The effect of regional geology, regulatory environments, and project value propositions on emerging discoveries and impending developments in the North Slope of Alaska
The Willow and Pikka petroleum play discoveries on the North Slope of Alaska have the potential to be the largest plays in the region since Prudhoe Bay, although environmental concerns, high cost of development, and Native community impact has slowed and even threatened to derail the development of...
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ftunivtexas:oai:repositories.lib.utexas.edu:2152/94607 2023-05-15T17:40:11+02:00 The effect of regional geology, regulatory environments, and project value propositions on emerging discoveries and impending developments in the North Slope of Alaska Scieszka, Evan Jeffrey Kerans, C. (Charles), 1954- 2021-08 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/2152/94607 https://doi.org/10.26153/tsw/21526 en eng https://hdl.handle.net/2152/94607 http://dx.doi.org/10.26153/tsw/21526 Alaska Geology Resource estimation Impact assessment Regulation North Slope NPRA Thesis text 2021 ftunivtexas https://doi.org/10.26153/tsw/21526 2022-01-20T18:18:32Z The Willow and Pikka petroleum play discoveries on the North Slope of Alaska have the potential to be the largest plays in the region since Prudhoe Bay, although environmental concerns, high cost of development, and Native community impact has slowed and even threatened to derail the development of new Alaskan drilling projects. The aim of this thesis is to understand these plays from a geological, production potential, value, and impact perspective to better understand impending developments in the North Slope region and formulate proposals to mitigate impact and project delay. Using publicly available data, we outline the broad geologic settings characterizing new play chances. We also show that both the Pikka and Willow plays possess high production estimates with high value propositions using local field data and predictive modeling techniques. Lastly, legitimate concerns over subsistence rights of Native Alaskans and environmental impact caused by the further development of these fields were addressed with the conclusion that significant policy change will likely be required into the future. The significance of this study is that it showcases the potential inherent in frontier oil plays through multiple lenses of geology, production estimates, and impact. It therefore informs our current understanding of these individual plays as well as the understanding of Alaskan oil and gas policy going forward Energy and Earth Resources Thesis north slope Prudhoe Bay Alaska The University of Texas at Austin: Texas ScholarWorks |
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Open Polar |
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The University of Texas at Austin: Texas ScholarWorks |
op_collection_id |
ftunivtexas |
language |
English |
topic |
Alaska Geology Resource estimation Impact assessment Regulation North Slope NPRA |
spellingShingle |
Alaska Geology Resource estimation Impact assessment Regulation North Slope NPRA Scieszka, Evan Jeffrey The effect of regional geology, regulatory environments, and project value propositions on emerging discoveries and impending developments in the North Slope of Alaska |
topic_facet |
Alaska Geology Resource estimation Impact assessment Regulation North Slope NPRA |
description |
The Willow and Pikka petroleum play discoveries on the North Slope of Alaska have the potential to be the largest plays in the region since Prudhoe Bay, although environmental concerns, high cost of development, and Native community impact has slowed and even threatened to derail the development of new Alaskan drilling projects. The aim of this thesis is to understand these plays from a geological, production potential, value, and impact perspective to better understand impending developments in the North Slope region and formulate proposals to mitigate impact and project delay. Using publicly available data, we outline the broad geologic settings characterizing new play chances. We also show that both the Pikka and Willow plays possess high production estimates with high value propositions using local field data and predictive modeling techniques. Lastly, legitimate concerns over subsistence rights of Native Alaskans and environmental impact caused by the further development of these fields were addressed with the conclusion that significant policy change will likely be required into the future. The significance of this study is that it showcases the potential inherent in frontier oil plays through multiple lenses of geology, production estimates, and impact. It therefore informs our current understanding of these individual plays as well as the understanding of Alaskan oil and gas policy going forward Energy and Earth Resources |
author2 |
Kerans, C. (Charles), 1954- |
format |
Thesis |
author |
Scieszka, Evan Jeffrey |
author_facet |
Scieszka, Evan Jeffrey |
author_sort |
Scieszka, Evan Jeffrey |
title |
The effect of regional geology, regulatory environments, and project value propositions on emerging discoveries and impending developments in the North Slope of Alaska |
title_short |
The effect of regional geology, regulatory environments, and project value propositions on emerging discoveries and impending developments in the North Slope of Alaska |
title_full |
The effect of regional geology, regulatory environments, and project value propositions on emerging discoveries and impending developments in the North Slope of Alaska |
title_fullStr |
The effect of regional geology, regulatory environments, and project value propositions on emerging discoveries and impending developments in the North Slope of Alaska |
title_full_unstemmed |
The effect of regional geology, regulatory environments, and project value propositions on emerging discoveries and impending developments in the North Slope of Alaska |
title_sort |
effect of regional geology, regulatory environments, and project value propositions on emerging discoveries and impending developments in the north slope of alaska |
publishDate |
2021 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/2152/94607 https://doi.org/10.26153/tsw/21526 |
genre |
north slope Prudhoe Bay Alaska |
genre_facet |
north slope Prudhoe Bay Alaska |
op_relation |
https://hdl.handle.net/2152/94607 http://dx.doi.org/10.26153/tsw/21526 |
op_doi |
https://doi.org/10.26153/tsw/21526 |
_version_ |
1766141040448765952 |