Legislature(2019 - 2020)BARNES 124

05/01/2019 01:00 PM House RESOURCES

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01:22:22 PM Start
01:23:03 PM Presentation(s): Oil and Gas Industry Update
03:11:17 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
-- Delayed to 1:20 pm --
+ Presentation: Oil and Gas Industry Update by TELECONFERENCED
- Kara Moriarty, President & CEO, Alaska Oil &
Gas Association
- Scott Jepsen, VP of External Affairs &
Transportation, ConocoPhillips
- Damian Bilbao, VP of Commercial Ventures, BP
- Scott Digert, Resource Development Area
Manager, Greater Prudhoe Bay, BP
- Benjamin Johnson, President & CEO, BlueCrest
-- Testimony <Invitation Only> --
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
                    ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE                                                                                  
               HOUSE RESOURCES STANDING COMMITTEE                                                                             
                          May 1, 2019                                                                                           
                           1:22 p.m.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative John Lincoln, Co-Chair                                                                                           
Representative Geran Tarr, Co-Chair                                                                                             
Representative Grier Hopkins, Vice Chair                                                                                        
Representative Sara Hannan                                                                                                      
Representative Ivy Spohnholz                                                                                                    
Representative Dave Talerico                                                                                                    
Representative George Rauscher                                                                                                  
Representative Sara Rasmussen                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative Chris Tuck                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
COMMITTEE CALENDAR                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
PRESENTATION(S):  OIL AND GAS INDUSTRY UPDATE                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     - HEARD                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
No previous action to record                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
WITNESS REGISTER                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
KARA MORIARTY, President & CEO                                                                                                  
Alaska Oil and Gas Association (AOGA)                                                                                           
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  Provided a PowerPoint presentation titled                                                                
"AOGA," dated 5/1/19.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
SCOTT JEPSEN, Vice President                                                                                                    
External Affairs and Transportation                                                                                             
ConocoPhillips Alaska, Inc.                                                                                                     
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  Provided a PowerPoint presentation titled                                                                
"North Slope Outlook," dated 5/1/19.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
DAMIAN BILBAO, Vice President                                                                                                   
Commercial Ventures                                                                                                             
BP Alaska                                                                                                                       
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:     Co-provided  a  PowerPoint  presentation                                                             
titled "House Resources," dated May 2019.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
SCOTT DIGERT, Resource Development Area Manager                                                                                 
Greater Prudhoe Bay                                                                                                             
BP Alaska                                                                                                                       
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:     Co-provided  a  PowerPoint  presentation                                                             
titled "House Resources," dated May 2019.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
J. BENJAMIN JOHNSON, President/CEO/Director                                                                                     
BlueCrest Energy Inc.                                                                                                           
Fort Worth, Texas                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:   Provided  a PowerPoint  presentation titled                                                             
"BlueCrest Cosmopolitan Overview," dated 5/1/19.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
ACTION NARRATIVE                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
1:22:22 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  GERAN   TARR  called   the  House   Resources  Standing                                                             
Committee  meeting  to  order  at   1:22  p.m.    Representatives                                                               
Talerico,   Rauscher,   Rasmussen,  Hannan,   Hopkins,   Lincoln,                                                               
Spohnholz, and Tarr were present at the call to order.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
^PRESENTATION(S):  OIL and GAS INDUSTRY UPDATE                                                                                  
         PRESENTATION(S):  OIL and GAS INDUSTRY UPDATE                                                                      
                                                                                                                              
1:23:03 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR TARR announced that the  only order of business would be                                                               
presentations by representatives  of the oil and  gas industry in                                                               
Alaska.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
1:24:01 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
KARA MORIARTY,  President & CEO,  Alaska Oil and  Gas Association                                                               
(AOGA), turned to slide 1  of her PowerPoint presentation, titled                                                               
"AOGA," dated  5/1/19, and noted  AOGA is the  professional trade                                                               
organization for the state's oil and  gas industry.  She moved to                                                               
slide 2  and said  [BlueCrest Energy, Furie,  Glacier Oil  & Gas,                                                               
Hilcorp, and  Marathon] are the companies  currently operating in                                                               
Alaska's  historical  oil basin  of  Cook  Inlet.   She  directed                                                               
attention to  maps in the  committee packet regarding  Cook Inlet                                                               
and North Slope oil and gas  activity and noted the Department of                                                               
Natural Resources  (DNR) develops  the maps  about twice  a year,                                                               
these October 2018 maps being the  most recent.  She said the map                                                               
on  slide 3  of Cook  Inlet  oil and  gas activity  gives a  good                                                               
synopsis of what can be expected  to happen.  Displaying slide 4,                                                               
she pointed out that Hilcorp  plans a very aggressive schedule of                                                               
drilling and workovers in a  variety of locations throughout Cook                                                               
Inlet  and Glacier  Oil and  Gas is  scheduled to  begin drilling                                                               
operations at  the Osprey  Platform in June.   About  16 offshore                                                               
rigs  are currently  in  Cook Inlet,  along  with operations  and                                                               
production onshore, she added.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY displayed  slides 5-6 and said  AOGA also represents                                                               
Interior companies [Petro Star Inc.  and Alyeska Pipeline Service                                                               
Company].   She noted that  Arctic Slope Regional  Corporation is                                                               
the sole  owner of Petro  Star, which  runs a refinery  in Valdez                                                               
and a refinery in North Pole.   She related that Petro Star has a                                                               
total of 335  employees, with over 150 in  the combined Fairbanks                                                               
and North  Pole area,  and that  the refinery's  primary products                                                               
are jet  fuels, special products  for the military,  home heating                                                               
fuel, and  low-sulfur diesel.   She pointed  out that  a refinery                                                               
has been operating in Nikiski for  almost 50 years, which has had                                                               
a  variety of  owners  and  is currently  owned  and operated  by                                                               
Marathon.  She said Marathon  has nearly 300 employees statewide,                                                               
and 99  percent are Alaska  residents, and the  refinery produces                                                               
quality  fuel  products  used  by Alaskans  every  day,  such  as                                                               
gasoline, jet  fuel, diesel  fuel, propane,  and asphalt.   These                                                               
three  refineries,  she  emphasized,   are  shining  examples  of                                                               
Alaskas in-state manufacturing sector.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MS.  MORIARTY moved  to slides  7-9 and  highlighted North  Slope                                                               
activity.  She  stated that on 4/6/19  Hilcorp started production                                                               
on  Moose  Pad  in  Milne  Point,  with  3,000  barrels  per  day                                                               
currently  being  produced,  an  expected total  recovery  of  62                                                               
million barrels, and  a total pad construction  and drilling cost                                                               
of $450 million.   She reported that Hilcorp is  also leading the                                                               
way by  working with the  University of Alaska Fairbanks  and the                                                               
National Energy  Technology Laboratory in funding  the first ever                                                               
pilot project  to try to validate  the use of polymer  floors for                                                               
heavy oil enhanced recovery.   This project, she continued, could                                                               
unlock  for  economic  recovery  the  billions  and  billions  of                                                               
barrels of heavy  oil that are thought to be  on the North Slope.                                                               
She  related that  Glacier plans  a  rig workover  at Badami  [in                                                               
summer  2019] and  Eni continues  to plan  additional exploration                                                               
work at Harrison  Bay and other field development  at its current                                                               
Spy Island  operation.   She said Repsol  is partnering  with Oil                                                               
Search to get the Pikka Unit sanctioned for development.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:30:00 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR TARR  requested further information about  Glacier Oil &                                                               
Gas Corporation  and noted  the company has  not yet  been before                                                               
the committee.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY replied  that Glacier has been an AOGA  member for a                                                               
couple of  years, so it  is not AOGA's  newest member.   She said                                                               
Glacier acquired some  of the Buccaneer properties  in Cook Inlet                                                               
several  years ago  and then  acquired  the Badami  Field on  the                                                               
North  Slope, so  Glacier  is  unique like  Hilcorp  in that  the                                                               
company has  assets in Cook  Inlet and on  the North Slope.   She                                                               
noted Glacier  is based in Anchorage,  has a small team,  and has                                                               
acquired other assets that have been in Alaska for some time.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR TARR inquired who the newest member of AOGA is.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY responded that Repsol  is newest in that it recently                                                               
rejoined AOGA a couple weeks ago, as did ConocoPhillips.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:30:31 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY resumed her presentation.   Turning to slide 10, she                                                               
stated it would make sense to  assume that record high oil prices                                                               
would result  in increased  oil production.   However,  she said,                                                               
that was not the case  from 2008-2013 when oil prices skyrocketed                                                               
and yet  Alaska lost  about 185,000  barrels per  day.   The good                                                               
news,  she continued,  is  that policies  were  changed, and  the                                                               
production decline stemmed and leveled  off, as depicted in green                                                               
on  the graph,  which is  important for  state revenue  and jobs.                                                               
She  pointed out  that  declining  production causes  operational                                                               
challenges for  the Trans Alaska  Pipeline System (TAPS)  and the                                                               
Cook Inlet  pipelines, plus it  costs more per barrel  when there                                                               
are less  barrels to share  the costs.   So, she added,  this new                                                               
trend line is encouraging for a host of reasons.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:32:42 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RAUSCHER  asked whether another tax  policy change                                                               
would be able to affect the decline.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MS.  MORIARTY answered  it  would  depend on  how  the policy  is                                                               
changed because the  industry responds to policy.   Investment in                                                               
capital dollars  is very competitive,  she advised, so  to remain                                                               
competitive, competitive policies need to be maintained.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  RAUSCHER inquired  whether there  is any  way Ms.                                                               
Moriarty could see an adjustment helping.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS.  MORIARTY  replied  that  having  more  encouraging  policies                                                               
would,  in  theory,  increase   production  and  investment,  but                                                               
without a proposal she can't speak to any specifics.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
1:33:49 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RASMUSSEN posed  a scenario of removing  $1 of the                                                               
taxable  credit, making  the  maximum be  $6-$7  for credits  for                                                               
