THE EXPLORERS 2007: Anadarko to drill first ANS gas well Has two rigs under contract, drilling 2 Brooks Range gas prospects, going back to finish Jacob’s Ladder Kay Cashman Petroleum News
Anadarko Petroleum and its partners in the Brooks Range Foothills, BG Alaska and Petro-Canada, plan to drill the first two natural gas exploration wells in northern Alaska this winter. Gas discoveries to date have been an accident of oil exploration.
Anadarko and its partners hold oil and gas rights covering some 2.2 million acres between the Canning and Colville rivers along the southern border of the North Slope, also referred to as the Brooks Range Foothills.
In April 2007, the Houston-based independent’s Alaska spokesman, Mark Hanley, said the company and its Brooks Range partners would likely drill just one well on one of their four gas prospects in the 2007-08 North Slope exploration season, and one prospect per year after that if things were moving slowly with the proposed gas pipeline from the North Slope to Outside markets. But in September Anadarko told the state it would be drilling wells from ice pads on two gas prospects — Gubik and Chandler.
Obviously, something has changed since April, the most obvious thing being the passage of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin’s Alaska Gasline Inducement Act, which Anadarko supported.
Over the past few years Anadarko has talked about drilling a gas well, but before making the investment company officials wanted to be certain a gas pipeline would be built — and would accept gas under reasonable terms. Under AGIA builders of a North Slope gas line have to treat all gas sellers fairly, even if North Slope oil producers and gas owners BP, ConocoPhillips and ExxonMobil, competitors of companies such as Anadarko, win state approval to build the line.
Hanley has told Alaska legislators that nonowners of the gas line have to have access to it and know that the line would be expanded if they discovered new gas fields or developed known discoveries. Access to the pipeline and a reasonable tariff were two of Anadarko’s chief concerns, and something the company did not see likely under former Gov. Frank Murkowski’s proposed gas line contract with BP, ConocoPhillips and ExxonMobil.
New rig for Foothills Another reason Anadarko and its partners are drilling this year is because of lease stipulations: “We think they’re valuable leases, so that’s one of the motivations,” Hanley said.
Getting started so that they’ll be ready for a gas pipeline is important, but risky.
The issue, Hanley said, is not putting too much money into exploring if a gas pipeline doesn’t go ahead in the next few years. Alaska is already challenged by long lead times for developments, and the companies “don’t want to strand a lot of capital” by committing a lot of dollars if they don’t think a gas pipeline is moving forward.
“There’s (been) enough movement” on the gas line to motivate Anadarko to contract with Nabors Alaska Drilling to build a new a lightweight drilling rig and remote camp rig, which are scheduled to arrive on the North Slope in December 2007.
Nabors Rig 105 and the camp, Hanley said, would be owned and operated by Nabors, but were built at the request of the operator of the partnership “for a multi-year drilling program with extensions options” in the Foothills. The rig is a “mobile rig, not a wheeled rig, so it can be broken down and transported on rolligons.”
Back to Jacob’s Ladder Anadarko has another rig under contract for winter 2007-08 drilling. The Akita 63 will be used on the other side of the North Slope at the company’s Jacob’s Ladder oil prospect, which Anadarko started drilling in the winter of 2006-07. The company told state officials it plans to go back in with a newly winterized Akita 63 to finish drilling.
Located 10 miles southeast of Prudhoe Bay, Jacob’s Ladder is considered an oil prospect in the Wahoo formation of the Lisburne group, with a potential reservoir in eroded cavities in Lisburne carbonate rocks. The eastern North Slope play is said to resemble the huge Yates field in Texas.
The Jacobs Ladder unit includes the Lisburne structure in the Ivishak formation of the Sadlerochit, rocks equivalent to the reservoir of Prudhoe Bay.
State Division of Oil and Gas geologists believe the Lisburne (Wahoo formation) structure in Jacobs Ladder could yield a range of 20-660 million barrels of oil equivalent and the Sadlerochit (Ivishak formation) structure could yield a range of 50-800 million barrels of oil equivalent.
Because the unit is located off the North Slope road system, Anadarko sought partners to help defray the expense of exploration. It secured Arctic Slope Regional Corp. and BG Alaska as joint venture partners.
Depending on what it finds at Jacob’s Ladder, Anadarko might do more drilling there or drill another nearby prospect.
On Native land Gas wells planned for the first winter include the 5,000-foot Gubik No. 3 and the 12,500-foot Chandler No. 1. Anadarko said all surface and bottom-hole locations are on ASRC-owned lands; directional drilling may be used for one or more of the wells.
Anadarko said the planned drilling operations are along the east side of the Colville River near Umiat. Six proposed drilling locations at the Chandler prospect are southeast of Umiat. Six proposed Gubik prospect locations are northeast of Umiat.
The U.S. Geological Survey has estimated that the Gubik field, which was drilled by the U.S. Navy during oil exploration in 1951, holds some 600 billion cubic feet of recoverable gas in three horizons — the Prince Creek Formation and Chandler and Ninuluk formations.
Partners in risk A commitment to finding large, long-term prospects in remote areas of northern Alaska underlies Anadarko’s strategy in Alaska, Greg Hebertson, Anadarko’s Alaska-Canada frontier project manager, and Hanley, told Petroleum News in 2005. The company wants to develop large fields that can be hubs for the development of smaller prospects.
“We’ve been in Alaska since 1993 and we’ve been continually investing in Alaska ever since that time,” Hebertson said. “We’re looking for the hundreds of millions of barrels, and because they are far from infrastructure … they need to be a substantial size.”
Exploring for large petroleum accumulations far from existing infrastructure entails higher than average risk.
“As you get more and more frontier you get a higher reward, higher risk portfolio,” Hanley said. To mitigate those risks, Anadarko works with partners that can share the risks and rewards, and can handle the commercial costs associated with operating in Alaska.
Anadarko has been partners with ConocoPhillips since the discovery of the Alpine field by an ARCO-operated partnership in 1994. In addition to partnering on the development of Alpine and its satellites in the Colville unit, Anadarko has an exploration joint venture with ConocoPhillips (operator) and Pioneer Natural Resources in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska.
The partners, which have drilled several NPR-A wells, including two wildcats in the winter of 2006-07, relinquished 300,000 acres in NPR-A in 2007 because of noncommercial finds and the costs of working so far from infrastructure.
Brief stint with Nikaitchuq In 2006 Anadarko acquired Kerr-McGee, including majority interest in KMG’s Nikaitchuq and Tuvaaq units, under consideration for development as a merged unit. If Anadarko had kept the acreage it would have been the operator of its own oil field and production facilities.
But in early 2007, Italian mega-major Eni made Anadarko an offer it could not refuse for all of Anadarko’s acreage in both units and the surrounding area.
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