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United States News Title: Conoco: Alaska exploration not competitive (2007 Palin tax to blame) For first time since 1965 company will not explore in the state; Archibald says states access, permitting OK, not fiscal system ConocoPhillips said in November that it planned no exploration drilling in Alaska this year. Larry Archibald, the companys senior vice president for exploration and business development, told the Alaska Support Industry Alliance Meet Alaska conference Jan. 22 that, its the first time since 65 that ConocoPhillips or one of its predecessor companies hasnt actively explored in Alaska. Thats saying a lot because those companies have been the states most active explorers for many years. Investment on state lands in Alaska isnt competitive with investment opportunities the company has elsewhere, Archibald said, comparing Alaskas competitiveness rank under the tax system initiated when ACES, Alaskas Clear and Equitable Share, was passed in 2007 with Alaskas rank prior to the passage of ACES. Prior to ACES, he said, the Alaska fiscal regime was about in the middle of the pack as consultancy Wood Mackenzie ranked the profitability of fiscal regimes for investors. But after ACES, Alaska moved to the right on the chart, where regimes take so much of royalty, taxes and other fees there isnt really much left for the investor in the success case, excluding the capital the companies put at risk in exploration and appraisal before any production occurs, Archibald said. Areas attracting investment Australia and the Gulf of Mexico federal outer continental shelf are areas that attract ConocoPhillips investment, he said, with Australia offering adequate fiscal terms and giant potential. While ConocoPhillips is investing a lot of money in the Gulf of Mexico, we consider the fiscal terms in the OCS going in the wrong direction but still adequate, he said. Threats to the situation there include shorter lease terms. And royalty rates have already increased from 12.5 percent to 19 percent, and rental rates from $7.50 an acre to $11 an acre, with an additional increase in the second half of the lease term. So while the terms have been adequate and were still exploring
in terms of the direction its going you cant drill some of the worlds most technically challenging and expensive wells into challenged reservoirs without adequate fiscal terms, Archibald said. Hurdles at existing fields And it isnt just Alaska exploration that is challenged, he said. While there is adequate access around existing giant fields on the North Slope Prudhoe Bay and Kuparuk and an adequate regulatory regime, the fiscal regime is a challenge. Theres a lot of near-term jobs, cash flow (and) production we could be getting out of existing giant fields, Archibald said, with a lot of running room with new technologies. But that work has a cost disadvantage because expensive waterflood and miscible injection is needed, he said. We need incentives for investment in well work and other activities and we could really be upping the game in the near term at those existing fields. NPR-A challenges Looking at undeveloped onshore areas of the North Slope, NPR-A is particularly challenged, Archibald said. The company has been exploring in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska for a long time, and has drilled 22 wells since 2000. Unfortunately, he said, weve found no standalone fields; weve got nothing in NPR-A that is currently producing. ConocoPhillips has made discoveries in the eastern part of NPR-A, but has faced repeated permitting and regulatory delays in hooking those up to Alpine. The company would like to get CD-5, the Alpine West discovery in NPR-A, permitted, because thats the gateway to tying in more discoveries in NPR-A. Archibald said there are more things in the area the company would like to explore for, but were going to slow the pace since we cant hook up our existing discoveries. Not for the faint of heart And then there is the Chukchi, where ConocoPhillips spent more than half a billion dollars on 98 leases in a 2008 federal OCS lease sale. There are many offshore Arctic basins that are grossly underexplored and the Chukchi in particular is underexplored, Archibald said. He called the Chukchi a world-class petroleum system and said ConocoPhillips would really like to get out there and do an exploration program. The company is pleased with the leases it won, which include control of a prospect called Devils Paw and some acreage on a prospect Shell calls Burger. But the Chukchi is not for the faint of heart. ConocoPhillips has a lot of money tied up in leases and were burning a lot of capital doing environmental and stakeholder engagement in the next several years, he said, and the company is still waiting for clarification of its lease status from the courts and the Department of the Interior. I think were confident well get there eventually, but theres a lot of money tied up that wed like to be moving forward with, Archibald said. Whats needed? Federal policies, he said, are poor when it comes to access to acreage and poor when it comes to permitting, but OK although tending down on fiscal terms. Its the reverse with the state, which is OK on access to acreage and permitting, but poor on fiscal terms. Its within the control of the federal and state government to change a lot of those conditions, he said. We need improved legal and regulatory environment for exploration on federal land; we need better fiscal terms and less onerous regulation for exploration on state land. And frankly after we get that we need stability on both fiscal and regulatory issues. We see more stability in many of the third-world countries we explore in than weve seen lately in this state, Archibald said.
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#1. To: go65 (#0)
I predict this article will throw Yukfartski into a tizzy...(grin)
Yeah, Yukon was quite the fan of Palin's windfall profits tax. He argued that since Alaska's oil belonged to the people Alaska, they were entitled to reap the rewards. I think there's a word for that....socialism!
Being a Republican means you get to choose your own reality.
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