transportation costs  for oil companies.   She asked  what impact                                                               
this would have in total for the industry.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY  surmised Representative  Rasmussen is  referring to                                                               
the per barrel  credit that is used as a  calculation for the tax                                                               
rate.   She  said any  adjustment  downward is  an automatic  tax                                                               
increase on  the industry,  so that is  less money  the companies                                                               
have to invest in Alaska.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  RASMUSSEN inquired  as  to what  a  change of  $1                                                               
would be in total for the industry.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY deferred  to the Department of Revenue  (DOR) for an                                                               
answer, but  estimated that  at current  prices and  production a                                                               
total repeal would be about a $1.2 billion tax increase.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:35:15 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY returned to her  presentation and stated that Alaska                                                               
could  be doing  a  lot  better in  stemming  the  decline.   She                                                               
explained slide  11 depicts  the most  recent data  [August 2018-                                                               
January 2019]  from the Energy  Information Administration  for a                                                               
six-month  average   for  production   from  the   seven  largest                                                               
producing states in  the U.S.  She noted that  Alaska is sixth in                                                               
production [479,000  barrels a  day], but  pointed out  that when                                                               
she started with AOGA 14 years ago Alaska was second.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS.  MORIARTY turned  to slide  12 and  further pointed  out that                                                               
Alaska has  fallen behind while  the U.S. has become  the world's                                                               
largest producer.   She said  Alaska has been surpassed  by other                                                               
states and  has become  a tiny fraction  of the  total production                                                               
from the  U.S.   She maintained  Alaska doesn't  have to  stay in                                                               
sixth place  because it is known  that about one-third of  all of                                                               
the  U.S. reserves  onshore  and  offshore are  in  Alaska.   She                                                               
recalled that  a variety of  legislative consultants  through the                                                               
years have said  Alaska's policy should focus on one  thing   how                                                               
to get more oil and more oil production.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
1:36:56 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  RAUSCHER  asked what  the  reason  is for  Alaska                                                               
falling behind.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY  responded that  companies are  working to  stem the                                                               
decline  in  Alaska's  aging 40-year-old  fields,  and  they  are                                                               
investing in  new fields.  In  North Dakota and Texas,  she said,                                                               
technology, price,  and innovation  have unlocked  resources that                                                               
were  thought would  never be  economically feasible.   Companies                                                               
have also become  incredibly efficient in driving  down the costs                                                               
to  make those  fields  profitable and  economic, she  continued.                                                               
Alaska still  has a lot of  oil, but is a  very challenging place                                                               
to do  business, she  said, and  later on  the committee  will be                                                               
hearing about  some near-term  projects that  could bump  up that                                                               
[number of 479,000 barrels a day].                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
1:38:44 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SPOHNHOLZ  remarked that  it is  not so  much that                                                               
Alaska has dropped in production as  it is that other states have                                                               
had dramatic increases in the  Permian Basin during the timeframe                                                               
depicted on  slide 11.   She recalled  Ms. Moriarty  stating that                                                               
technology  allowed   previously  uneconomic  fields   to  become                                                               
economic now  and inquired whether  those technology  changes are                                                               
serving in Alaska.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY answered yes; industry  has been utilizing hydraulic                                                               
fracturing on  the North Slope  for 50  years and counting.   She                                                               
said if hydraulic  fracturing couldn't be used  there wouldn't be                                                               
production  from  most  offshore  platforms,  Oooguruk  being  an                                                               
example.  The forthcoming speakers,  she related, will be talking                                                               
about  how they  are utilizing  advanced technologies  in Alaska.                                                               
Ten years ago Alaska was at  around 700,000 barrels a day, so the                                                               
state has the  potential for more production than  it does today,                                                               
she advised, but it is never going to be 4.76 million barrels.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:39:37 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY turned  to slide 13 and  continued her presentation.                                                               
She said  Congress passed a  bill authorizing two lease  sales in                                                               
the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge  (ANWR) and later this year a                                                               
final Environmental  Impact Statement (EIS)  for a lease  sale is                                                               
expected.  The Energy Information  Administration has now started                                                               
to forecast  production from  the refuge,  she continued,  so the                                                               
next generation of  oil and gas is being talked  about, with peak                                                               
production likely in about 2040.   She pointed out that the black                                                               
line on  the chart  represents the base  case reference  case, or                                                               
the average  of what is thought  will be produced.   She said the                                                               
Department of Revenue  (DOR) does the same thing when  it gives a                                                               
production forecast,  but DOR might call  it something different.                                                               
She  noted the  chart shows  that  the base  case for  production                                                               
could be  over 1  million barrels  per day  just from  the refuge                                                               
alone.   The point, she added,  is that the future  is incredibly                                                               
promising because it is known the resources are available.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY  moved to slide 14  and stated that for  decades the                                                               
oil and gas industry has produced  the most revenue for the state                                                               
and local  governments in Alaska.   She said the  projected total                                                               
of  unrestricted and  restricted  oil revenue  to  the state  for                                                               
fiscal year (FY) 2020 is  $2.3 billion, and local governments are                                                               
projected to  receive $440  million.  In  addition to  taxes, she                                                               
noted, industry  pays fees  to a variety  of state  agencies [for                                                               
example,  $7.6 million  to the  Alaska Oil  and Gas  Conservation                                                               
Commission  (AOGCC) Regulatory  Cost Charge  and $7.0  million to                                                               
the Spill Response  Fund].  She displayed slide  15 and explained                                                               
the  pie chart  represents  a  summary of  total  revenue to  the                                                               
state,  local governments,  and a  variety of  agencies from  the                                                               
oil, mining,  and commercial fishing  industries.  She  turned to                                                               
slide 16 and noted the chart  comes from the 2017 McDowell report                                                               
on the  seafood industry.   The chart, she specified,  shows that                                                               
oil and  gas represents  nearly a  third of  all wage  and salary                                                               
jobs  in Alaska,  meaning  oil  and gas  creates  more jobs  than                                                               
seafood, visitor and mining combined.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
1:43:57 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN inquired  as to how many of  those jobs are                                                               
permanent residents of Alaska.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY  displayed slide  17 and  replied that  100,000 jobs                                                               
are Alaska residents.  She  said the McDowell Group study, funded                                                               
by AOGA, looked  at Alaska-based zip codes to  determine jobs and                                                               
wages, rather than  the Permanent Fund indicator that  is used by                                                               
the Department  of Labor and  Workforce Development  for resident                                                               
hire.   She  related  that  in 2016  AOGA  members  - called  the                                                               
"primary oil  and gas  companies" in the  study -  provided 4,275                                                               
Alaska residents  with jobs, which  is 80 percent of  the roughly                                                               
5,000  jobs that  the primary  companies employ  in Alaska.   She                                                               
said that that  generated 6,000 resident jobs in the  oil and gas                                                               
support  service  industry,  which then  created  another  35,000                                                               
indirect and  induced jobs,  and 58,000 jobs  are related  to the                                                               
oil and  gas taxes  and royalties  that the  industry pays.   She                                                               
specified that  100,000 is the  number of Alaska  residents whose                                                               
employment can be attributed to the oil and gas industry.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:46:00 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN brought attention to  the chart on slide 16                                                               
that compares [the total jobs and  income created by] the oil and                                                               
gas, seafood, visitor,  and mining industries.   She surmised the                                                               
chart shows not  just the 4,275 direct employees  of the industry                                                               
that  are  Alaska residents,  but  also  the service  sector  and                                                               
indirect jobs.  She asked  whether the number of seafood industry                                                               
jobs depicted on the chart also reflects the indirect jobs.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY  offered her understanding  that all  the industries                                                               
[depicted on the chart] in  this summary slide include direct and                                                               
indirect jobs, that  it is a like-like comparison.   She said she                                                               
could double-check the figures.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR TARR  disagreed.  She  said she knows that  the depicted                                                               
number of seafood jobs [36,800] is for direct jobs.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY answered  that there may be more direct  jobs in the                                                               
seafood industry, but these [numbers] are Alaska resident jobs.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  TARR  maintained  that  that number  could  not,  then,                                                               
include the other categories because it is too low.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS.  MORIARTY  replied that  the  chart  is from  the  [McDowell]                                                               
seafood report and she would go back and look.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN asked what the  total number of direct jobs                                                               
is in oil and gas in Alaska, besides the Alaska resident jobs.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY  responded that the  total number of direct  jobs by                                                               
the primary companies in 2016 was  just over 5,000, so 85 percent                                                               
of that 5,000 were Alaska residents.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  RASMUSSEN offered  her  belief  that perhaps  the                                                               
question   Representative  Hannan   was  coming   from  was   the                                                               
percentage of overall  employees.  She said it  is interesting to                                                               
note that  Alaska residents in  this industry make up  85 percent                                                               
of the  primary [companies], while [previously  presented] slides                                                               
for fisheries stated about 50 percent are Alaskan employees.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
1:48:11 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  TARR  recalled that  2016  was  a higher  than  average                                                               
employment year on the North Slope.   She offered her belief that                                                               
in 2019 the primary employment is more in the range of 3,500.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY answered  she would have to double-check.   She said                                                               
AOGA updates  this study every  three years, so  it is due  to be                                                               
updated in  the next 12 months  and she doesn't have  that number                                                               
off the top of her head.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR TARR  inquired whether AOGA  has a study from  2013 that                                                               
could be compared to [the 2016 study].                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY  replied yes, AOGA  has studies for 2016,  2013, and                                                               
2009.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  TARR requested  that Ms.  Moriarty share  these studies                                                               
