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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. 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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Here’s something to keep an eye on.

Bradner’s Economic Report says transportation companies and oil and gas industry groups are forming a coalition to press for more state funding for the Dalton Highway, the strategic state-owned road linking North Slope oil fields with Interior Alaska’s highway system. Maintenance has lagged on the Dalton, truckers and industry groups say. The road has seen heavy use this year with major new oil projects under construction on the slope and the traffic will continue through 2025 and likely beyond.

The Dalton will become even more important in January when the Interior Gas Utility of Fairbanks begins trucking liquefied natural gas from the Harvest Alaska LNG plant nearing completion at Prudhoe Bay, eteran industry reporter Tim Bradner says IGU plans six LNG trucks a day going south with six returning north daily, a total of 12 on the Dalton. If Fort Wainright, the Army installation in Fairbanks, goes ahead with a plan to switch to natural gas, this would eventually double the LNG demand and trucks on the road.
... See MoreSee Less

Here’s something to keep an eye on.

Bradner’s Economic Report says transportation companies and oil and gas industry groups are forming a coalition to press for more state funding for the Dalton Highway, the strategic state-owned road linking North Slope oil fields with Interior Alaska’s highway system. Maintenance has lagged on the Dalton, truckers and industry groups say. The road has seen heavy use this year with major new oil projects under construction on the slope and the traffic will continue through 2025 and likely beyond. 

The Dalton will become even more important in January when the Interior Gas Utility of Fairbanks begins trucking liquefied natural gas from the Harvest Alaska LNG plant nearing completion at Prudhoe Bay, eteran industry reporter Tim Bradner says IGU plans six LNG trucks a day going south with six returning north daily, a total of 12 on the Dalton. If Fort Wainright, the Army installation in Fairbanks, goes ahead with a plan to switch to natural gas, this would eventually double the LNG demand and trucks on the road.

After a hiatus that lasted more than two decades, a production module was built at the Don Young Port of Alaska and sealifted to the North Slope where it is being installed at Nuna.

Construction took place at Anderson Dock operated by North Star Terminal & Stevedore Company.

“It’s great to see the fabrication of the module take place right here in our backyard and be built by Alaskans,” said Erec Isaacson, president of ConocoPhillips Alaska.

From Oliktok Dock, the module was transported inland to its permanent location at drill site 3T. Nuna will bring Kuparuk’s forty-ninth drill site online and will add 29 development wells that tie back to existing processing facilities at Central Processing Facility 3.

“Kuparuk has played a vital role in our company’s success, contributing significant production for more than 40 years,” says Isaacson. “It’s remarkable to witness new developments like the Nuna project showcasing that this asset remains robust and continues to provide considerable value to our North Slope operations.

ConocoPhillips expects Nuna to boost Kuparuk’s production in the coming years, reaching a peak rate of 20,000 net barrels of oil equivalent per day.

📸 : ConocoPhillips
... See MoreSee Less

After a hiatus that lasted more than two decades, a production module was built at the Don Young Port of Alaska and sealifted to the North Slope where it is being installed at Nuna.

Construction took place at Anderson Dock operated by North Star Terminal & Stevedore Company.

 “It’s great to see the fabrication of the module take place right here in our backyard and be built by Alaskans,” said Erec Isaacson, president of ConocoPhillips Alaska.

From Oliktok Dock, the module was transported inland to its permanent location at drill site 3T. Nuna will bring Kuparuk’s forty-ninth drill site online and will add 29 development wells that tie back to existing processing facilities at Central Processing Facility 3. 

“Kuparuk has played a vital role in our company’s success, contributing significant production for more than 40 years,” says Isaacson. “It’s remarkable to witness new developments like the Nuna project showcasing that this asset remains robust and continues to provide considerable value to our North Slope operations.

ConocoPhillips expects Nuna to boost Kuparuk’s production in the coming years, reaching a peak rate of 20,000 net barrels of oil equivalent per day.

📸 : ConocoPhillips

One of the earliest companies to prospect for oil in Alaska, Chevron is making its final farewell as it sells most of its remaining North Sope assets to ConocoPhillips Alaska.

Chevron first arrived in Alaska in 1888 when it began selling retail products in the territory of Alaska. The company helped develop the state's oil industry in Cook Inlet but exited in 1992, only to return a decade later with its $20 billion purchase of Unocal. It finally sold its Inlet properties in 2011 to Hilcorp.

