Alaska officials probing BP oil, gas
wells at Prudhoe Bay after spill
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[January 15, 2019]
By Yereth Rosen
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters) - Regulators in
the U.S. state of Alaska will investigate all of the oil and natural gas
wells operated by BP Plc at its Prudhoe Bay oil field after the release
of a small amount of crude oil and gas from a well that had earlier been
shut.
The Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission (AOGCC) has scheduled a
Feb. 7 hearing “to assess the mechanical integrity of Prudhoe Bay wells
operated by BP Exploration (Alaska), Inc.,” the agency said in a notice
issued on Friday.
Last month’s leak occurred at one of 14 wells that BP had shut in 2017
following a much bigger release oil and gas then.
The most recent failure, detected on Dec. 7, released natural gas and
about two gallons of crude oil, said Megan Baldino, spokeswoman for BP
Exploration (Alaska) Inc. The gas release was brought under control two
days later, she said. There was no oil released to the tundra and no one
was injured, she said.
There are 1,780 Prudhoe Bay wells, said Baldino, adding that the company
is cooperating with the AOGCC’s investigation.
“BP is investigating the incident to determine the cause. We are
cooperating with AOGCC’s request for more information,” she said in an
email on Monday.
The earlier failure, in April 2017, caused crude oil to spray over a
roughly 1 acre (0.4 hectare) area and caused natural gas to vent for
days before it was brought under control.
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The logo of BP is seen at a petrol station in Kloten, Switzerland
October 3, 2017. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann/File Photo
That well failure was linked to permafrost thaw. The normally frozen
soil thawed, triggering movement that pushed the well up 3 to 4 feet
(1.2 meters), breaking a pressure gauge that previously regulated
the site, according to regulators.
That sparked a North Slope-wide well review ordered by the AOGCC. In
the end, BP identified and shut the 14 wells that because of an
outdated and flawed design.
In the aftermath of that incident, AOGCC officials concluded that
the permafrost thaw was the result of the wells' design flaw, not to
climate change.
However, permafrost in Prudhoe Bay, which is located on the Alaska
North Slope region above the Arctic Circle, from the area near the
tundra's surface to the depths far below it, has warmed
significantly since the 1980s in response to the rising temperatures
in that region, according to scientists at the University of
Alaska-Fairbanks.
(Reporting By Yereth Rosen in Anchorage, Alaska; editing by
Christian Schmollinger)
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