with the committee.  She recalled  seeing a slide sometime in the                                                               
past that showed  a spike [in jobs] that paralleled  the spike in                                                               
prices, but returned to the historic levels of 3,500-4,000.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY  agreed to get  that answer  to the committee.   She                                                               
said  AOGA's primary  company resident  hire stays  in the  80-85                                                               
percent range  regardless of  the number  of direct  employees on                                                               
the North Slope and in Cook Inlet.   It is important to note, she                                                               
added, that for every $1  earned by AOGA's primary company direct                                                               
employees, another $8 in wages  is generated throughout the state                                                               
of Alaska.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:50:12 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY  resumed her  presentation.   She said  Alaska needs                                                               
all its industries  to be successful and her  presentation is not                                                               
about "us versus them."   She stated she was trying  to put it in                                                               
context based on  the reports the committee has seen  in the last                                                               
few weeks.  Clearly, she continued,  [oil and gas] stands out, no                                                               
other industry comes  close to the economic impact  that [the oil                                                               
and  gas  industry]  has  statewide,  but  the  state  needs  all                                                               
industries to be successful.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY moved  to slide 18 to discuss the  future of oil and                                                               
gas globally.   She noted the  source for the charts  depicted on                                                               
the slide is the "World  Energy Outlook 2018," a report published                                                               
by  the International  Energy Agency.    She said  the three  pie                                                               
charts  on the  top  left show  the growth  in  global demand  by                                                               
sector from 2000 to  2017 to 2040 and the four  pie charts on the                                                               
bottom  left  show  the  composition of  fuels  used  to  provide                                                               
worldwide  energy.   She explained  that  the first  of the  four                                                               
charts compares 2017 to three  different policy scenarios in 2040                                                               
that might be adopted by countries  globally.  She noted that gas                                                               
is shown in purple and oil is  shown in red, and pointed out that                                                               
[the  percentage of]  renewables grows  in every  policy and  the                                                               
percentage of oil  and gas remains at about 53-54  percent of the                                                               
energy supply over the next three decades.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN  inquired about  the abbreviations  used in                                                               
the pie charts.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY  responded that "mb/d"  in the top three  pie charts                                                               
stands for  million barrels per day  and that she would  get back                                                               
to the  committee as to what  "Mtoe" stands for.   [It stands for                                                               
millions of tons  of oil equivalent.]  She added  that the report                                                               
is about  350 pages and her  point in showing these  charts is to                                                               
demonstrate that  the world needs  oil and  that oil and  gas are                                                               
still going to be more than 50  percent of the energy mix for the                                                               
next several decades.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
1:52:59 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY continued  her presentation.  She said  the graph on                                                               
the right of slide 18  demonstrates why investment is needed over                                                               
the  next 30-40  years.   According to  the report,  she related,                                                               
without new  investment from 2018  onward, global  oil production                                                               
could be cut in half, but the  demand for oil and gas would still                                                               
be there.   She stated that  the world needs energy  and policies                                                               
are being adopted to ensure  energy efficiency for taking care of                                                               
the climate, but the reality is  that oil and gas are still going                                                               
to supply over 50 percent of  the world's energy for at least the                                                               
next 30-40 years.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR TARR  observed [from the  four pie charts on  the bottom                                                               
left] that renewable energy is  expected to double over that time                                                               
period.    She offered  her  understanding  that some  of  AOGA's                                                               
member  companies are  presently  involved  in renewable  energy.                                                               
She asked whether  AOGA would at some  point become comprehensive                                                               
in that energy portfolio and expand its mission.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY  answered that AOGA's  mission is for  the long-term                                                               
viability of the oil and gas  industry in Alaska.  She said other                                                               
organizations are  looking at water,  wind, and solar,  and right                                                               
now AOGA has not expanded its  mission.  As the industry evolves,                                                               
she continued, it  could be something the board decides  to do at                                                               
a later  date and  would depend  on how  that matters  in Alaska.                                                               
She  added  that  she  doesn't  see  it  any  time  soon  because                                                               
renewables are very  challenging in Alaska and she  has her hands                                                               
full right  now just advocating  for the long-term  viability for                                                               
oil and gas.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
1:56:15 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY turned  to slide 19 and  continued her presentation.                                                               
She  stated that  [exploration] for  oil and  gas doesn't  happen                                                               
without investment, as demonstrated by  the boom in the Lower 48.                                                               
She said the oil and gas  industry was expected to spend close to                                                               
$120  billion in  capital and  exploration projects,  with Alaska                                                               
slated to get about 2 percent  of that.  Drawing attention to the                                                               
bar graph,  she said expenditures  in North America,  depicted in                                                               
dark red at the bottom of the  bars, are expected to grow for the                                                               
next several years and could exceed $200 billion in 2025.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS.  MORIARTY addressed  the recent  news headlines  displayed on                                                               
the right side  of slide 19 and said they  show that Alaska needs                                                               
to remain competitive.   For example, she noted,  the Wall Street                                                             
Journal  article highlights  that Chevron  is expected  to double                                                             
production in  the Permian  Basin of west  Texas and  eastern New                                                               
Mexico.   The Permian Basin, she  pointed out, is the  reason why                                                               
New Mexico is  currently the third largest producer  in the U.S.,                                                               
with ExxonMobil possibly  having a million barrels a  day in that                                                               
basin alone by  2024.  She said this same  article points out how                                                               
competitive the  industry is  in that  it reports  ExxonMobil can                                                               
generate a 10 percent rate of  return at $35 oil.  Companies will                                                               
invest based on a variety of  factors, but clearly rate of return                                                               
is important,  she continued,  and that is  playing out  with the                                                               
public  bidding war  between  Chevron  and Occidental  Petroleum,                                                               
along with Berkshire Hathaway, for  Anadarko, a company that used                                                               
to be  in Alaska.   The industry  is very competitive  and highly                                                               
fluid, she advised, and Alaska  needs to remain competitive to be                                                               
considered a player in the global market.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:58:58 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HOPKINS concurred  Alaska must remain competitive.                                                               
Bringing attention  to slide  14, he  agreed it  is unequivocally                                                               
true for Alaska  that oil and gas produces the  most revenue.  He                                                               
observed that the FY 2020  unrestricted oil revenue [to the State                                                               
of Alaska] is projected to be  $1.754 billion.  He asked what the                                                               
revenue  is to  the North  Slope  producers over  this same  time                                                               
period in order to arrive at the $1.754 billion.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY  replied that since  AOGA is a trade  association it                                                               
must comply with  strict antitrust laws.  She  said she therefore                                                               
doesn't know the answer to  that question because the profits and                                                               
returns of individual members cannot be talked about.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:00:30 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RASMUSSEN  addressed slide  19 and  keeping Alaska                                                               
competitive.  She  surmised that again changing  Alaska's oil and                                                               
gas tax structure wouldn't keep  Alaska competitive, but inquired                                                               
whether   from AOGAs  perspective  - maintaining the stability is                                                               
sufficient for keeping Alaska competitive.   She further inquired                                                               
if something else could be done to make Alaska more competitive.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY responded that AOGA  is not currently advocating for                                                               
any changes  to the tax  structure, investment  opportunities, or                                                               
policies in  Alaska.   At the  new administration's  request, she                                                               
continued,  AOGA is  identifying  regulatory changes.   She  said                                                               
AOGA has  met with the  Department of Revenue (DOR)  on improving                                                               
the audit process,  the Department of Natural  Resources (DNR) on                                                               
a  couple  of  policies,  and  the  Department  of  Environmental                                                               
Conservation  (DEC)   on  making  things  more   streamlined  and                                                               
eliminating duplication in regulation  and oversight.  She stated                                                               
this doesn't mean oversight isn't  wanted, but that the oversight                                                               
is  sometimes  duplicative  and   could  be  more  efficient  and                                                               
modernized to match the industry's changing technologies.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:02:28 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN  returned to slide 6  regarding refineries.                                                               
She asked how much of the  product from those three refineries is                                                               
consumed in state and offered her presumption it is 100 percent.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY  answered it  is almost 100  percent in  that, while                                                               
rare, there are situations where it is shipped out of state.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN asked what  percent of Alaska's consumption                                                               
of those products is being refined in state.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY replied  she doesn't know the  percentage by product                                                               
and will get  back to the committee with an  answer.  She pointed                                                               
out  that products  used by  Southeast Alaska  consumers come  up                                                               
from refineries in Washington  state because transportation costs                                                               
are cheaper from there versus Valdez or the Kenai Peninsula.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN asked if bunker fuel is a refined product.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY responded she is unsure.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:05:05 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RAUSCHER  drew attention  to slide 12  and offered                                                               
his  assumption  that  [industry]  is  constantly  exploring  and                                                               
finding new ways to produce oil and  gas in the U.S.  He observed                                                               
from the chart  that Russian and Saudi Arabia  are holding steady                                                               
[in their production].  He asked  why they are holding steady and                                                               
whether it is by design.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS.  MORIARTY answered  she cannot  speak  specifically to  other                                                               
countries  and what  their policies  are, she  can only  tell the                                                               
committee what  the data shows.   She  stated slide 12  shows the                                                               
combined production of gas and oil  and the U.S. has increased in                                                               
both oil and gas.  At one point  in time, she noted, the U.S. was                                                               
importing gas and  creating terminals to bring more  gas into the                                                               
country, but now those have been turned into export facilities.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:06:22 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORIARTY  moved to slide  20 and concluded  her presentation.                                                               
