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Providing coverage of Alaska and northern Canada's oil and gas industry
August 2021

Vol. 26, No.33 Week of August 15, 2021

AIX perseveres with Kenai Loop production

Small natural gas field went into production in 2012; company said in 2020 it had an estimated 5 years of remaining economic life

Kristen Nelson

Petroleum News

AIX Energy acquired the Kenai Loop natural gas field after Buccaneer Energy went bankrupt in 2014. AIX was Buccaneer’s largest secured creditor and agreed to be the stalking horse bidder in the 2014 bankruptcy sale, setting the lowest acceptable price and assuring that the field did not fall prey to an unreasonably low bidder in the bankruptcy sale.

In the seventh plan of development and operations for Kenai Loop, effective May 7, 2021, through May 6, 2022, AIX said it became field operator on Nov. 10, 2014, retroactively effective to Oct. 1 of that year. AIX finalized lease agreements with the stakeholders in the field - the Alaska Department of Natural Resources, Cook Inlet Region Inc. and the Mental Health Trust Land Office - in February 2015.

The field, east of the Kenai Airport in the Kenai Industrial Park, had cumulatively produced 24.8 billion cubic feet of natural gas, 2,800 barrels of condensate and 10,221 barrels of water as of the end of June 2021, according to Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission data.

The field produces from a single drill pad, KL-1. A second pad was constructed in 2012, AIX said, but was never used in operations, and AIX decommissioned that pad in June 2017, returning the surface lease to the Trust Land Office.

Drilling by Buccaneer

There are four wells at the field, AIX said in its seventh plan of development and operations, all drilled by Buccaneer: KL 1-1 (the field discovery well, drilled in 2011, flowed 10 million cubic feet per day from the 9,700-foot Tyonek sand) is an active producer; KL 1-2 (drilled in 2011 and reported as a dry hole) is temporarily suspended and has possible future use as a disposal well; KL 1-3 (drilled in 2012, a 9,700-foot sand producer, 300 feet structurally deeper than the KL 1-1 discovery well) is an active producer; and KL 1-4 (drilled in 2013, in 9,700-foot sand, 100 feet shallower than KL 1-1; tested at 2.5 million cubic feet per day, but was determined to be in the same reservoir as KL 1-1 and KL 1-3; has been used to monitor reservoir pressure) a shut-in producer which is not tied into the production system.

Buccaneer also completed a 23 square mile 3D survey at Kenai Loop in 2012.

A field production chart from startup in 2012 indicates that field production peaked in 2016 at more than 11,000 thousand cubic feet, mcf, per day. In June of this year the field averaged 4,105 mcf per day. KL 1-1 averaged 2,800 mcf per day and KL-3 averaged 1,305 mcf per day.

Current plans

AIX said its marketing goal is to continue to pursue gas sales opportunities, aligning with existing and future production, while maintaining price discipline. It said that on April 1, 2021, it “will begin selling all gas volumes to a single purchaser under a one year ‘Firm as Available’ contract.”

The company it will evaluate tying KL 1-4 to the production system for increased deliverability and to provide redundancy to meet firm gas sales obligations “and to possibly increase ultimate recovery.” This is the well, determined to be in the same reservoir as current producers KL 1-1 and KL 1-3, which is currently a shut-in producer used to monitor reservoir pressure.

AIX also is evaluating recompleting wells for additional deliverability.

A plant to obtain statis reservoir pressures on KL 1-1 and KL 1-3 during this plan year will “update the material balance estimates of gas in place and reserves.” It requires a 72-hour field shutdown and AIX said it “will attempt to shelter the work during planned pipeline or facility maintenance.”

The company will be doing a workover, planned for the second quarter of 2021, on KL 1-1 to replace the subsurface safety value as required by AOGCC.

AIX said it has not identified any drilling opportunities at the field.

In 2013 DNR’s Division of Oil and Gas denied a request by Buccaneer to unitize Kenai Loop and the field remains un-unitized.

Reserves data for Kenai Loop is confidential, but in February 2020 testimony to AOGCC on bonding requirements, Wendy Sheasby, the company’s chief financial officer, said the remaining economic life of the field is five years.






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