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Regulatory and fiscal stability are key
to vibrant resource industry

It’s a new day on the North Slope despite the challenges that come with operating in the Arctic – high costs, harsh weather, supply chain issues, legal hurdles and struggles to find adequate financing.

For the first time in a long time North Slope production is projected to remain stable in the near term and increase in the late 2020s. This is excellent news for Alaska. Resource industries, particularly oil and gas, form the backbone of our economy. They are labor intensive, pay some of the best wages in the state and require continued capital investment to maintain or expand production levels. Production is key to jobs and revenue for Alaska.

We cannot control many of the challenges Arctic operations bring, but we can maintain stable tax policies that attract the capital needed to keep our resource industries healthy so they can produce jobs and revenues for Alaskans.

What’s at stake

$3.1B

State & Local Revenue

FY19

77,600

Alaskan Jobs Supported

Direct/Indirect

$549M

Grow the Permanent Fund

FY22 Dedicated Revenues to Corpus

$4.4B

Spending with Local Businesses

Annual

Source: “The Role of the Oil and Gas Industry in Alaska’s Economy,” January 2020, McKinley Research

Jim-Jansen Joe Shierhorn

Letter from the co-chairs

Fair and Competitive oil taxes are working

There is a resurgence in oil production and jobs in Alaska that is directly related to our current oil tax policy. SB 21, a fair and competitive tax policy, replaced the antiquated ACES tax structure that drove down petroleum investment for more than a decade. Thanks to SB 21, Alaskans have the greatest opportunity of our generation on the North Slope today.

Some present and former legislators argue that SB 21 was a mistake, but the facts speak for themselves.

The Willow and Pikka projects, years in the making, are in active development, with Pikka now expecting first production by the end of the year. These and other robust investments in Alaska’s future would not have occurred under the previous punitive tax regime. Between the Willow and Pikka projects alone, the oil and gas industry is spending over $10 billion in Alaska in the next few years, with each project generating 2,500 construction jobs and hundreds of operating jobs.

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Hilcorp: $900 million on the Slope this year – While the Willow and Pikka projects by ConocoPhillips and Santos, Ltd. are being closely watched this year, Hilcorp Energy has a busy winter season planned at North Slope fields it operates east of Pikka and Willow, the company told state legislators. Hilcorp plans to spend $900 million in 2025 on Slope projects, up from $870 million in 2024.
From east to west, Hilcorp is operator at the Point Thomson gas/condensate projects and the Endicott and Northstar offshore fields. Onshore, the company operates the large Prudhoe Bay field along with Milne Point. Hilcorp is operating five drill rigs this year on the Slope, Fisk said.

At Point Thomson, Hilcorp is reactivating a Doyon Drilling rig this winter with plans to move it to Point Thomson by ice road next winter to drill a second gas and condensate well. This will allow Point Thomson liquid condensate output to double and fully use capacity in the pipeline built west to Badami and Prudhoe Bay.

At the large Prudhoe Bay field, Hilcorp plans to drill 58 wells this year with both conventional “rotary” rigs and lightweight, truck-mounted coiled-tubing units, Fisk said. There are now 47 drill sites and production pads at Prudhoe, 1,000 miles of pipelines, 230 miles of oil field roads and about 1,000 producing wells.

A major focus for Hilcorp at Prudhoe this year is new development of viscous, or thick, oil in the undeveloped parts of Prudhoe’s west end.

📸 : ExxonMobil Alaska
... See MoreSee Less

Hilcorp: $900 million on the Slope this year – While the Willow and Pikka projects by ConocoPhillips and Santos, Ltd. are being closely watched this year, Hilcorp Energy has a busy winter season planned at North Slope fields it operates east of Pikka and Willow, the company told state legislators. Hilcorp plans to spend $900 million in 2025 on Slope projects, up from $870 million in 2024.
From east to west, Hilcorp is operator at the Point Thomson gas/condensate projects and the Endicott and Northstar offshore fields. Onshore, the company operates the large Prudhoe Bay field along with Milne Point. Hilcorp is operating five drill rigs this year on the Slope, Fisk said. 
 
At Point Thomson, Hilcorp is reactivating a Doyon Drilling rig this winter with plans to move it to Point Thomson by ice road next winter to drill a second gas and condensate well. This will allow Point Thomson liquid condensate output to double and fully use capacity in the pipeline built west to Badami and Prudhoe Bay. 
 
At the large Prudhoe Bay field, Hilcorp plans to drill 58 wells this year with both conventional “rotary” rigs and lightweight, truck-mounted coiled-tubing units, Fisk said. There are now 47 drill sites and production pads at Prudhoe, 1,000 miles of pipelines, 230 miles of oil field roads and about 1,000 producing wells. 
 
A major focus for Hilcorp at Prudhoe this year is new development of viscous, or thick, oil in the undeveloped parts of Prudhoe’s west end. 

📸 : ExxonMobil Alaska

Winter oil field employment continues to exceed most forecasts, stressing the workforce.

