Alaska Gov. Bill Walker boards Air Force One on Friday morning, joining President Donald Trump for a flight to Hawaii with other governors for a discussion on issues important to the Pacific Rim. (Photo courtesy of the Office of the Governor)

Alaska Gov. Bill Walker boards Air Force One on Friday morning, joining President Donald Trump for a flight to Hawaii with other governors for a discussion on issues important to the Pacific Rim. (Photo courtesy of the Office of the Governor)

Gov. Bill Walker will travel to China with President Donald Trump

Gov. Bill Walker will be among the entourage of President Donald Trump as the president begins a trip to Asia this week.

Walker told reporters by telephone that he will fly with Trump’s group from Washington, D.C. to Hawaii, then travel ahead to Beijing, arriving days before the president. He will then rejoin the entourage.

Walker said a goal of the trip is signing some kind of deal to benefit the proposed trans-Alaska natural gas pipeline project known as AKLNG.

“I would say this is probably the most significant opportunity we’ve had,” Walker said. “We’ve been over on our own trade missions, but to be part of a larger trade mission … it expresses a much higher attention to Alaska in doing this.”

Asked whether a deal is in the works, Walker said “it’s too soon to say.”

“We’ll see what happens in these final few days,” he added.

Walker and Keith Meyer, president of the Alaska Gasline Development Corporation, are among 29 business leaders on a roster for the trip. The roster was first reported Thursday morning by CNBC’s Kayla Tausche and Tucker Higgins. Walker is the only state governor on the list.

Walker traveled to Washington, D.C. this week before the trip and to participate in Congressional hearings about oil and gas drilling in the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Reserve.

“It was a long day of hearings and testimony about opening up the 1002 area of ANWR for exploration,” Walker said. “We had a lot of discussion back and forth.”

On Friday morning, he will go to Andrews Air Force Base and board either Air Force One or the auxiliary aircraft that accompanies it on trips. That flight will take Walker and the president to Hawaii, where they will meet the governors of Hawaii, American Samoa, the Northern Mariana Islands, and Guam for a discussion on security in the Pacific.

Trump will fly to other parts of Asia before going to China. Walker will head to Beijing directly. He visited the country in 2008 with former Gov. Wally Hickel.

Meyer, meanwhile, has been in Asia off and on this year to market the proposed trans-Alaska natural gas pipeline to potential customers. In an October briefing with legislators, AGDC board chairman Dave Cruz said Meyer’s mission is “to get us a gas customer.”

China has been a frequent stop for Meyer, and in a September interview with Xinhua, Meyer said Chinese backing of the pipeline would create “a very good marriage” and a very beautiful fit” between Alaska and China.

In October, Walker energy adviser John Hendrix told Reuters that China Investment Corp. and China’s state-owned energy company, Sinopec, have held talks with state officials. Sinopec proposed an Alaska liquefied natural gas project under Gov. Sarah Palin, but the state rejected the bid in favor of Canadian pipeline builder TransCanada. (Alaska subsequently bought out TransCanada’s share of the pipeline.)

Low natural gas prices have jeopardized the pipeline, which Walker has consistently backed. With Alaska running a $2.8 billion annual deficit, lawmakers have soured on the project, and economic analyses have said the project is not viable. A proposal by the Alaska Senate Majority to redirect money from the pipeline project narrowly failed earlier this year. As local opinions have shifted, the future of the pipeline has come to rely on the ability of AGDC to sign firm contracts with customers. If AGDC cannot find customers for gas from the pipeline, there likely will not be a pipeline.

Chinese President Xi Jinping briefly visited Anchorage in April while returning home from a summit with President Trump at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida. During that visit, Walker made his pitch for a natural gas project. Partially reciprocating that visit, Alaska first lady Donna Walker traveled to China in June at the invitation of China’s first lady, Peng Liyuan, who funded the trip.


• Contact reporter James Brooks at james.k.brooks@juneauempire.com or call 523-2258.


Alaska Gov. Bill Walker boards Air Force One on Friday morning, joining President Donald Trump for a flight to Hawaii with other governors for a discussion on issues important to the Pacific Rim. (Photo courtesy of the Office of the Governor)

Alaska Gov. Bill Walker boards Air Force One on Friday morning, joining President Donald Trump for a flight to Hawaii with other governors for a discussion on issues important to the Pacific Rim. (Photo courtesy of the Office of the Governor)

More in News

(Juneau Empire file photo)
Aurora forecast through the week of Dec. 15

These forecasts are courtesy of the University of Alaska Fairbanks’ Geophysical Institute… Continue reading

Juneau Board of Education members vote during an online meeting Tuesday to extend a free student breakfast program during the second half of the school year. (Screenshot from Juneau Board of Education meeting on Zoom)
Extending free student breakfast program until end of school year OK’d by school board

Officials express concern about continuing program in future years without community funding.

Juneau City Manager Katie Koester (left) and Mayor Beth Weldon (right) meet with residents affected by glacial outburst flooding during a break in a Juneau Assembly meeting Monday night at City Hall. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Juneau’s mayor gets an award, city manager gets a raise

Beth Weldon gets lifetime Alaska Municipal League honor; Katie Koester gets bonus, retroactive pay hike.

Dozens of residents pack into a Juneau Assembly meeting at City Hall on Monday night, where a proposal that would require property owners in flood-vulnerable areas to pay thousands of dollars apiece for the installation of protective flood barriers was discussed. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Assembly OKs lowering flood barrier payment for property owners to about $6,300 rather than $8,000

Amended ordinance makes city pay higher end of 60/40 split, rather than even share.

A family ice skates and perfects their hockey prowess on Mendenhall Lake, below Mendenhall Glacier, outside of Juneau, Alaska, Nov. 24, 2024. The state’s capital, a popular cruise port in summer, becomes a bargain-seeker’s base for skiing, skating, hiking and glacier-gazing in the winter off-season. (Christopher S. Miller/The New York Times)
NY Times: Juneau becomes a deal-seeker’s base for skiing, skating, hiking and glacier-gazing in winter

Newspaper’s “Frugal Traveler” columnist writes about winter side of summer cruise destination.

(Michael Penn / Juneau Empire file photo)
Police calls for Sunday, Dec. 15, 2024

This report contains public information from law enforcement and public safety agencies.

Gov. Mike Dunleavy (left) talks with U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski and local leaders during an Aug. 7 visit to a Mendenhall Valley neighborhood hit by record flooding. (Photo provided by U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski’s office)
Dunleavy to Trump: Give us Mendenhall Lake; nix feds’ control of statewide land, wildlife, tribal issues

Governor asks president-elect for Alaska-specific executive order on dozens of policy actions.

A map shows properties within a proposed Local Improvement District whose owners could be charged nearly $8,000 each for the installation of a semi-permanent levee to protect the area from floods. (City and Borough of Juneau map)
Assembly holding public hearing on $8K per-property flood district as other agreements, arguments persist

City, Forest Service, tribal council sign $1M study pact; citizens’ group video promotes lake levee.

Travelers using the all-gender restroom at Seattle–Tacoma International Airport on Dec. 3. (Laurie Craig / Juneau Empire)
New this holiday season for travelers in transit at Sea- Tac: All-gender restroom and autonomous wheelchairs

Facilities installed earlier this year in Alaska Airlines concourse; single-sex bathrooms still available.

Most Read