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Exxon Gets Key Permit for Alaska’s Point Thomson Field

Exxon Mobil Corp on Friday received a major federal permit it needed to start construction on the Point Thomson oil and gas field on the eastern North Slope of Alaska, officials said, after an extended delay that threatened some leases there.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers granted Exxon a wetlands-fill permit for construction of drill pads, roads, an airstrip, pipeline, and docking and other facilities needed for production at the long-languishing field – production the state of Alaska has accused the company of dragging its heels on.

The Army Corps permit followed a detailed environmental impact study that began in 2009. While there remain a few outstanding state permits, the wetlands-fill authorization was the major approval needed for construction, said Mike Holley, northern branch team leader for the state’s Army Corps district.

Holley said Exxon, backed by partners BP Plc and ConocoPhillips, hopes to begin construction soon.

“They are planning on doing as much of the construction this winter as possible,” he said, adding that ice roads, which are built by spraying water on the tundra, would accommodate that.

Read more from this story HERE.

The Biggest Oil Industry Giveaway without a Guarantee

Recent articles in local papers and community forums hosted by Alaska State Senators have promoted Great Bear Petroleum and their North Slope shale oil play as THE answer to stemming the decline in TAPS.

Beware. Great Bear, and the politicians who tout them as the silver bullet for declining production, are not telling the whole truth about Great Bear, their development plans and what it could cost the state of Alaska.

On February 28, 2011, Ed Duncan, President and CEO of Great Bear testified in a House Resources hearing in support of HB 110 – Governor Parnell’s bill to change ACES. Duncan repeatedly stated that in order for his shale oil play to be successful, a change in the tax structure was necessary. Duncan told legislators “Alaska has some fiscal terms that are suppressing the development of that great basin” and “Reduction of the production tax burden would improve Great Bear’s ultimate commercial outcome which would improve the probability of attracting critical capital investment to the state, to the plays and to the business.” In this same presentation, Duncan unveiled a development plan that called for 250 wells per year for 20 years, starting in 2013.

Fast forward to April 25th, 2012: Duncan came before the legislature again, this time the Senate Resources committee, to provide an update on Great Bear’s development plan. What a difference a year makes!

Duncan’s newest presentation called for UP TO 24 wells in 2013-2014 and projected UP TO 192 wells in 2015 and 2016. A far cry from the 250 wells per year for 20 years that was presented the year before.

In this presentation, Duncan also introduced a new strategy for making his project commercially viable – driving down the profits of local service companies and incentivizing people to move up from outside. Say what? The champions of local hire –Senators Paskvan, French and Wielechowski (who spent $150,000 on a study of Alaska Hiring practices on the North Slope) must have been shocked to hear such a strategy!

Apparently they weren’t listening- and continued to promote Great Bear’s development plan as the answer to declining production.

What Duncan and his supporters in the senate have failed to disclose is just how much money the state will give Great Bear for their exploration activities.

If Great Bear accomplishes what they have outlined in their development plans before the legislature- the state could pay them close to 1.2 billion dollars in tax credits. 1.2 billion dollars without a guarantee of production. 1.2 billion dollars pushed across the table with no production guarantee.

It appears that Senators like Paskvan, Wielechowski and French who advocate local hire, oppose HB 110 and demand guarantees in return for tax relief aren’t being intellectually honest.

It appears that Senators like Paskvan, Wielechowski and French are publicly opposing a “2 billion dollar giveaway with no guarantees” while quietly supporting and promoting a 1.2 billion dollar giveaway with no guarantees. A 1.2 billion dollar giveaway to a company who intends to drive down the profits of Alaskan companies and replace Alaskan workers with cheap outside labor. A 1.2 billion dollar giveaway to a company who reduces their development plan by 90% in one year.

A giveaway. No guarantee. No local hire. Beware.

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Jeff Landfield was a delegate to the 2008 Alaska Republican Convention and recently ran for office for the first time, running a close race against Senator McGuire in the 2012 Republican primary. He holds a BA in history with a minor in economics from the University of Alaska.