She said it is the industry's  great people who bring the oil and                                                               
gas out  of the ground,  refine it, and ship  it to market.   She                                                               
drew  attention to  a profile  in the  committee packet  of Klint                                                               
Vanwingerden, an Alyeska Pipeline  Service Company employee.  She                                                               
said he is part of the  next generation of energy workers who are                                                               
committed to  using the most advanced  technologies, engineering,                                                               
and  pipeline management  systems.   She further  noted that  Mr.                                                               
Vanwingerden is part of the team  striving to ensure that TAPS is                                                               
viable for the next 40 years.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:08:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SCOTT    JEPSEN,   Vice    President,   External    Affairs   and                                                               
Transportation,   ConocoPhillips   Alaska,   Inc.,   provided   a                                                               
PowerPoint  presentation  titled  "North  Slope  Outlook,"  dated                                                               
5/1/19, regarding  his company's  plans on the  North Slope.   He                                                               
displayed slide  2 and noted  that because he is  making forward-                                                               
looking  statements, committee  members  might want  to read  the                                                               
cautionary statement.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. JEPSEN  explained the map on  slide 3 shows the  areas on the                                                               
North Slope where ConocoPhillips has  working interests.  He said                                                               
ConocoPhillips has  about a  36 percent  working interest  in the                                                               
Prudhoe Bay Unit,  which is operated by BP; a  95 percent working                                                               
interest in  the Kuparuk  River Unit; and  a 100  percent working                                                               
interest  in the  Western  North Slope  (WNS)  [comprised of  the                                                               
Colville River, Greater Mooses Tooth,  and Bear Tooth units].  He                                                               
explained that  the black and  white dashed line is  the boundary                                                               
of  the National  Petroleum Reserve-Alaska  (NPR-A).   He pointed                                                               
out that  the Alpine Field  is located within the  Colville River                                                               
Unit  and noted  he  uses these  two  terms interchangeably  when                                                               
talking about Alpine.  Mr. Jepsen  stated that over the last year                                                               
ConocoPhillips increased its ownership  of the Kuparuk River Unit                                                               
and the Western  North Slope.  He said  ConocoPhillips bought out                                                               
its  co-ventures  there  primarily  because  the  company  had  a                                                               
different vision and desire for pace of development there.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:10:03 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. JEPSEN said  the graph on slide  4 summarizes ConocoPhillips'                                                               
perspective on  the North Slope and  how it has changed  over the                                                               
years.   The steadily  declining grey bars,  he said,  depict his                                                               
company's long-range  plans as they  were in 2013, at  which time                                                               
the anticipation was  for production to be  about 100,000 barrels                                                               
a day in  2028.  The red bars, he  stated, depict ConocoPhillips'                                                               
present day anticipation that production  will rise to upwards of                                                               
300,000 barrels a  day in 2028 of net production  coming from the                                                               
company's North  Slope working interests.   He noted that  if the                                                               
company's acquisitions  were taken  out of this  the anticipation                                                               
would have  been for around  250,000 barrels a  day.  But  by any                                                               
measure, he  continued, it is  a radical change in  the company's                                                               
perspective.   He explained the red  bars fade out at  the top to                                                               
indicate that it  isn't a hard number  because ConocoPhillips has                                                               
a lot  of running room  in exploration  and is unsure  where that                                                               
production is going to peak.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. JEPSEN discussed the drivers  of transformation listed on the                                                               
right side of slide 4.   He said the fiscal framework improved in                                                               
2013 when the state moved  from [House Bill 2001], Alaska's Clear                                                               
and Equitable Share  (ACES), to Senate Bill 21, an  act that made                                                               
Alaska  competitive for  investments again.   Over  the last  few                                                               
years,  he  continued, ConocoPhillips  has  focused  on its  core                                                               
fields  and in  Alpine  and Kuparuk  the  increased drilling  was                                                               
successful.   He said technological  advancements have  been made                                                               
in drilling and  in some areas of the  North Slope ConocoPhillips                                                               
is  leading what  is  going on  in the  shale  developments.   He                                                               
pointed out  that the  last downturn was  tough on  everybody and                                                               
ConocoPhillips was in a tough  spot when oil prices dropped below                                                               
$30 a  barrel.  However,  he said, the  industry as a  whole, not                                                               
just  in Alaska,  took  a lot  of  cost out  of  the system;  for                                                               
example,  in some  places the  breakeven cost  fell by  $20-$30 a                                                               
barrel.   ConocoPhillips was able to  take a lot of  costs out of                                                               
its system in Alaska, he  related, so Alaska is still competitive                                                               
with the  company's other  investments in  places like  Texas and                                                               
North  Dakota.    The  corporate  center  allocated  dollars  for                                                               
exploration in  Alaska, he added,  which has been  successful and                                                               
is driving the shape of the curve depicted on the graph.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:12:27 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. JEPSEN moved to slide  5 and reviewed the significant changes                                                               
that drilling has  undergone.  He recalled that  during the early                                                               
days in Prudhoe  Bay, about 1970, a drill  site was approximately                                                               
65  acres, spacing  between wellheads  was about  20 feet,  and a                                                               
radius of 3-4  square miles could be drilled from  a single drill                                                               
site.   Today, he said,  the size of a  drill site has  shrunk to                                                               
about 12 acres,  spacing between wellheads is about  20 feet, and                                                               
a  radius of  55  square  miles can  be  developed, depending  on                                                               
depth, from a single drill site.   He related that Doyon Drilling                                                               
is  now  building  the  next   generation  of  drilling  rig  for                                                               
ConocoPhillips,  called  an  extended-reach drilling  (ERD)  rig.                                                               
The  drill site  will still  be 12  acres, he  explained, but  [a                                                               
radius of]  154 square  miles can be  developed from  this single                                                               
drill site.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR.  JEPSEN stated  the story  gets  even deeper  because of  the                                                               
incredible directional  drilling technology being  employed right                                                               
now.   He related that if  the ERD rig was  in the ConocoPhillips                                                               
tower  in Anchorage  it could  drill over  to the  south side  of                                                               
Anchorage and put  that drill bit inside Cabella's gun  safe.  He                                                               
further related that in 2018  in the Alpine Field, ConocoPhillips                                                               
set the record  for the longest horizontal well  drilled in North                                                               
America - 21,000 feet in zone.   To do this, he explained, a hole                                                               
was cut  in the side  of the  primary wellbore through  which the                                                               
directional  drilling assembly  went out  and into  the producing                                                               
sand.  Even though faults may  have shifted that sand up or down,                                                               
he said, the directional drilling  assembly could be kept in that                                                               
sand  because the  contractors  have tools  that  can see  ahead.                                                               
When  faults  are  seen,  the drill  bits  are  adjusted  through                                                               
pressures in  the drilling mud  to go  around the fault  and then                                                               
back into the sand.  Mr.  Jepsen said another lateral was drilled                                                               
above that,  giving another  10,000 feet  in zone  before running                                                               
out of  sand, and  therefore one wellbore  had over  31,000 feet,                                                               
about six  miles, of [pay, which  is defined as a  reservoir or a                                                               
portion  of a  reservoir  that  contains economically  producible                                                               
hydrocarbons].   He  compared this  to Prudhoe  Bay in  the 1970s                                                               
when only 280 feet of pay would have been open to the wellbore.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR.  JEPSEN  stated  this technology  makes  a  huge  difference:                                                               
smaller  drill  sites,  fewer  drill  sites,  fewer  roads,  less                                                               
gravel, fewer  pipelines, and  fewer wells.   He said  this means                                                               
that accumulations can  now be developed that  probably would not                                                               
have been  economic 20 years  ago.  A  lot of this  technology is                                                               
technology that  is being used  in the shales, he  continued, but                                                               
ConocoPhillips is  pushing that horizontal technology  further in                                                               
Alaska than it has been pushed in the shale places.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
2:15:58 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RASMUSSEN  asked when the  extended-reach drilling                                                               
technology is  going to be  rolled out.   She further  asked what                                                               
the cost  savings look like  from the efficiencies  realized from                                                               
this larger underground footprint.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR.  JEPSEN replied  that ConocoPhillips  anticipates having  the                                                               
ERD rig  up on the  North Slope in April  2020 and said  the cost                                                               
savings  are highly  dependent  upon where  the  company will  be                                                               
developing.   He noted that  today's 55 square miles  compared to                                                               
[154] square  miles means that  one-third fewer drill  sites will                                                               
be needed.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RASMUSSEN inquired whether  it would be reasonable                                                               
to say  that one-third more  production could be done  within the                                                               
same cost if using the ERD.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR.  JEPSEN responded  that  it's not  that  simple because  it's                                                               
dependent upon the field being  developed, the reservoir quality,                                                               
and the  reservoir thickness.   However, he added, it  does allow                                                               
for the  drilling of  things that  couldn't otherwise  be reached                                                               
because putting a drill site  out there wasn't affordable.  Also,                                                               
he said, it will allow for  thinner sands that couldn't have been                                                               
produced with conventional technology.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:17:12 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN  inquired whether  there has been  a change                                                               
in the rigidity of the drill  pipe itself as well as the robotics                                                               
going through it.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR. JEPSEN  answered that  there are no  robotics.   He explained                                                               
that with these much more advanced  systems the driller has a two                                                               
dimensional (2-D) picture,  but gets a good view in  terms of 3-D                                                               
of where that drill bit is  in the ground, where the wellbore is,                                                               
and where all  the other wellbores of a site  are.  Regarding the                                                               
pipe's rigidity,  he said there is  no new technology -  the pipe                                                               
has a certain amount of degrees of  bend per 100 feet and that is                                                               
considered when determining  where to kick off the  wellbore.  He                                                               
added that  there is another type  of rig called a  coiled tubing                                                               
drilling rig,  where the tubing is  run into the hole  and can be                                                               
bent almost  vertical in a short  turn radius of about  100 feet.                                                               
He explained  it looks like an  oversize garden hose on  a spool,                                                               
with  a  continuous  drilling string  of  10,000-12,000  feet  of                                                               
