens, R-Kodiak, at last week’s press conference, illustrating the uncomfortable push and pull of Alaska’s financial situation, where real-world human suffering often translates to real-world bucks in the state’s treasury.

“I mean, we’re concerned about what’s going on in the Middle East, and the deaths that have occurred and the destruction that has occurred, but one of the benefits is that there should be some higher oil prices.”

At the same meeting, Anchorage Sen. Bill Wielechowski outlined that every dollar above or below the state’s revenue forecast for oil prices translates into about $30 million in revenue, but that’s based on the yearlong average. Daily price fluctuations, he explained, translate to more like $82,000 in daily revenue per dollar price difference, or $820,000 for every $10.  

That’s all to say it’ll take a lot more high days than we’ve seen to cover the current year’s roughly $500 million deficit – a hole that was planned to be filled by tapping the Constitutional Budget Reserve (a three-quarter vote minority Republicans have not been willing to give) – let alone cover the price of a full dividend.

Legislative Finance Division Director Alexei Painter told House Finance last week that oil would have to average more than $105 per barrel through the end of June to fully fund the supplemental budget, which covers things like disaster response, highway projects and the interminably expensive prison system.

"Barring extraordinary events beyond what we've seen already, I wouldn't anticipate a high likelihood that we will be able to cover all the supplemental requests without tapping the Constitutional Budget Reserve," he said.

Oil prices went from $78 per barrel on the day he made those comments to $81.72 to $94.08 by Friday, the last day available for Alaska’s crude oil prices.

To be clear, those prices are all well above the current revenue forecasts, which expect an average of $65 per barrel of oil this year and $62 next year, but alone aren't enough to meaningfully move the dial on the state's deficits.

Still, we’re at a time where legislators are coming face-to-face with the consequences of years of pinching pennies – after all, the dire situation at state boarding school Mt. Edgecumbe, which included slashing live-in volunteers who took students on walks and trips into town, was all over a $1.5 million shortfall.

And while the uptick in revenue will take the pressure off legislators’ need to address the state’s structural budget deficit for another year, as it did in 2022, it's a reminder of why they desperately need to address the precarious position Alaska leaves itself in by relying so much on oil revenue.

Roller coasters, after all, are a mix of high highs, free falls and ejector airtime. (I say as a card-carrying member of the American Coaster Enthusiasts... which reminds me, I need to renew my membership.)

The interlocking loops on Busch Gardens Williamsburg's venerable Loch Ness Monster roller coaster. (Photo by Matt Buxton)

And with the notoriously mercurial Trump administration, things are even more unpredictable. Who knows how long it'll last, where it'll take us or if we'll even make it in one piece.

Take, for example, U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright’s claim that the U.S. Navy had gotten into the business of escorting tankers – seemingly an effort to soothe fears over the economic fallout – before the White House finally stepped in to say that no such thing had happened. The whole thing resulted in a roughly $10 dip in oil prices, with prices rebounding to the $90 range at the correction.

That’s a difference of $820,000 to the state treasury right there, about half of Mt. Edgecumbe High School’s deficit.

The political component of Trump's war on Iran adds an extra layer of uncertainty to already uncertain oil and gas markets, particularly as the economic impacts of increasingly expensive gas are felt by Americans. It's why the administration has been so quick to downplay or soften – if only in headlines – the war's impact.

That kind of economic anxiety is precisely what Trump and his allies successfully manipulated heading into the 2024 election, and I’d hazard a guess it’s not exactly the sort of thing Republicans like U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan and U.S. Rep. Nick Begich are thrilled about running on this year. That political risk – amounting to yet another existential threat to Republican rule in 2026 – is probably the greatest reason to not get overly excited about a protracted conflict with Iran.

Well, that, and the human suffering.

Stay tuned.

Begich addresses the Legislature

U.S. Rep. Nick Begich delivered his second annual address to Alaska lawmakers since beating Democratic U.S. Rep. Mary Peltola in 2024. While he had plenty of praise for Trump-led efforts to open up more of the state to resource extraction and for RFK Jr.'s health care expertise, it was noticeably less partisan than the fervently pro-Trump address delivered last month by U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan. The lack of blame aimed at Democrats, "special interest groups," and Chuck Schumer stood out, as did his single solitary mention of the "Working Families Tax Cuts Act" – better known as H.R. 1 or Trump's Big, Beautiful Bill – that Sullivan mentioned by name more than a dozen times.

Instead, he struck a more bipartisan-friendly tone, answering a legislator's question about Begich's success in passing nearly a dozen bills in his first term.

"The truth of the matter is, there's far more common ground than ever gets reported on the nightly news. You know, in fact, I was very surprised to learn this when I arrived in DC," he said. "90% or more of the legislation that passes out of the House is bipartisan. It's bipartisan. We see eye to eye on so many things."

Still, one thing we probably won't see eye to eye on is his claim that RFK Jr.'s "Make America Health Again" initiative – an amalgamation of ostensibly sensible health basics with woo-woo wellness gimmicks aimed at sowing distrust in the traditional health care system – is a good stand-in for affordable health insurance.

"We have to look at the demand side of the equation," he said in response to a question about rising health care costs under Republican rule. "You know, the MAHA movement is not just a slogan. There's a real reason why we need to be healthier, because if we can lower demand on the health care system, we will lower the cost for everyone. Insurance rates will come down. The cost of care will come down. The system will be less stressed."

Follow the thread: Begich addresses legislators

Reading list

In Trump’s Washington, Congress has little power left
The president has started a war and levied sweeping tariffs, marking a major expansion of executive power at the expense of the legislative branch.
Alaska Senate passes bill requiring civics education for high school students
If passed by the House, high school students would have to complete a civics course, exam or project to graduate.
Conservation group study asserts Ambler Road will cost Alaska billions
The head of the state agency behind the road responded that it’s working to nail down a final cost, and said there are many unknowns and potential savings.
Mat-Su School District to reexamine nurse cuts as school closures move toward board approval
The list of proposed cuts will go before the Mat-Su school board for a vote March 16.
Alaska lawmakers advance all-time high $523M Department of Corrections budget
Corrections officials pointed to ballooning costs for staffing the state’s 13 prisons and medical care for inmates, and recommended a new task force or consultant to address budgeting.
Alaska Legislature

Matt Acuña Buxton

Matt is a longtime journalist and longtime nerd for Alaska politics and policy. Alaska became his home in 2011, and he's covered the Legislature and more in newspapers, live threads and blogs.

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