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BP proposes development with no pad, flexible pipeline
Small accumulations uneconomic with conventional facilities;
five-seven year test at Gwyder Bay
By Kristen Nelson
PNA News Editor
The absence of a gravel drilling pad and flexible pipeline distinguish
development proposals for a small accumulation at Gwydyr Bay.
BP Exploration (Alaska) Inc. has been working with regulators to find
an economic way to develop the small Sagavanirktok/Ivishak find the company
made at its Pete's Wicked exploration well in the winter of 1997, BP said,
"after the reserves were found too small to justify a conventional
development (i.e., involving a gravel road, pad, and pipeline on vertical
support members extending from T Pad to the Pete's Wicked location)."
The situation was similar, the company said, for two other small accumulations,
also Sagavanirktok/Ivishak discoveries, the Kuparuk River Delta and Point
Storkersen wells.
A proposal is now under consideration for a five-to-seven-year test beginning
in 1999. No gravel pad would be constructed at the well site - just three
10-12 foot diameter well cellar/house combinations. The Pete's Wicked
well would be re-entered during the winter from an ice pad in the Gwydyr
Bay area and two additional wells might be drilled from the same ice pad,
using conductor pipes previously installed and improved at the time of
the Pete's Wicked drilling.
Flexible pipe reusable
Flexible pipe proposed for the project was developed for offshore undersea
use, BP said, and has been in common use in the Gulf of Mexico and the
North Sea for more than 15 years. Flexible pipelines with high density
polyethylene liners have been used on the North Slope at two Prudhoe Bay
drill sites "for well tie-in lines for the past three years and have
worked well in the Arctic," the company said.
A 4-inch inner diameter line would be used. It is available in one-mile
continuous lengths, requiring only three to four joints. With the continuous
high density polyethylene liner, BP said the lines are completely corrosion
proof. After depletion of the Gwydyr Bay oil, the line could be spooled
up and reused in other applications.
Construction-related activity would begin this summer with the ordering
of project materials; project construction is slated for January-May 1999.
Approximately 2.02 miles of the line would be in two shallow lakes and
approximately 2.5 miles on tundra. The test will include "many different
line placement configurations to determine the actual impacts in a scientifically
valid manner," BP said.
To allow for caribou movement, some line will be placed directly on the
tundra. Between the lakes, a critical caribou crossing area, the line
will be raised on seven-foot vertical support members. In other areas,
the line will be raised one foot above the tundra on plastic or wooden
blocks to allow drainage and movement by flightless molting waterfowl,
shorebirds or broods. The line will also be routed to avoid areas of expected
high nesting density.
BP developed the plan for Gwydyr Bay in conjunction with the North Slope
Borough, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers, the U.S. Department of Interior Bureau of Land Management,
the Alaska Department of Natural Resources division of oil and gas, the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Alaska Department of Fish and Game.
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