coiled  tubing on  a single  spool.   He said  ConocoPhillips has                                                               
deployed  coiled  tubing for  going  back  into existing  fields,                                                               
primarily for  bypassed oil in  places like Alpine,  Kuparuk, and                                                               
Prudhoe Bay.   He stated it  accounts for a tremendous  amount of                                                               
his  company's  production  right  now;  for  example,  about  30                                                               
percent of Kuparuk's current production.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:19:34 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. JEPSEN turned to slide 6  and continued his presentation.  He                                                               
said the map depicts the  various projects that ConocoPhillips is                                                               
progressing on the Western North Slope.   He related that CD5 was                                                               
started in 2012,  GMT1 is on stream, and that  the company is now                                                               
moving ahead with  GMT2, Fiord West, and Willow.   Fiord West, he                                                               
noted, is  located in  the northwest corner  of the  Alpine Field                                                               
and is the  reason for building the ERD rig.   He elaborated that                                                               
ConocoPhillips was  unable to  figure out  a way  to economically                                                               
develop its leases there given they  are on the coastline, a very                                                               
sensitive  place to  permit.   He said  the ERD  rig is  going to                                                               
allow development of  that accumulation from the  CD2 drill site.                                                               
About 12  acres of gravel have  been put down to  accommodate the                                                               
new wells, he stated, but no  pipeline or roads will be needed on                                                               
the coast  and the difficulty  of permitting on  coastal wetlands                                                               
will be avoided.   Basically, he continued, the ERD  rig is going                                                               
to allow development  of an accumulation that  couldn't have been                                                               
developed otherwise.   He said  current estimates are for  a peak                                                               
production  of about  20,000 barrels  a day  from the  Fiord West                                                               
leases, a substantial  addition to the Alpine Unit.   He reported                                                               
that ConocoPhillips is currently in  the process of building GMT2                                                               
and first  oil is expected in  2021 at probably 35,000  barrels a                                                               
day of  production.   He noted  that for  projects like  GMT1 and                                                               
CD5, the peak workforce of  about 700 construction jobs is during                                                               
the winter.   ConocoPhillips sources  most of  those construction                                                               
jobs out of  the union halls in Fairbanks, he  pointed out, since                                                               
hiring as  many Alaskans as possible  is a focus of  the company.                                                               
He added it would be about $1 billion in gross to develop GMT2.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:21:37 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. JEPSEN related that the  Willow Discovery, announced in 2017,                                                               
is a substantial discovery at  potentially 100,000 barrels a day.                                                               
Displaying slide  7, he  elaborated on  the development  plan for                                                               
the Willow  Discovery.  He  said BT1, BT2,  BT3, BT4, and  BT5 in                                                               
the  Bear Tooth  Unit are  going to  be the  drill sites  for the                                                               
Willow  development.   He  stated the  production  will be  large                                                               
enough and  far enough away  from existing facilities that  a new                                                               
central  processing  facility  will  need  to  be  built  at  the                                                               
location  on  the  map labeled  WCF  [Willow  Central  Facility].                                                               
Other opportunities,  he noted,  are Greater  Willow 2  (GW2) and                                                               
GW1, a discovery made last year  that is called West Willow.  The                                                               
core  plan right  now, he  continued, is  to use  these sites  to                                                               
produce at Willow.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR.  JEPSEN specified  that between  the Willow  Discovery and  a                                                               
couple  of  others, ConocoPhillips  has  found  an estimated  500                                                               
million to  1.1 billion barrels of  resource and the goal  now is                                                               
to translate  that into reserves.   He pointed out  that resource                                                               
doesn't mean reserves,  it just means something is  out there and                                                               
now it  must be  determined if it  can be  produced economically.                                                               
Willow accounts for  400-750 million barrels of  the estimate, he                                                               
said, and the process now is  to narrow that to better understand                                                               
what the accumulation looks like.   He stated it is going to cost                                                               
about $2-$3  billion in  investment before  getting to  the first                                                               
drop of oil;  this money will be used to  build roads, pipelines,                                                               
the  central production  facility,  and the  initial  wells.   He                                                               
added that another  $2-$3 billion would be spent to  drill up the                                                               
rest of the project.  He  noted that places like West Texas don't                                                               
require $2-$3 billion,  generally speaking, to get  out there and                                                               
drill.   However,  he continued,  in some  instances there  isn't                                                               
infrastructure and pipelines; for  example, ConocoPhillips had to                                                               
do  some of  that  in  its Permian  Basin  and  Eagle Ford  Shale                                                               
Formation production.   He said  that for  Willow, ConocoPhillips                                                               
expects  a final  environmental impact  statement (EIS)  from the                                                               
Bureau of  Land Management (BLM) in  the last half of  2019 and a                                                               
Record of Decision (ROD) is expected in 2020.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. JEPSEN drew attention to  other discoveries shown on slide 7.                                                               
He said ConocoPhillips discovered Stony  Hill and Putu last year,                                                               
but  that Stony  Hill is  [not close  to] infrastructure  and the                                                               
best way  to develop  this discovery  is still  being determined.                                                               
Putu, he  continued, is  located inside  the Colville  River Unit                                                               
and it  is anticipated that another  gravel pad will be  put down                                                               
and the  discovery produced back  through the  Alpine facilities.                                                               
He  related  that ConocoPhillips  believes  some  of the  Narwhal                                                               
Trend or Nanushuk Trend can be drilled  from CD4.  He said a test                                                               
well was drilled  over into the Narwhal this last  season and the                                                               
hope is to  drill another well off CD4 later  in 2019 to continue                                                               
trying to  understand the geology of  this particular exploration                                                               
play, as well as to potentially  inject water to have a long-term                                                               
test out of this play.   Getting those tests, he explained, helps                                                               
to understand the long-term producing potential.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:25:08 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN  observed on  the map on  slide 7  a circle                                                               
delineated  by red  dashes and  labeled "new  gravel mine."   She                                                               
asked what the other circles with dashed lines indicate.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR.  JEPSEN explained  the  red  circle is  the  most likely  new                                                               
gravel  source  with  regard  to  Willow  because  the  company's                                                               
current  gravel source  is across  the  Colville River  and is  a                                                               
longer haul to  bring gravel over to Willow.   The more that haul                                                               
can be  shortened the  less the development  costs, he  said, and                                                               
the hope is to find something  even closer.  But, he added, there                                                               
aren't a lot of good gravel sources  going west in the NPR-A.  He                                                               
said the  other circles near GW1  and GW2 identify that  there is                                                               
some exploration and production.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  HANNAN observed  on the  map on  slide 7  a solid                                                               
blue line  that turns into a  dashed line.  She  inquired whether                                                               
this line indicates a road.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. JEPSEN  responded that this is  an ice road, not  a full-time                                                               
road.   He said it  is basically the road  system:  from  CD4 the                                                               
road can be taken to CD5 and GMT1,  he thinks the road to GMT2 is                                                               
in, and then  a road will be  built to WCF.  He  specified that a                                                               
pipeline is  also going to be  built to take production  from the                                                               
Willow Central Facility  back over to the  Alpine pipeline, which                                                               
then runs to the Kuparuk pipeline, which then runs to TAPS.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN observed a line on  the map on slide 7 that                                                               
connects BT4 with BT1 and BT2.  She asked what it represents.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. JEPSEN  answered that it is  a spine road and  that pipelines                                                               
will be [built] there as well.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
2:27:25 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RAUSCHER inquired  whether ConocoPhillips is going                                                               
to be able to keep up with, and  build new pads as good as, those                                                               
built by Hilcorp at Moose Pad at Milne Point.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR.  JEPSEN  replied  he is  unaware  of  anything  significantly                                                               
different [between the pads of the two companies].                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:28:16 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. JEPSEN  displayed slide 8  and resumed his presentation.   He                                                               
summarized the  exploration work done by  ConocoPhillips in 2019:                                                               
eight  wells were  drilled; an  exploration well  was drilled  on                                                               
Cairn, which was drilled off of  gravel at Kuparuk; the Putu well                                                               
was drilled  off of CD4 into  the Narwhal; seven well  tests were                                                               
done; two reentries were made in  Willow and four other new wells                                                               
were drilled;  two rigs were  running; there were about  54 miles                                                               
of  ice roads  for the  exploration program  and about  147 miles                                                               
equivalent  for all  of the  work done  by ConocoPhillips  in the                                                               
NPR-A; and  about 400 jobs  were associated with  the exploration                                                               
projects.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR.  JEPSEN said  the  map  on slide  8  depicts the  exploration                                                               
prospects that  ConocoPhillips has  yet to  drill.   He explained                                                               
that Willow, West Willow, and  the Narwhal Trend are discoveries,                                                               
while  the dark  orange  blobs are  potential accumulations  that                                                               
have  been  identified from  seismic.    ConocoPhillips has  only                                                               
tested about 25 percent of  its exploration portfolio, he pointed                                                               
out.   The company plans to  start drilling next year  in some of                                                               
these additional opportunities  in the hope of  finding more oil,                                                               
he said, which is  the reason why the red bars  were faded out on                                                               
the graph he provided at the start of his presentation.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:29:41 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR.  JEPSEN moved  to slide  9 and  discussed his  company's core                                                               
field activity.  He said  ConocoPhillips currently has seven rigs                                                               
running    two  are workover  rigs at  Kuparuk, one  is a  coiled                                                               
tubing  (CT) rig,  three  are  development rigs,  and  one is  an                                                               
exploration rig.   But,  he added,  towards the  end of  2019 the                                                               
number of  rigs will be  down to  three.  He  said ConocoPhillips                                                               
has about  a three rig  continuous drilling program that  will be                                                               
in place by the end of 2019.   Once the ERD rig is brought out by                                                               
the  second quarter  of 2020,  he continued,  the number  of rigs                                                               
will go up to  four for the rest of 2020.   The focus at Kuparuk,                                                               
he  explained, is  infill drilling  to find  pockets of  oil that                                                               
were missed,  as well  as continued  enhanced oil  recovery (EOR)                                                               
implementation.  He related that  ConocoPhillips is providing the                                                               
