Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Oil begins f lowing from Alaska reserve

North Slope site set aside for production in 1923

- By MARK THIESSEN

Nuiqsut, Alaska — Rising from the edgeless, wind-scoured, snow-covered tundra on Alaska’s North Slope lies a million-pound drilling rig pulling the first commercial oil from a reserve set aside nearly a century ago.

ConocoPhil­lips is the first oil company to draw crude from the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska, an area the size of Indiana that President Warren G. Harding dedicated as an emergency oil supply for the U.S. Navy in 1923.

Getting to this point took compromise­s with Alaska Natives while keeping environmen­tal concerns in mind. The Bureau of Land Management, which controls the reserve, in 2013 identified 12 million acres that could be available for developmen­t while setting aside 11 million acres to protect wild animals and grazing lands.

The drilling rig first began pulling up oil in October, and at peak production will produce 16,000 barrels a day from the Colville-Delta 5 field, or as it’s more commonly known, CD5. It also will serve as a launchpad for another nearby field in Alaska’s Arctic.

The Colville-Delta 5 field itself is an extension of the ConocoPhil­lips’ Alpine field, located about five miles to the east.

“We’ve spent more than a dozen years trying to achieve the permits to do the developmen­t, to complete the developmen­t,” Jim Brodie, the capital projects manager for ConocoPhil­lips in the reserve, said of the $1 billion project earlier this month after reporters toured the North Slope facility last month. “It’s a sizable investment.”

The project included a 6-mile gravel road, four bridges over channels of the Colville River, including one 1,400 footexpans­e, 32 miles of pipelines, and miles of communicat­ions and electrical infrastruc­ture that tie the field back to the main Alpine facilities. Oil that is being brought up goes back to Alpine for processing, and then is sent 800 miles down the trans-Alaska pipeline for shipment out of Valdez.

The oil is being drilled on surface land owned by Kuukpik Corp., an Alaska Native village corporatio­n for the nearby community of Nuiqsut, located about 25 miles south of the Arctic Ocean, or 625 miles north of Anchorage.

Village residents who live a subsistenc­e lifestyle objected to the original plans for one of the bridges over the Colville River to the oil field, worried that it might interfere with fishing access.

Brodie said ConocoPhil­lips pulled its permit package to come up with an alternate plan, working “with the community and the elders and establishe­d a new location for the Nigliq Channel Bridge, which caused a reroute of the road and it was at considerab­le expense to ConocoPhil­lips, but at the same time we got the support from the community and it enabled the project to move forward.”

The Inupiat village agreed with the new plan and now welcomes the financial opportunit­ies that oil brings to the native community in terms of taxes and jobs.

“We worked with ConocoPhil­lips to make sure that CD5 is developed responsibl­y and make sure that it’s a win-win,” said Isaac Nukapigak, president of Kuukpik Corp.

Developmen­t in the petroleum reserve hasn’t drawn the usual protests from environmen­tal groups.

Nicole Whittingto­n-Evans, Alaska regional director for The Wilderness Society, said her group has been mostly concerned with how the developmen­t will proceed: Will it involve roads or not? How far westward will the sprawl continue?

“Those are the types of things that we’re concerned about right now, and we have focused on trying to ensure that the least environmen­tally damaging developmen­ts move forward,” she said.

ConocoPhil­lips continues preparatio­ns to drill in the more inglorious­ly named Greater Mooses Tooth 1 despite oil prices being in the tank. First oil from there could be as soon as December 2018, and could produce 30,000 barrels a day at peak production.

Steve Thatcher, ConocoPhil­lips’ Alpine operations manager, said oil prices are cyclical and will rebound.

“For these kinds of projects, if we can invest in them now, it makes a lot of sense for when the oil price is the other extreme,” he said.

Nukapigak

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ice forms on pipelines built near the Colville-Delta 5 field. ConocoPhil­lips in October became the first to drill for oil in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Ice forms on pipelines built near the Colville-Delta 5 field. ConocoPhil­lips in October became the first to drill for oil in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska.
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