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The
NewsRoom
Release: #3210
Date: December 27, 2004
MMS to Evaluate Interest in Oil and Gas Sale
in Alaska's Cook Inlet
The
Minerals Management Service today issued a request for the energy
industry to provide comments on their interest in energy exploration
of the potentially resource rich federal waters of Cook Inlet in
Alaska. MMS issued its Call for Information and Nominations for Cook
Inlet Sale 199, which could provide much needed energy for use in
south-central Alaska. Cook Inlet Sale 199 is tentatively scheduled for
May 2006.
The Call is the first step in the leasing process
and is used to gather information and nominations on natural gas and
oil leasing, exploration, development and production from all
interested parties. This is the beginning of an extensive and
thorough decision-making process of whether or not there will be a
lease sale in the area.
The federal OCS area in Cook Inlet
remains relatively unexplored, with the last exploration well drilled
in 1984. Cook Inlet is important for the State of Alaska and those
who live in Anchorage and the Kenai Peninsula Borough, where residents
and industries are in need of a stable supply of energy and fuel.
This is the second Cook Inlet sale held under the 2002-2007 Five Year
Plan.
“MMS’s goal is to keep options
open both nationwide and in the State in the search for new energy.
By holding predictable sales in the federal portion of Cook Inlet we
will complement the State’s strong program to find the energy and raw
materials to keep the State’s economy growing. We hope this sale will
be an added incentive for someone to bring a drill rig into Cook
Inlet,” said MMS Regional Director John Goll.
MMS is proposing to lease in the
federal waters of Alaska’s Cook Inlet between three and 30 nautical
miles offshore. The area covers about 2.5 million acres extending just
south of Kalgin Island to just northwest of Shuyak Island. The water
depths in the area range from about 30 to 650 feet. No leasing is
proposed in Shelikof Strait.
In November 2003, MMS published a
single Environmental Impact Statement for both proposed Cook Inlet
Sales 191 and 199. In preparation for Sale 199, scheduled for May
2006, MMS will prepare a coastal zone management consistency
determination and an environmental assessment, and, if needed, a
supplemental EIS. MMS will seek public comment on the environmental
document which will focus on any new issues that may have arisen since
the EIS was prepared. All sale proposals will be available to the
public.
“This approach allows us and the
public to more easily key in on any new information or issues and is a
standard used by the State of Alaska and other federal agencies,” said
MMS Regional Director John Goll. “Our proposed sale includes a set of
stipulations that we have used successfully in the past to safeguard
the fishing and tourism which is so vital to the economy of the Cook
Inlet area,” he added.
MMS has a comprehensive regulatory
program in place which covers all aspects of the industry’s drilling
procedures that have successfully minimized risk. Several
requirements are attached to the sale to supplement these rules,
including provisions for fisheries, biological resources and use of
pipelines to transport any discovered production.
The MMS is evaluating a package of
economic incentives for Federal leases in Cook Inlet. This includes a
longer primary term of 8 years, lower minimum bid of $10 per acre,
annual rental rates of $2 per acre and royalty suspension volumes.
The RSV’s would relieve royalty payments on a producing lease up to
the first 30 million barrels of oil equivalent. The suspension
applies to both oil and natural gas and includes price floor and
ceiling thresholds.
MMS
oversees an extensive multidisciplinary Environmental Studies Program
for obtaining information for the prediction, management, and
assessment of potential effects of offshore oil and gas exploration
and development on the OCS. Currently MMS has more than 20 planned or
ongoing studies applicable to Cook Inlet information needs.
Information on the status of these studies can be obtained at
http://www.mms.gov/eppd/sciences/exp/profiles.
MMS cooperatively sponsors a Coastal Marine Institute with the
University of Alaska Fairbanks, which is conducting several of the
studies.
Comments must be received by
February 10, 2005, and may be sent to the
MMS Alaska OCS Region, 3801 Centerpoint Drive, Room 500 Anchorage, AK
99503; submitted via e-mail to AKEIS@mms.gov; hand delivered to the
above address, or faxed to MMS at 907-334-5202. Please call MMS at
907-334-5208 or toll-free at 1-800-764-2627 if you have additional
questions.
The State of Alaska receives 27%
of all revenues generated as a result of federal leases that lie
within 3-to-6 miles offshore the Alaska coast, and 50% of this money
goes into the Alaska Permanent Fund Account.
MMS, part of the U.S. Department
of the Interior, oversees 1.76 billion acres of the Outer Continental
Shelf, managing offshore energy and minerals while protecting the
human, marine, and coastal environments through advanced science and
technology research. The OCS provides 30 percent of oil and 23
percent of natural gas produced domestically, and sand used for
coastal restoration. MMS collects, accounts for, and disburses mineral
revenues from Federal and American Indian lands, with fiscal year 2004
disbursements of around $8 billion and more than $143 billion since
1982. The Land and Water Conservation Fund, which pays for
acquisition of state and federal park and recreation land, gets nearly
$1 billion a year.
Relevant Web Sites:
MMS Main Website
Alaska OCS Region Website
Media Contacts:
Christine Huffaker
(907) 334-5207
MMS: Securing Ocean Energy & Economic Value for
America
U.S. Department of the Interior
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