That sale included 10 platforms: Anna, Baker, Bruce, Dillon, Dolly Varden, Granite Point, Grayling, King Salmon, Monopod and Steelhead. Baker was installed in 1965 on a lease in the North Middle Ground Shoal field, northwest of the community of Nikiski. Ultimately 31.9 million barrels of oil and 15.9 billion cubic feet of natural gas were produced before production was halted in 2003 as oil recovery dwindled to an average of 515 barrels per day.

Oil production was suspended the prior year from the Dillon platform to the south.

Chevron dismantled its Cook Inlet refinery on 470 acres in Nikiski in 1991. The smallest of the company's nine refineries, it processed 18,000 barrels of crude oil daily, producing jet fuel, diesel and asphalt, and employed 20 full-time workers. (See photo below).

Net daily production from its Inlet assets in the sale totaled 3,900 barrels of oil and 85 million cubic feet of natural gas, Chevron said.

Chevron was on the North Slope from the beginning, owning nonoperating interests in more than 2,000 oil and gas wells that produce an estimated 9,400 barrels a day from three oil fields: 4.9% in the Kuparuk River Unit, including Kuparuk Satellite fields; 1.2% in Prudhoe Bay; along with interests in the Kuparuk pipeline. It earlier divested its interests in the trans Alaska pipeline and Point Thomson.

An interesting fact is that Chevron and BP drilled the only test well in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge on lands owned by the Kaktovik Iñupiat Corporation (KIC) and minerals owned by the Arctic Slope Regional Corporation. The test well was meant to help ASRC and the two oil majors determine what oil and gas resources lie beneath the surface. The results of the well, known as the KIC-1 test well, have been kept secret for decades. In 2022 Chevron and Hilcorp paid $10 million to terminate their ANWR leases.

📸 : Chevron’s Cook Inlet refinery. Alaska State Library Collection
... See MoreSee Less

One of the earliest companies to prospect for oil in Alaska, Chevron is making its final farewell as it sells most of its remaining North Sope assets to ConocoPhillips Alaska.

Chevron first arrived in Alaska in 1888 when it began selling retail products in the territory of Alaska. The company helped develop the states oil industry in Cook Inlet but exited in 1992, only to return a decade later with its $20 billion purchase of Unocal. It finally sold its Inlet properties in 2011 to Hilcorp.

That sale included 10 platforms: Anna, Baker, Bruce, Dillon, Dolly Varden, Granite Point, Grayling, King Salmon, Monopod and Steelhead. Baker was installed in 1965 on a lease in the North Middle Ground Shoal field, northwest of the community of Nikiski. Ultimately 31.9 million barrels of oil and 15.9 billion cubic feet of natural gas were produced before production was halted in 2003 as oil recovery dwindled to an average of 515 barrels per day. 

Oil production was suspended the prior year from the Dillon platform to the south.

Chevron dismantled its Cook Inlet refinery on 470 acres in Nikiski in 1991. The smallest of the companys nine refineries, it processed 18,000 barrels of crude oil daily, producing jet fuel, diesel and asphalt, and employed 20 full-time workers. (See photo below).

Net daily production from its Inlet assets in the sale totaled 3,900 barrels of oil and 85 million cubic feet of natural gas, Chevron said.

Chevron was on the North Slope from the beginning, owning nonoperating interests in more than 2,000 oil and gas wells that produce an estimated 9,400 barrels a day from three oil fields: 4.9% in the Kuparuk River Unit, including Kuparuk Satellite fields; 1.2% in Prudhoe Bay; along with interests in the Kuparuk pipeline. It earlier divested its interests in the trans Alaska pipeline and Point Thomson.

An interesting fact is that Chevron and BP drilled the only test well in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge on lands owned by the Kaktovik Iñupiat Corporation (KIC) and minerals owned by the Arctic Slope Regional Corporation. The test well was meant to help ASRC and the two oil majors determine what oil and gas resources lie beneath the surface. The results of the well, known as the KIC-1 test well, have been kept secret for decades. In 2022 Chevron and Hilcorp paid $10 million to terminate their ANWR leases.

📸 : Chevron’s Cook Inlet refinery. Alaska State Library Collection
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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.