Page added on July 18, 2016
Oil and Alaska have maintained a close relationship since oil producers started pumping crude from the Alaskan North Slope region in the 1970s. For decades, Alaskan oil has created a large portion of the U.S.’s overall production, while the proceeds from oil created the bulk of the Alaskan economy.
Recently, though, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) delivered a very sobering truth: By 2030, expected Alaska production will fall by 50% from current levels, at which time it will barely contribute to the expected U.S. average production of 10 million barrels of oil per day (BOE/D). The EIA report shouldn’t come as a huge surprise, though. Here’s why.
At its peak in the late 80s, the Alaska oil and gas industry was producing roughly 2 million barrels of oil per day. Large oil producers reaped the benefits of enormous oil reservoirs, such as the Prudhoe Bay oil field on Alaska’s North Slope, which, with 25 billion proven barrels of reserves, constituted the largest oil field in the U.S.
Peak oil production can’t last forever, though, and Alaskan production began its slow descent to today’s average of 600,000 BOE/D, according to the Alaska Oil and Gas Association. As if to add insult to injury, an EIA report last year knocked Prudhoe Bay from the country’s largest producer down to third in both production and reserves, behind the Texas Eagle Ford and Spraberry Trend shale resrevoirs.
The production decreases are caused by the difficulty of drilling in the complex offshore fields, as well as the rapid advances in onshore shale oil production in the Lower 48. It’s simply becoming less economical for companies to invest in Alaskan oil fields.
Royal Dutch Shell (NYSE:RDS-A) (NYSE:RDS-B) represents one of the best — and most talked-about — examples. Last year, the company famously opted to pull out of its offshore positions after spending $7 billion in unsuccessful efforts to find oil in the Chukchi Sea. It stated that it couldn’t find commercially viable sources of oil. Shell abandoned further efforts to extend its leases last month.
Additionally, Repsol (NASDAQOTH:REPYY), a Spanish oil company and the last oil producer in the Chukchi Sea, just announced it is abandoning 55 drilling leases in the region and will pull out of its remaining 38 by next year.
Let’s not shake the death rattle just yet. For the first time in a decade, the Alaskan North Slope oil production rose by 3% during the fiscal year. Oil production from new fields such as ExxonMobil‘s (NYSE:XOM) Point Thomson came online after several years of development. Added production also came from ConocoPhillips‘ (NYSE:COP) CD5 field in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska.
Additionally, Prudhoe Bay’s recovery rates have been bumped up from an estimated 40% to a revised 60% because its oil field producers, which include BP (NYSE:BP) as the primary operator, along with active partners ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips, are beginning to use new methods to extract the crude. Many of these methods are replicated from the innovative shale oil production, which includes multi-lateral wells.
To add further good news, the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management said that despite Shell’s inability to find commercially viable oil, significant reserves of potential oil exist in regions such as the Chukchi Sea. This is an important distinction. Potential oil is not the same thing as commercially viable oil. After spending $7 billion to unsuccessfully extract the potential oil, Shell could not justify the further expenses at today’s oil prices to make it commercially viable. Potential oil, though, means that as prices recover and companies continue to find innovative new ways to extract it from the icy waters and complex rock formations, these reserves could potentially be revisited in the future. The Obama administration is already considering new permits beginning in 2020.
A slew of factors are working against Alaska. Despite its North American dominance in the 1980s and 1990s, major oil producers found far cheaper oil in shale deposits in Texas, Oklahoma, and North Dakota. The fact is, it is not easy to drill for oil in the offshore Alaskan oil fields. Add in the advances in renewable technologies that have slowly been cutting into the nation’s energy requirements, and it’s easy to write Alaska off altogether.
But all is not lost. The offshore reserves remain vast — meaning some of the largest in the world. Shale oil once seemed unattainable. Today, because of innovative drilling techniques, it has reshaped the world’s oil markets. Those methods are already being applied in Alaska.
If Shell’s $7 billion gamble is any indication, though, you should think twice about investing in a company that seems bullish on Alaska. ConocoPhillips is having some success in its CD5 position, and BP continues to produce from its pre-established Prudhoe Bay positions, but until companies prove they can economically explore, develop, and produce in Alaska, it’s best to leave those ventures on ice.