Alaska September Oil Output Jumps 30% as Maintenance Ends

Alaska North Slope oil production rose 30 percent in September from the previous month as fields operated by BP Plc (BP/) and ConocoPhillips (COP) resumed production after annual maintenance ended.

Production averaged 516,296 barrels a day in September, up from 398,643 in August, the state’s tax division said on its website.

Production from Prudhoe Bay fields operated by BP rose to 271,444 barrels a day from 177,182 in August, when two fields, Milne Point and Northstar, and three Prudhoe Bay facilities were shut for maintenance during part of the month, said Dawn Patience, a BP spokeswoman in Anchorage.

“Operations are back to normal, and our maintenance season, which typically takes place in the summer because otherwise we are in arctic conditions, has wrapped up,” Patience said.

Read more from this story HERE.

Industry Protests Obama’s Plan for Alaskan Oil Reserves

Photo credit: roger4336

A new proposal by the Obama administration to expand drilling to half of the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska (NPR-A) has attracted criticism from the oil industry, as the plan still leaves a broad area off limits to new oil development. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said new development will be permitted in an 11.8 million-acre geographical area, which purportedly holds about 549 million barrels of oil, while coastal regions such as Kasegaluk Lagoon and Peard Bay — where there is a higher concentration of seals and polar bears — will receive “special protection.”

According to the U.S. Geological Survey, the entire reserve harbors about 900 million barrels of oil, a region west of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge approximately the size of Indiana. Opening up only half of this area to leasing is disappointing, says Erik Milito, a director at the American Petroleum Institute (API). “This falls short of where we need to be.”

In a conference call on Tuesday, API president and CEO Jack Gerard disputed President Obama’s so-called “all of the above” energy policy. “Today, we’re sending a letter to the White House to urge the president and his agencies to do more than merely talk about ‘all-of-the-above’ while they pursue policies that include ‘none-of- the-below,’” Gerard charged.

Gerard protested that the Obama administration’s plan to restrict this vast opportunity for oil development is unacceptable, and that it will further depress the nation’s capabilities to become more energy independent. “One half of the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska, it was announced just yesterday [August 13], has been taken off limits,” Gerard affirmed. “This is an area by law dating back to the 1920s, [which] was specifically set aside in Alaska for oil and natural gas development. The announcement yesterday by Secretary [Ken] Salazar was essentially an announcement that we’re going to take everything that was legislatively set aside and we’re placing them off-limits.”

President Warren Harding established the NPR-A in 1923 as a resource for the U.S. Navy during a period when its ships were transferring over from coal to oil power. In 1976, the Naval Petroleum Reserves Production Act handed 23.5 million acres over to the Department of the Interior. Then in 1980, the Interior Department Appropriations Act appointed the agency’s Bureau of Land Management to administer oil leasing on the Alaskan land.

Read more from this story HERE.

Tentative oil plan for Alaska’s National Petroleum Reserve

The U.S. Interior Department opened the door to the possibility of an oil pipeline across the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska and to oil and gas leasing on 11.8 million acres of it.

The draft development proposal unveiled Monday by U.S. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar represents the federal government’s first coordinated plan for the 22-million-acre reserve, which has seen limited oil production in recent years despite controversy over potential threats to wildlife.

The reserve, which lies west of the oil fields on Alaska’s North Slope, is home to the famous Western Arctic caribou herd, numbering about 325,000, and a smaller herd of 45,000 caribou that migrates near Teshekpuk Lake.

The largest single block of public land in the country, the reserve contains an estimated 549 million barrels of economically recoverable oil and 8.7 trillion cubic feet of natural gas.

The compromise plan — unveiled after a long study that collected more than 400,000 public comments — would continue to protect some of the most ecologically sensitive areas, including Teshekpuk Lake, home to tens of thousands of geese and brant that migrate to the far north during sunny Arctic summers.

Read more from this story HERE.