infrastructure  for other  companies that  are developing  plays,                                                               
such  as Caelus,  ENI, Brooks  Range, and  Oil Search.   He  said                                                               
these other  companies all drive  the roads, use  camps belonging                                                               
to  ConocoPhillips, and  use the  common  carriage pipelines  for                                                               
moving oil  to market.  The  focus at Alpine, he  noted, includes                                                               
development drilling  at CD5 and  Fiord West, and  development at                                                               
Putu, along with continued EOR implementation.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
2:31:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. JEPSEN explained that slide 10  is his company's version of a                                                               
map by  the Department  of Natural  Resources (DNR)  that depicts                                                               
all of  the opportunities on the  North Slope.  The  core fields,                                                               
he  pointed out,  still take  a lot  of attention  and are  still                                                               
where a  fair amount  of his  company's money  goes.   Those core                                                               
fields are  the heart and lungs  of the North Slope,  he advised,                                                               
and must be kept healthy  because they provide the infrastructure                                                               
that makes possible  the other smaller developments.   He posed a                                                               
hypothetical  scenario  in  which  all the  production  from  new                                                               
developments - like  Liberty, Pikka, Nuna, and the  places he has                                                               
talked  about  -  come  on  stream  in  one  day,  and  said  the                                                               
production would  be between 350,000  and 400,000 barrels  a day.                                                               
In  actuality they  will come  on stream  at different  times, he                                                               
continued.   Mr. Jepsen related that,  assuming everything talked                                                               
about here happens  and happens in the timeframe  talked about by                                                               
proponents, new  production could be  200,000 barrels a  day with                                                               
an  estimated $13  billion in  capital expenditures  (capex) over                                                               
the next 7-8 years  to develop all of this.   He pointed out that                                                               
the projects  being talked about  aren't just concepts,  they are                                                               
either being built, like GMT2,  or are in the permitting process.                                                               
He urged  members to  have confidence that  results will  be seen                                                               
from this.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:32:51 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. JEPSEN turned to  a map of the Lower 48 on  slide 11 and said                                                               
the good news story on  the North Slope isn't without challenges.                                                               
One challenge, he noted, is  all the opportunities for investment                                                               
elsewhere  and the  "unconventionals"  in the  Lower  48 are  the                                                               
center of  gravity for investment.   He explained that  the green                                                               
areas   on   the   map   denote    oil   accumulations   in   the                                                               
unconventionals, with  the big  three being  the Eagle  Ford, the                                                               
Permian, and the Bakken.  He said  the areas shown in red are the                                                               
natural gas plays,  with the Marcellus being  a huge accumulation                                                               
at 400  trillion cubic feet of  gas (TCFG).  He  pointed out that                                                               
the  numbers  for  the  Lower  48  unconventionals  are  multiple                                                               
Prudhoe Bays; for example, Eagle  Ford's 35-60 billion barrels of                                                               
oil  equivalent (BBOE)  is five  times Prudhoe  Bay's 13-14  BBOE                                                               
recoverable.   Therefore, he continued, attracting  investment to                                                               
Alaska is  a big  challenge because  [the Lower  48] has  tens of                                                               
thousands of drilling opportunities, has  a lower cost of supply,                                                               
is closer  to market, is easier  to permit, and by  and large has                                                               
had stable fiscal policies.  He  explained that cost of supply is                                                               
the metric that most of the  industry is using today and it means                                                               
breakeven price at  10 percent discount rate.  He  added that for                                                               
producers like ConocoPhillips, it  has been helpful that Alaska's                                                               
fiscal policy has been pretty  stable since the passage of Senate                                                               
Bill 21 and the citizens' initiative.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:34:25 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SPOHNHOLZ recalled that  ConocoPhillips had a goal                                                               
a  few years  ago of  trying to  get production  in Alaska  to be                                                               
profitable at $40 per barrel.   She asked where the company is in                                                               
that process.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. JEPSEN replied that that  is still the goal because competing                                                               
for capital cannot be done without meeting that hurdle.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SPOHNHOLZ asked what  the timeframe is for meeting                                                               
that goal.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. JEPSEN responded that ConocoPhillips is doing it.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SPOHNHOLZ remarked that that is fantastic.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:34:54 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. JEPSEN  turned to  slide 12  and concluded  his presentation.                                                               
He specified  that as a  competing business,  ConocoPhillips must                                                               
always have  access to lands  with more resource.   Regarding the                                                               
regulatory side,  he said  Alaska does  pretty well,  although it                                                               
takes a bit  longer than other places to get  permits.  He stated                                                               
that having  a stable, competitive fiscal  environment has played                                                               
a key  role in his  company's decision to continue  investing the                                                               
billions of dollars  that he has talked about.   If there were an                                                               
increase in the  tax rate, he advised, it could  be expected that                                                               
ConocoPhillips would  act like rational  investors by  looking at                                                               
the economics,  and if not  competitive then those  dollars would                                                               
go elsewhere since the company does not lack for opportunities.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:36:20 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DAMIAN BILBAO,  Vice President,  Commercial Ventures,  BP Alaska,                                                               
along  with  Scott  Digert, provided  a  PowerPoint  presentation                                                               
titled "House Resources,"  dated May 2019.  He  displayed slide 2                                                               
and said  the top  left graph  depicts global  oil demand  to the                                                               
year 2050.   He said today's demand is about  100 billion barrels                                                               
a day  and BP  sees that  continuing to  increase with  a billion                                                               
more people expected  on the planet through 2050,  two billion of                                                               
them currently without access to  primary energy who are going to                                                               
continue to  seek that access moving  forward.  But, he  noted, a                                                               
diversified [energy]  supply is  seen coming from  renewables and                                                               
natural gas,  and so  as the  2040s and  2050s are  approached BP                                                               
sees  a  tip  over  point" in  global oil  demand.   However,  he                                                               
continued, an  interesting dynamic  is seen  when looking  at oil                                                               
supplies,  which are  depicted on  the  bottom right  graph.   He                                                               
explained that the left bar on  the graph depicts all the barrels                                                               
that are  in the ground in  various regions around the  world and                                                               
the  right  bar  depicts  the  sum of  all  the  demand  that  is                                                               
represented on  the top left  graph.   He pointed out  that there                                                               
are two barrels  in the ground around the world  for every barrel                                                               
that  is going  to be  required  over the  next several  decades,                                                               
meaning  half of  those barrels  are going  to end  up not  being                                                               
produced while  the rest  of the  barrels compete  for investment                                                               
and make  their way  to market.   So, he  asked, where  does that                                                               
position Alaska in that conversation?                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BILBAO  turned  to  slide  3 to  answer  this  question.  He                                                               
explained that  the graphic shows  how all the  different barrels                                                               
of oil in the ground around  the world compete against each other                                                               
on a cost  supply basis in the year 2025,  assuming 10-12 million                                                               
more barrels  of oil are going  to be required.   He said looking                                                               
from left  to right along the  x-axis shows there is  a long list                                                               
of oil sources throughout the Lower  48 and around the world that                                                               
are going  to be cheaper to  produce than Alaska.   He noted that                                                               
Alaska is  in the third  quartile of competitiveness  relative to                                                               
other potential  sources.  He  further noted that  Alaska becomes                                                               
more  or less  competitive (moves  left  or right  on the  graph,                                                               
respectively)  for investment  depending  upon whether  [Alaska's                                                               
industry] becomes more efficient,  uses new technology, or counts                                                               
on a change in the fiscal  regime.  He reminded committee members                                                               
that  when Senate  Bill 21  passed [in  2013], the  legislature's                                                               
consultants said  Alaska would move  from the fourth  quartile of                                                               
competitiveness  into  the third  quartile,  which  is what  this                                                               
slide from Wood Mackenzie reflects today.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:40:00 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN  returned to slide  2 and asked  what "CIS"                                                               
stands for in the bar labeled technically recoverable resources.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR. BILBAO  replied it  is former  Soviet countries.   Responding                                                               
further, he confirmed that Russia is included in that.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:40:32 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. BILBAO  moved to slide  4 and  resumed his presentation.   He                                                               
said  the  graphic  provides  a comparison  of  six  years  under                                                               
Alaska's Clear  and Equitable  Share (ACES)  and six  years under                                                               
Senate  Bill 21.   He  pointed out  that [during  the time  under                                                               
ACES] the overall production from  the North Slope, or production                                                               
down TAPS,  declined by 185,000  barrels a day, an  equivalent to                                                               
more  than 1.5  times the  size  of Kuparuk,  the second  largest                                                               
field in North  America when it was discovered.   After six years                                                               
under Senate Bill  21, he continued, there has  been a flattening                                                               
of  production to  [a  decline]  of 18,000  barrels  a  day.   He                                                               
explained this is  because investment has shifted to  Alaska in a                                                               
way  that wasn't  there during  ACES and  because Senate  Bill 21                                                               
creates  a  fundamental  policy  incentive  and  requirement  for                                                               
production.  To  offset [Alaska's] high 35 percent  base rate, he                                                               
said, the  producer needs to pull  the barrels out of  the ground                                                               
and bring the  barrels to market to earn the  credits, and so the                                                               
policy of Senate Bill 21 is working.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BILBAO turned  to slide  5 and  discussed what  a 1  percent                                                               
decline under  Senate Bill  21 versus a  6 percent  decline under                                                               
ACES means  for the State of  Alaska going forward for  40 years.                                                               
He explained the graph takes a  common starting point and the top                                                               
light blue line is a 1 percent  decline and the dark blue line is                                                               
a  6 percent  decline,  and  the difference  between  them is  an                                                               
additional $50 billion of revenue to  the state under a 1 percent                                                               
decline.    He  said  policies that  incentivize  production  and                                                               
encourage a decline  of 1 percent or less are  going to result in                                                               
greater revenue to the State of  Alaska over time.  He added that                                                               
BP Alaska believes  there is at least another 40  years of oil to                                                               