Staffing for the Willow and Pikka projects will approach or reach 5,000, and Hilcorp is expanding its North Slope work this winter. Labor economists have been puzzled as to why the North Slope boom isn’t being reflected in the broader economy, at least yet. Part of the answer is that a higher percentage of jobs are being filled by nonresidents, which is expected given the extremely tight labor market in construction and oil-related skills. The most recent data on nonresident workers from the Department of Labor and Workforce Development in 2023 shows a 24% increase in nonresident workers in construction and a 200% increase for North Slope construction. That trend is sure to carry on when 2024 and 2025 numbers are available.
... See MoreSee Less

Winter oil field employment continues to exceed most forecasts, stressing the workforce.
 
Staffing for the Willow and Pikka projects will approach or reach 5,000, and Hilcorp is expanding its North Slope work this winter. Labor economists have been puzzled as to why the North Slope boom isn’t being reflected in the broader economy, at least yet. Part of the answer is that a higher percentage of jobs are being filled by nonresidents, which is expected given the extremely tight labor market in construction and oil-related skills. The most recent data on nonresident workers from the Department of Labor and Workforce Development in 2023 shows a 24% increase in nonresident workers in construction and a 200% increase for North Slope construction. That trend is sure to carry on when 2024 and 2025 numbers are available.

ConocoPhillips is beginning to look west in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska from its Willow project in the northeast NPR-A. “We’re putting ourselves in a position to continue exploring west of Willow,” Kirk Johnson, the company’s Senior Vice President, told investment analysts at ConocoPhillips’ fourth-quarter earnings call.

The new administration’s executive orders on oil and gas and Alaska, the NPR-A in particular, have been very encouraging, Johnson said. ConocoPhillips already has one discovery in its federal leases in the petroleum reserve that it calls, with optimism, “Willow West.” There are also discoveries by other companies farther west.

The NPR-A order is expected to reverse the NPR-A land regulations put in place in 2024 by former Interior Secretary Deb Haaland. A provision in the rules allowing protected areas in the petroleum reserve to be reviewed every five years, and then possibly enlarged, and or additional ones created, has been a major concern for the industry. Haaland had proposed new and enlarged areas just before leaving office. Those will not happen now. However, turning back the land regulations has procedural complexities that will take time and perhaps a new Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement. That could take two years and likely longer since litigation is almost a certainty.

Meanwhile, Johnson was also bullish on progress in Willow construction during the earnings call. “The mobilization for the winter construction season, our largest, has gone exceptionally well,” Johnson said. “Ice roads were built as well as bridges. Operations modules moved to the North Slope by sea last summer were being moved overland in December and January. The company is expecting to spend $500 million more in this winter season than it did last winter,” he said. Project employment is much higher than last year, too, at about 2,400, roughly double that of 2024.

Meanwhile, ConocoPhillips will also continue work on its new Nuna project in the Kuparuk River field, which came online in December. Nuna is the first new operations pad in the Kuparuk field in over a decade. Eight more production wells are planned at Nuna on top of 10 drilled previously there, ConocoPhillips’ Alaska president, Erec Isaacson said.
... See MoreSee Less

ConocoPhillips is beginning to look west in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska from its Willow project in the northeast NPR-A. “We’re putting ourselves in a position to continue exploring west of Willow,” Kirk Johnson, the company’s Senior Vice President, told investment analysts at ConocoPhillips’ fourth-quarter earnings call. 
 
The new administration’s executive orders on oil and gas and Alaska, the NPR-A in particular, have been very encouraging, Johnson said. ConocoPhillips already has one discovery in its federal leases in the petroleum reserve that it calls, with optimism, “Willow West.” There are also discoveries by other companies farther west. 
 
The NPR-A order is expected to reverse the NPR-A land regulations put in place in 2024 by former Interior Secretary Deb Haaland. A provision in the rules allowing protected areas in the petroleum reserve to be reviewed every five years, and then possibly enlarged, and or additional ones created, has been a major concern for the industry. Haaland had proposed new and enlarged areas just before leaving office. Those will not happen now. However, turning back the land regulations has procedural complexities that will take time and perhaps a new Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement. That could take two years and likely longer since litigation is almost a certainty.  
 
Meanwhile, Johnson was also bullish on progress in Willow construction during the earnings call. “The mobilization for the winter construction season, our largest, has gone exceptionally well,” Johnson said. “Ice roads were built as well as bridges. Operations modules moved to the North Slope by sea last summer were being moved overland in December and January. The company is expecting to spend $500 million more in this winter season than it did last winter,” he said. Project employment is much higher than last year, too, at about 2,400, roughly double that of 2024. 
 
Meanwhile, ConocoPhillips will also continue work on its new Nuna project in the Kuparuk River field, which came online in December. Nuna is the first new operations pad in the Kuparuk field in over a decade. Eight more production wells are planned at Nuna on top of 10 drilled previously there, ConocoPhillips’ Alaska president, Erec Isaacson said.
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The mission of KEEP Alaska Competitive is to promote and preserve competitive, fair and stable taxes on Alaska’s resource industries to enhance investment, jobs and production to secure Alaska’s long term economic future.

Keep Alaska Competitive Coalition Board of Directors:

  • Jim Jansen, Lynden, Inc.
  • Joe Schierhorn, Northrim Bank
  • Bill Corbus
  • Aaron Schutt, Doyon, Lmtd.
  • Dave Karp, Saltchuk
  • Gary Dixon, Alaska Teamsters Union
  • Vic Angoco, Matson
  • Harry McDonald
  • Jon Cook
  • Elizabeth Stevens, Executive Director