Less than five weeks before taking his seat in the Oval Office, the President-elect isn’t mincing words about his pro-energy plans. After four years, the oil and gas pendulum is set to swing in a new direction. There’s talk of reviving the Keystone XL Pipeline—a project approved by him in January 2020—which was summarily cancelled on Day One of the current administration. Resurrecting the XL that would flow heavy Canadian crude to Gulf Coast refineries could now be a Day One declaration by the incoming president. Alaska Governor Mike Dunleavy wants to add his projects to the Day One list and he isn’t playing Yahtzee to get these moving.

Reese Energy Consulting today is following the latest news from Alaska, where the incoming president, following his decisive election win, vowed to kickstart another large pipeline project that’s been hog-tied and snout-taped over the last four years. That would be the 807-mile Trans-Alaska LNG pipeline system—a massive $40 billion effort that would flow up to 3.3 BCFD of natural gas from the North Slope to the state’s Southcentral LNG export facility in Nikiski.

In a November letter to the President-elect that’s just been released, Governor Dunleavy asks for an Alaska-focused executive order to reverse the current energy policies that restrict oil development in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and the National Petroleum Reserve. He also requests a cabinet-level task force with six new oversight positions to ensure federal agencies adhere to the Order.