produce  from  the North  Slope  that  can  compete in  the  very                                                               
competitive landscape he previously talked about.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
2:43:14 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  RAUSCHER  referenced  the ongoing  argument  over                                                               
whether credits  should be repealed.   He inquired how  repeal of                                                               
the credits would  factor into the way that BP  Alaska would look                                                               
toward production and exploration.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BILBAO offered  his recognition  of the  difficult challenge                                                               
before the legislature.   In regard to how repeal  of the oil tax                                                               
credits would  affect BP Alaska's  investment decisions,  he said                                                               
it  would  effectively  raise  taxes  on  the  industry  by  $1.3                                                               
billion.   Referring  to the  graph on  slide 3,  he said  a $1.3                                                               
billion tax  increase on the  industry would shift Alaska  to the                                                               
right in competitiveness and would  cause other places around the                                                               
world to compete  more effectively for investment.   For example,                                                               
he continued, the many fields in  the Lower 48 that are multiples                                                               
the size of Prudhoe Bay, that  are closer to market, and that are                                                               
without  Arctic  conditions  would compete  more  effectively  if                                                               
Alaska were to shift to the right.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RAUSCHER  recalled that the  previous presentation                                                               
had Russia  steady and Saudi  Arabia very  steady.  He  asked why                                                               
these countries are so steady in their production.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR.  BILBAO answered  that  keeping a  field  flat is  incredibly                                                               
challenging, so  keeping a  Russian or  Saudi Arabian  field flat                                                               
requires  a  tremendous  amount  of  investment  to  start  with.                                                               
Second, he  said, a  technological shift  in U.S.  production has                                                               
enabled the  shale revolution and is  increasing the productivity                                                               
of each  well that is drilled.   So, he continued,  there is more                                                               
production per well and more  production in areas where there was                                                               
no production  before, while at  the same time  mature production                                                               
is being  seen in other  places around  the world.   He qualified                                                               
that this is his judgment and  therefore he would have to go back                                                               
and look at the data to verify his answer.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:46:49 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE RASMUSSEN  asked what kind  of impact it  would be                                                               
to reduce the tax credits by $1 instead of repealing them.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. BILBAO  performed a "back  of the envelope" calculation.   He                                                               
calculated that if  the total in credits is $1.3  billion when it                                                               
is $8 a  credit, reducing it $1 is one-eighth  and so a reduction                                                               
of about  12.5 percent, which  would be  a tax increase  of about                                                               
$162 million for each $1 change  in the tax credit.  He qualified                                                               
that  this would  vary depending  on oil  price and  company, but                                                               
that  a  tax  increase  of  $162 million  is  the  equivalent  of                                                               
multiple rigs running on the North  Slope for a year, so it would                                                               
be a material impact on industry's ability to fund activity.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  RASMUSSEN asked  how  much  impact on  production                                                               
would a tax increase of $150 million cause.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. BILBAO  answered he cannot  state specifically what  it would                                                               
be for that  amount, but he can  say that going from  a 1 percent                                                               
decline  to a  6 percent  decline would  mean about  25,000 fewer                                                               
barrels a  day going  down TAPS each  year, which  then compounds                                                               
itself.   He  said 25,000  barrels  a day  less per  year is  the                                                               
equivalent of one or two new oil fields coming online in a year.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
2:48:38 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SCOTT DIGERT, Resource Development  Area Manager, Greater Prudhoe                                                               
Bay, BP Alaska,  Alaska, displayed slide 6 and said  that in 2017                                                               
BP  Alaska  celebrated  the 40th  anniversary  of  Prudhoe  Bay's                                                               
startup, which was significant because  the field was designed to                                                               
operate for  30 years.  Now,  40 years later, he  continued, 12.7                                                               
billion  barrels  have  been  produced, a  third  more  than  the                                                               
original estimate of 9.6 billion  recoverable barrels.  Referring                                                               
to  the PBS40  Prudhoe Bay  Seismic Survey,  he said  "PBS40" was                                                               
shortened  from "PBS40More"  and  the aspiration  now  is how  to                                                               
sustain Prudhoe Bay  for another 40 years and how  to provide the                                                               
continuing level of investment,  technology, innovation, and hard                                                               
work that has gotten BP Alaska to where it is today.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. DIGERT moved to slide 7  and said the jagged grey dashed line                                                               
delineates the Prudhoe Bay Unit  boundary.  Two surveys have been                                                               
done, he noted.   The 2015 seismic survey  was conducted offshore                                                               
with boats and shallow water  techniques and the land survey used                                                               
a new technique called Independent  Source and Sweep (ISS), which                                                               
enabled a  lot more area  to be covered  with the same  number of                                                               
vibrator  units running  at the  same  time.   The ISS  technique                                                               
worked so well,  he stated, that in 2019 the  technology was used                                                               
to do  the PBS40  survey on  the rest  of Prudhoe  Bay.   The 450                                                               
square miles  completed this winter  would previously  have taken                                                               
two to  three seasons to  shoot, he  explained, but with  the new                                                               
ISS technology  it only  took one season  and provided  a 10-fold                                                               
increase in  the data density.   So, ISS is better  and larger at                                                               
the same time, he added.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. DIGERT  reported that BP  Alaska is  now going back  into its                                                               
computing system and joining the 2015  and 2019 surveys.  He said                                                               
that for  the first  time in Prudhoe  Bay's history,  the company                                                               
has  one  survey  using equivalent  technology  over  the  entire                                                               
field.   This is  significant, he elaborated,  because it  is the                                                               
basis  used  to  target  new  wells and  is  about  refining  the                                                               
targeting  to  smaller and  smaller  targets  to find  the  right                                                               
places to drill.   He recalled that the initial  wells drilled in                                                               
Prudhoe  encountered a  nearly 400-foot  oil column  so targeting                                                               
wasn't difficult   another well  was just drilled 1,500 feet away                                                               
from the last well  and oil would be there.  Now,  he said, it is                                                               
down to columns  that are 15-20 feet thick and  having to go into                                                               
very small  faulted compartments that  may not have  already been                                                               
swept  by oil  or water.   Right  now, he  explained, Prudhoe  is                                                               
mostly filled with gas, has a lot  of water, and has a little bit                                                               
of oil left, so getting back  to these oil pockets that BP Alaska                                                               
is drilling  for requires better  and better resolution  and that                                                               
is what this survey is meant to do.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
2:52:32 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. DIGERT discussed  the schematic on slide 8  depicting how the                                                               
survey was  executed.   He said  the survey  started on  the west                                                               
side  of the  unit and  worked across  to the  east.   He brought                                                               
attention  to the  area labeled  "Ice Check"  and explained  that                                                               
equipment is moved  ahead of the survey units to  look at the ice                                                               
thickness  on lakes  and  rivers  to determine  if  the ice  will                                                               
safely  hold  the  90,000-pound vibrators  and  if  hazards  like                                                               
snowdrifts  and steep  banks  have been  correctly  located.   In                                                               
every unit  is a  sophisticated GPS  system that  has all  of the                                                               
hazards  marked automatically  so  it  is known  when  a unit  is                                                               
entering a hazard zone  or a safe zone, he said.   Behind the ice                                                               
check  equipment, he  continued,  geophones are  put down  (green                                                               
area labeled "Layout"), to receive  the signal from the vibrators                                                               
and the information is actually  recorded on the geophones in the                                                               
blue  area labeled  "Active."   Following  that is  the red  line                                                               
labeled  "Vibes,"  which  is where  the  vibrators  are  actually                                                               
operating, he said.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR.  DIGERT  elaborated  that  about   a  dozen  tracked  vehicle                                                               
vibrators are  used, each  with a  big plate  in the  middle that                                                               
presses  down under  the snow  and acts  like a  speaker, with  a                                                               
sweep from 3  hertz to about 105 hertz over  30 seconds, which is                                                               
equivalent in  a sonic  register to  the very low  base end  of a                                                               
home stereo.   This  wave of  low base  rumble, he  explained, is                                                               
picked up as it passes down  through the ground and every time it                                                               
transitions from one  kind of rock strata to another  it causes a                                                               
reflection that is picked up by  the geophones.  When done enough                                                               
times, he said,  it results in a very detailed  3-D image of what                                                               
is down below.  The vibration  cannot be heard or felt, even when                                                               
standing right next  to the vibrator, he added.   Each time after                                                               
the plate  goes down and  comes back up,  he said, the  rig moves                                                               
100 feet ahead  and does it again.  Work  is conducted about five                                                               
miles  ahead of  the vibrators  and the  geophones are  picked up                                                               
about  five miles  behind  the  units, he  continued.   Once  the                                                               
geophones  are  picked up,  the  information  is downloaded,  the                                                               
process is  moved to the  next row  up ahead, and  information is                                                               
acquired again.   He pointed  out that the  pink area on  the far                                                               
left of the  schematic is the completed area and  the area to the                                                               
far right has yet to be swept.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
2:55:36 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. DIGERT displayed slide 9 and  noted that the top left picture                                                               
is the  ice check machine,  which is  a Tucker Snowcat  pulling a                                                               
ground-penetrating  radar  unit.    He  said  the  ice  thickness                                                               
information is  recorded, and lake  ice needs  to be at  least 55                                                               
inches  thick for  the vibrator  units.   The middle  picture, he                                                               
explained,  is of  a wireless  receiver that  records to  memory.                                                               
This geophone/microphone unit is laid  on the snow and includes a                                                               
battery,  receiver  pack,  and  recording  unit,  he  elaborated.                                                               
Twenty days  later it is  picked up, the  information downloaded,                                                               
the  data cleared,  and then  it is  deployed again.   The  right                                                               
picture, he said, is of a  vibrator unit on wheels rather than on                                                               
tracks, which saves almost 35,000 pounds of weight.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR. DIGERT  turned to slide  10 and  concluded his portion  of BP                                                               
Alaska's presentation.   He summarized  by highlighting  that the                                                               
[2019  PBS40] seismic  survey:   covered  450  square miles;  was                                                               
accomplished  in  one  season (three  months);  was  finished  on                                                               
