Forwarded by Carol Olicker, posted by Jack Eastman Oil Industry Hesitates Over Moving Into Arctic Refuge > > March 10, 2002 > > By NEELA BANERJEE > > > > > HOUSTON, March 9 - More than three decades ago, the world's > largest energy companies led the charge to drill for oil on > the North Slope of Alaska. But now, as the debate rages > over opening the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil > exploration, those same companies remain surprisingly > silent. > > Drilling in the Arctic refuge, which has already been > approved by the House, has become a touchstone issue for > the Bush administration, and the issue promises to produce > a nasty fight in the current debate over the energy bill in > the Senate. > > Publicly, the biggest multinational petroleum companies, > like Exxon Mobil (news/quote), Royal Dutch/Shell, BP and > ChevronTexaco, back the Bush administration's assertion > that developing the oil in the Arctic refuge is critical to > the American economy. But privately, many large companies > say the prospect, solely on business terms, is not terribly > attractive. > > "Big oil companies go where there are substantial fields > and where they can produce oil economically," said Ronald > W. Chappell, a spokesman for BP Alaska, which officially > supports opening the area to drilling. Using the acronym > for the refuge, he continued, "Does ANWR have that? Who > knows?" > > Oil companies and industry experts say it is cheaper and > more promising right now to exploit large reservoirs of oil > elsewhere in the world. And it is easier: many companies > fear that drilling in the wilderness area may be blocked by > persistent litigation, or that a future president or > Congress could put the refuge out of bounds once more. > > "There is still a fair amount of exploration risk here: you > could go through eight years of litigation, a good amount > of investment, and still come up with dry holes or > uneconomic discoveries," said Gerald J. Kepes, the managing > director for exploration and production issues at the > Petroleum Finance Company, a Washington consulting firm for > oil companies. "It's not clear that this is quite the > bonanza some have said." > > Supporters and opponents alike of drilling in the Arctic > refuge have noted the reticence of the largest > multinational oil conglomerates on the issue. "They are not > present at all," a Senate aide said. > > Claire Buchan, a White House spokeswoman, said that the > administration believed that oil companies would be > interested in exploration if the refuge is opened to > drilling. "What's important is that we have this option due > to the vast potential to reduce our reliance on foreign > sources of energy," she said. > > The fight over oil drilling in the refuge has flared in > Congress every few years, and so far, opponents of drilling > have kept the area off limits. Now, proponents of drilling > smell the sharpest whiff of victory ever. > > They still face an uphill battle. The energy bill narrowly > passed last year by the House includes a passage permitting > oil exploration in the refuge. But in the Senate, two > Democrats, John Kerry of Massachusetts and Joseph I. > Lieberman of Connecticut, have threatened to filibuster any > amendment on drilling, meaning that proponents will have to > muster at least 60 members to force a vote. Given the > deepness of the divisions, the entire energy bill could > unravel if both sides tug hard enough at this single issue, > Congressional aides and energy industry executives said. > > The battle centers on drilling on the coastal plain of the > refuge, a narrow ribbon of land that stretches about 110 > miles along the Beaufort Sea. Environmentalists and > wildlife biologists say that in the summer, the coastal > plain teems with caribou and millions of migratory birds. > Drilling for oil there, they argue, would ruin one of the > few pristine wilderness areas left on the planet. > > Those who back drilling are varied and formidable, > including a bipartisan array of politicians from southern > and western states, nearly the entire political > establishment of Alaska and several labor unions, led by > the Teamsters. They contend that the coastal plain is a > snowbound wasteland, and the oil there could be developed > with little environmental damage. They say the coastal > plain's reservoirs hold about 16 billion barrels of oil, or > enough to meet the country's appetite for petroleum for a > little more than two years. > > The oil companies themselves, however, are less certain of > how much oil lies below the coastal plain. No precise data > about the amount of oil in the plain is publicly available. > In the 1980's, BP and what then was the Chevron Corporation > (news/quote) drilled an exploratory well on private land > owned by native tribes that is inside the refuge, but BP > said that those results were a proprietary secret. The > United States Geological Survey estimates that at oil > prices around $20 a barrel, the amount of oil that could be > recovered economically from the federally controlled part > of the coastal plain is 3.2 billion barrels. > > Of course, companies face severe difficulties in developing > oil fields overseas, from the rough winters in the North > Sea to the endemic corruption in Nigeria to the > long-running civil war in Angola. But the size of the > discoveries and the relative cheapness of exploiting them > often make the investments worthwhile. Within each oil > company, prospects in the Arctic refuge would be measured > against fields elsewhere. A political mandate to explore > the region, executives of several major oil companies said, > would not necessarily compel them to rush into the area. > > "All our Alaska projects need to compete worldwide with > other Phillips projects," said Dawn Patience, a spokeswoman > in Alaska for Phillips Petroleum (news/quote), the largest > oil producer on the North Slope. "And it does come down to > economics." > > The calculus includes the usual factors like the cost of > producing oil and shipping it to market. But drilling in > the Arctic refuge holds significant political risks that > would lead to delays and with that, higher costs, oil > company officials said. > > "There will be tremendous debate or delays due to > litigation," an executive with a major oil company said. > "All that has to go into the assessment of whether that > project would be economically viable." > > Still, there would be pressure on companies already working > in Alaska, like BP, Exxon Mobil and Phillips, to bid for > leases if the area is opened to drilling. The state, which > issues so many of the permits oil companies need to work in > Alaska, might take their indifference as a slap in the > face, said environmentalists and some industry executives. > > At the same time, smaller companies, particularly those > looking for a foothold in Alaska, might be willing to take > on the risks and aggressively pursue drilling in the > refuge. "Smaller companies are involved in fewer places, > and what is a marginal opportunity for us is a big > opportunity for an independent," the executive with the > major oil company said. "This is not a huge priority for > us." > > Even without lawsuits by environmentalists, the earliest > any oil from the wildlife refuge would make it to market is > 2010, industry executives said. But development efforts > could drag out well beyond that date. "To protect the > refuge," said Deborah Williams, executive director of the > Alaska Conservation Foundation in Anchorage, "national > environmental law firms and Alaskan environmental groups > will find every opportunity to challenge drilling." > > Oil companies know too well how projects can atrophy within > a web of litigation and political resistance. They hold > hundreds of leases for places where they cannot drill > because of litigation, Congressional action or a change of > presidential administration. Among them are Bristol Bay in > Alaska, the western and eastern seaboards of the United > States and the eastern part of the Gulf of Mexico. > > The champions of drilling in the refuge are the State of > Alaska and the unions. In fiscal 2001, 82 percent of the > unrestricted funds in the state budget came from the > petroleum industry, which is also a major employer. But oil > production on the North Slope has fallen by half since its > peak of two million barrels a day in 1988, said Mark D. > Myers, director of the State Division of Oil and Gas. > > And as oil production dwindles, so might revenues and jobs. > "The primary reason is job creation," said Jerry Hood, a > Teamsters union energy specialist. The Bush energy policy, > Mr. Hood said, "is, frankly, a way to re-employ American > workers." > > http://www.nytimes.com/2002/03/10/business/10ALAS.html?ex=1016733546&ei=1&en =db0f76d2bcb0030a > >