9 Comments on "Is This the End of Alaskan Oil?"
Plantagenet on Mon, 18th Jul 2016 1:55 pm
Its risky to invest in any oil company during an oil glut. However, the oil glut will end soon, if it hasn’t ended already, and the entire economic landscape facing the oil biz will shift again.
Cheers!
jjhman on Mon, 18th Jul 2016 3:52 pm
No mention in this article about the minimum flow rate in the pipeline. If I recall correctly the pipeline cannot flow much below 400,000 bbl/day. If that is so they won’t be shipping half of 600,000 bbl/day in 2030.
Yet we are constantly suprised by the engineers, aren’t we?
shortonoil on Mon, 18th Jul 2016 5:34 pm
“Potential oil, though, means that as prices recover and companies continue to find innovative new ways to extract it from the icy waters and complex rock formations, these reserves could potentially be revisited in the future. “
Not IF prices recover, but WHEN!! That is presented even though the last two years has been the largest decline in prices witnessed in the last 55 years. Even though the price decline that began in July of 2014 is now more than 6 standard deviations from that 55 year mean (a one in a million chance) we are expected to believe that WHEN they recover everything is going to be just fine.
If you believe that go put your entire life savings on the Mega Lottery.
You might as well wish upon a couple dozen stars while you are at it!!
Go Speed Racer on Mon, 18th Jul 2016 7:54 pm
Will the last person leaving Alaska,
please turn off the lights.
Apneaman on Mon, 18th Jul 2016 9:27 pm
Alaska oil like Siberian oil has plenty of threats, like permafrost melt/heave and wildfires.
Scores of City-Sized Siberian Wildfires Spew 2,500 Mile-Long Plume of Smoke Over Northern Hemisphere
“Today’s satellite pass by NASA’s LANCE MODIS array tells a dire story that practically no one in the global mainstream media is talking about. Northern and Central Siberia is burning. Scores of massive fires, some the size of cities and small states, are throwing off a great pall of smoke 2,500 miles long.”
https://robertscribbler.com/2016/07/18/scores-of-city-sized-siberian-wildfires-spew-2500-mile-long-plume-of-smoke-over-northern-hemisphere/
Kenz300 on Tue, 19th Jul 2016 7:14 am
Fossil fuels companies will have many stranded unprofitable assets in the future……….
The world is moving to safer, cleaner and cheaper alternative energy sources like wind and solar for power generation and electric vehicles for mobility………
Koch Brothers Continue to Fund Climate Change Denial Machine, Spend $21M to Defend Exxon
http://ecowatch.com/2016/06/22/koch-defends-exxon/
Big Coal Funded This Prominent Climate Change Denier, Docs Reveal
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/roy-spencer-peabody-energy_us_57601e12e4b053d43306535e
Pope Francis’s edict on climate change will anger deniers and US churches | World news | The Guardian
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/dec/27/pope-francis-edict-climate-change-us-rightwing
Head Of The Episcopal Church Says It’s ‘Sinful’ To Ignore Climate Change
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/03/26/katherine-jefferts-schori-climate-change_n_6949532.html?utm_hp_ref=green&ir=Green
Kenz300 on Tue, 19th Jul 2016 7:33 am
Watch The Climate Change Ad Fox News Didn’t Want Its Viewers To See
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/climate-change-ad-fox-news_us_57892a37e4b03fc3ee50c207?section=
geopressure on Tue, 19th Jul 2016 8:51 am
the Alaskan Pipeline is down… BP is currently routing tankers to Prudoe Bay to move the oil…
Apneaman on Tue, 19th Jul 2016 3:57 pm
Iced Lightning – Lightning Strikes at 80 North
“In the Arctic, the harbinger of climate change, anthropogenic global warming is causing another natural phenomenon to occur more frequently (besides coastal erosion, permafrost degradation, wild fires, etc), especially along the northern coasts. In the past, sea water would keep air temperatures too cool for thunderstorms to develop, but this is obviously changing.”
http://neven1.typepad.com/blog/2016/07/iced-lightning.html