JUNEAU -- The past 12 months were high times for oil companies in Alaska. They made more than $5 billion -- after expenses -- from North Slope crude, according to a new state estimate.
It might be torment for consumers at the gas pump. But the long run of stratospheric oil prices, over $55 a barrel recently, is great for the companies' bottom line. Those big profits are also stirring up the public debate over raising oil taxes.
The state government is expected to pull in $3.04 billion in oil taxes and royalties for the fiscal year that ends Thursday. That's more oil money than the state has collected in a year since 1991, Department of Revenue analysts said. The trans-Alaska oil pipeline was running almost twice as fully then as it is today, and there was a spike in prices as a result of the Persian Gulf War.
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