4/17/19; acquired 561,000 sources;  had 78,00 receiver locations;                                                               
acquired  7.5 billion  traces, a  trace being  one source  to one                                                               
microphone; and  the units  were driven  the equivalent  of twice                                                               
around the world  at the same latitude.   He said super-computers                                                               
located  in Houston,  Texas, will  now process  the more  than 52                                                               
terabytes of information.   The information is expected  to be up                                                               
on BP Alaska's office computers  by mid-summer, he continued, and                                                               
he expects  to start generating targets  by the end of  the year.                                                               
If successful, this  will feed the next decade or  so of drilling                                                               
at Prudhoe Bay, he stated.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN asked how long  the vibration cycle is once                                                               
the plate touches the ground.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MR. DIGERT replied  it takes 35 seconds to do  one sweep and then                                                               
the unit is moved another 120 feet and it is done again.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:58:54 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
J.  BENJAMIN  JOHNSON, President/CEO/Director,  BlueCrest  Energy                                                               
Inc.,  provided  a   PowerPoint  presentation  titled  "BlueCrest                                                               
Cosmopolitan Overview," dated  5/1/19.  He began  by pointing out                                                               
that  the major  oil companies  have tremendous  assets and  huge                                                               
staffs, while  BlueCrest is  a tiny company.   He  said BlueCrest                                                               
and other  small companies coming  to Alaska have  brought state-                                                               
of-the-art technology.   Turning to a map of Cook  Inlet Basin on                                                               
slide  2, he  noted that  BlueCrest's Cosmopolitan  Field is  the                                                               
southern-most field in Alaska.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. Johnson  moved to  slide 3 and  stated that  the Cosmopolitan                                                               
Unit is  located offshore, has  had 11  wells drilled, and  a 3-D                                                               
seismic survey  and analysis have  been done.  He  said BlueCrest                                                               
knows that about  one-half billion barrels of oil  and about one-                                                               
quarter of a trillion cubic feet  of gas are in the ground there,                                                               
but it is  unknown how much of  that the company will  be able to                                                               
get out of the ground and when.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR TARR requested Mr. Johnson  to point out the location of                                                               
the onshore surface lease.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. JOHNSON  replied it  is about seven  miles north  of downtown                                                               
Anchor Point on the edge of Cook Inlet.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
3:00:51 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. JOHNSON displayed  slide 4 and resumed his  presentation.  He                                                               
explained that this oil and  gas discovery is located three miles                                                               
offshore.  However,  he continued, BlueCrest did not  want to put                                                               
in  an offshore  oil platform  to  develop the  reservoir, so  an                                                               
extended-reach  drilling (ERD)  rig is  being used  to drill  the                                                               
wells from  onshore and  there is  no chance  of an  offshore oil                                                               
spill with  this method.   He noted  that BlueCrest's ERD  rig is                                                               
currently the most  powerful drilling rig in Alaska,  but it will                                                               
be surpassed when ConocoPhillips gets its  new ERD rig going.  He                                                               
stated that  the Cosmopolitan gas  supply is dry, no  liquids are                                                               
produced with the  gas, and the plan is to  develop this gas with                                                               
a subsea option.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MR.  JOHNSON  said the  picture  on  slide  5 is  of  BlueCrest's                                                               
onshore facility.   He  explained the picture  looks to  the west                                                               
[across Cook Inlet]  and the subsea reservoirs  are delineated on                                                               
the picture.   He  noted slide 6  depicts the  onshore facility's                                                               
layout and  said the facility  will handle as much  production as                                                               
will ever be needed there.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MR. JOHNSON  projected slide 7  and stated that to  his knowledge                                                               
BlueCrest is the first in the world  to drill down and then up by                                                               
using extended reach  drilling, as depicted by the  black line on                                                               
the  schematic which  represents a  recently drilled  well called                                                               
the H12.   In  the H12,  he said,  BlueCrest drilled  over 31,000                                                               
feet of  total measured depth,  a massive  project.  He  moved to                                                               
slide 8 and  explained the schematic is a  3-D seismic subsurface                                                               
rendering  of   two  of   the  many   different  sands   [in  the                                                               
Cosmopolitan structure],  the top  one being a  gas sand  and the                                                               
bottom one  an oil  sand.   He drew attention  to the  well paths                                                               
going into the sands.  Moving  to slide 9, a schematic of current                                                               
Cosmopolitan well paths, he said  these "fishbone" wells have yet                                                               
to be  seen anywhere else  in the world    the wells  are drilled                                                               
down  and then  up and  each rib  is the  equivalent of  one well                                                               
drilled from the surface onshore                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
3:03:47 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  TARR   inquired  whether  BlueCrest  or   someone  else                                                               
developed this fishbone technology.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR. JOHNSON  responded that  BlueCrest developed  this technology                                                               
itself, using its great technical  staff and consultants, many of                                                               
whom work with people on the North Slope.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:04:06 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. JOHNSON moved to the schematic  on slide 10 and continued his                                                               
presentation.  He  stated that BlueCrest has proven  it can drill                                                               
fishbone wells  and is now  working on  the next generation.   He                                                               
said BlueCrest is currently permitting  its next well, which will                                                               
be three fishbone wells out of  one main wellbore to the surface.                                                               
He  pointed out  that  this  reduces the  cost  of  the well  and                                                               
tremendously speeds up the time to production.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR. JOHNSON  said the  production graph on  slide 11  shows where                                                               
things currently  are.  He explained  that new wells come  on but                                                               
decline quickly at  first and then level out, and  more wells are                                                               
drilled,  and they  decline.   Right now,  he said,  BlueCrest is                                                               
producing 1,800-2,000  barrels a day  of oil and about  7 million                                                               
cubic feet  a day  of gas.   He noted that  each 1  million cubic                                                               
feet a day of gas is equivalent  in royalty to the state of about                                                               
100 barrels of oil.  But, he added, this is just the start.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. JOHNSON  turned to slide  12 and reported that  BlueCrest has                                                               
about 20 more  wells it can drill and  develop [in Cosmopolitan].                                                               
The key here  is stability, he stressed, BlueCrest  chose to come                                                               
to Alaska  because of the  state's extremely positive  tax credit                                                               
program.   The company invested  roughly $150-200  million before                                                               
getting the  first drop of  oil, he said,  but at that  point the                                                               
tax  credit program  suddenly  changed.   BlueCrest  was able  to                                                               
adapt  to that,  he continued,  but  then it  didn't receive  the                                                               
money  it  was owed  for  the  tax  credits, which  made  another                                                               
challenge.  BlueCrest  is working through that and  will get this                                                               
development done, he  stated.  However, he  related, BlueCrest is                                                               
a little  company and  must therefore  deal with  investors every                                                               
month  when it  comes to  needing more  money for  this or  that.                                                               
These investors invest all over the  world, he advised, and it is                                                               
absolutely  a competition  between  what he  is  vouching for  in                                                               
Alaska and other  places around the world.  He  said he therefore                                                               
encourages  committee   members  to   please  provide   a  stable                                                               
environment, wherever it  is.  He offered his  opinion that right                                                               
now   it  works,   and  companies   are   investing  in   today's                                                               
environment.   He  pointed out  that even  a little  change is  a                                                               
little leak  in the dam  and causes  investors to worry  that the                                                               
policy is going to be changed going forward.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
3:07:23 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  RASMUSSEN offered  her  appreciation  to all  the                                                               
presenters.   She agreed  that a  change viewed  as small  by the                                                               
state would  increase the costs to  investors and be viewed  as a                                                               
substantial change.  She offered her  hope that the state will be                                                               
able to keep continued stability for oil and gas.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MR. JOHNSON responded  that changing [the tax regime]  in any way                                                               
is  important because  that signals  instability and  uncertainty                                                               
for the future.  He again encouraged it be kept constant.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
3:08:09 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  HANNAN  related that  members  receive  a lot  of                                                               
political  pressure,  especially  in the  current  situation,  to                                                               
resolve  the state's  fiscal dilemma.   The  two things  that get                                                               
talked about the most often, she  said, are repealing the oil tax                                                               
credits and  the other is instituting  an income tax.   She noted                                                               
that members  hear from industry  about the tax credits,  but not                                                               
about an  income tax.  She  inquired whether Mr. Johnson  is in a                                                               
position where he could answer with his personal opinion.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR.  JOHNSON  replied he  cannot  answer  personally and  is  not                                                               
prepared today to  talk about an income tax.   However, he added,                                                               
an income  tax is another tax  and an increased cost  to industry                                                               
as well as to people.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE HANNAN  asked whether  BlueCrest is  a corporation                                                               
or a limited liability company (LLC).                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MR. JOHNSON responded that BlueCrest is a corporation.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. JOHNSON,  in response to  Co-Chair Tarr,  confirmed BlueCrest                                                               
is privately held by investors and is not publicly traded.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
3:09:20 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  TALERICO noted  he  always checks  on the  safety                                                               
records of  the companies  in Alaska because  it is  important to                                                               
always send employees  home in the same condition  that they came                                                               
to work in.  He expressed his appreciation for the safety                                                                       
records of the companies in Alaska.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MR. JOHNSON concurred  that protecting employees, as  well as the                                                               
environment, are the  most important things and  that profits are                                                               
secondary.   He said  this has  worked and  BlueCrest has  a very                                                               
good safety record.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
3:11:17 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
There being no further business before the committee, the House                                                                 
Resources Standing Committee meeting was adjourned at 3:11 p.m.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
HRES AOGA Presentation 05.01.19.pdf HRES 5/1/2019 1:00:00 PM
HRES Oil & Gas Presentations
AOGA Supporting Document - CookInlet Activity Map - Oct 2018.pdf HRES 5/1/2019 1:00:00 PM
HRES Oil & Gas Presentations
AOGA Supporting Document - NSActivity Map - Oct. 2018.pdf HRES 5/1/2019 1:00:00 PM
HRES Oil & Gas Presentations
AOGA Supporting Document - Optimizing Pipeline Performance Article.pdf HRES 5/1/2019 1:00:00 PM
HRES Oil & Gas Presentations
HRES BP Presentation 05.01.19.pdf HRES 5/1/2019 1:00:00 PM
HRES Oil & Gas Presentations
HRES BlueCrest Energy Overview 05.01.19.pdf HRES 5/1/2019 1:00:00 PM
HRES Oil & Gas Presentations
HRES ConocoPhillips Presentation 05.01.19.pdf HRES 5/1/2019 1:00:00 PM
HRES Oil & Gas Presentations