Institute of Social and Economic Research, University of Alaska Anchorage
Abstract
The total value of construction
spending “on the
street” in Alaska in 2011
will be 7.1billion,up4from2010.1,2,3Wageandsalaryemploymentintheconstructionindustrywillcontinuetheslowdeclinethatbeganin2006,butthelevelremainsabovethelong−termaveragefortheindustry.Excludingtheoilandgassector—whichaccountsfor41spendingwillbe4.2
billion—up 5% from 2010.
Private-sector construction
spending will be up 6% from
2010, to 4.5billion,inspiteoftheexpectedslowgrowthintheoverallAlaskaeconomy.Oilandgassectorspendingwillbeabout2.9 billion,
up 3%. Spending will
increase in the utility and
hospitals4 categories, but will
decline in residential and
other commercial categories.
Public construction spending
will be up 1%, to $2.7
billion, due to the large FY
2011 state capital budget.
The main infusion of cash
from the American Recovery
and Reinvestment Act
(ARRA) has worked its
way through the system,
and federal spending overall
has declined.
Uncertainty is particularly
significant in the forecast this
year, especially in the oil and
gas sector—in spite of high
oil prices. In January 2011,
uncertainty surrounds most
of the large-scale petroleum
projects on the North Slope
and in Cook Inlet. Environmental
reviews are slowing
development drilling at Point
Thomson east of Prudhoe
Bay and Alpine West in the
National Petroleum Reserve
Alaska. Exploration drilling
offshore in the Chukchi and
Beaufort seas continues to
face legal challenges. The
offshore Liberty project is
under internal environmental
review. In Cook Inlet, a
major offshore exploration
effort awaits the uncertain
arrival of a jack-up rig. In
this forecast we assume most
of these projects will move
forward this year, but their
pace is hard to predict. If
several are delayed in 2011,
oil and gas spending will be
significantly lower.Associated General Contractors of Alaska.
Northrim Bank