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Planning for MegaProject Success

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Most seismically active zone in North America ... Native lifestyles. Transportation, other human land uses. 800 mile trench across Alaska ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Planning for MegaProject Success


1
Planning for Mega-Project Success
  • Challenges and Opportunities of the Alaska Gas
    Pipeline

2
Development of Alaska Natural Gas40 years and
counting
  • 1960s Discovery of North Slope Oil
  • 30 trillion cubic feet of natural gas
  • 1970s Canada-US Treaty, Presidential Selection
  • 1980s De-regulation of US natural gas, pre-build
    of gas lines from Canada to US
  • 1990s Canada movement toward a market approach
    depletion of giant fields supply and price
    concerns
  • 2000s Serious efforts toward project approval
    by North Slope producers

3
The Project
  • 4000 mile high-pressure buried natural gas
    pipeline from Arctic Ocean at Prudhoe Bay, Alaska
    to Chicago, Illinois
  • Worlds largest natural gas treatment plant,
    bordering the Arctic Ocean
  • Potential intermediate Natural Gas Liquids plant
    in Canada or US

4
The Gas
  • Prudhoe Bay, Point Thomson, other fields leased
    by BP, ExxonMobil, ConocoPhillips
  • Oil produced at Prudhoe, produced gas is
    re-injected
  • Point Thomson not yet on-line
  • Total gas 30 trillion cu ft
  • Around 6 of US annual demand, 30 years

5
US Demand for Natural Gas
  • Increasing year by year
  • Clean Air Act, electric power plants
  • Combined cycle plants
  • Less seasonally driven
  • Nationwide gas transmission lines, delivery
    infrastructure
  • Often the preferred energy source

6
Supply
  • Depletion of giant fields
  • Disappointing conventional discoveries
  • Barriers to entry
  • Emergence of coal-bed methane
  • Tight sands technologies
  • LNG terminal projects
  • Rising costs

7
Price per mcf
  • Since 2000, 2.00 - 14.00 and higher
  • 7.00 or so today
  • Even at 7.00, projects being delayed or canceled
    (high costs)
  • Just during 2001 Producer pipeline study, price
    moved from 10.00 back down to 2.00

What will be the price between 2020 and 2050?
8
Fun with numbers (and people)
  • 48-52 inch steel pipe, buried 4000 miles from
    Arctic to Chicago, high pressure (2000-2500 psi)
  • Worlds largest natural gas treatment plant on
    the Arctic Ocean
  • Hundreds of miles in permafrost
  • Most seismically active zone in North America
  • All pipeline steel produced for 2 years,
    worldwide
  • 7 Alaska tribal regions, 15-25 First Nations,
    State lands
  • 40 billion?
  • 12 year project?

9
Environmental Challenge
  • Salmon-spawning streams
  • Animal migration
  • Historic preservation
  • Culturally-significant sites
  • Native lifestyles
  • Transportation, other human land uses
  • 800 mile trench across Alaska
  • Permafrost ? Breakup ? SOIL EROSION

10
Safety
  • 50 million man-hours
  • In harsh environment
  • In winter
  • In dark
  • Along Alaska Highway
  • High pressure pipeline
  • Local hire and training mandates

11
Risks Barriers to Project Success
  • Taxes and royalties
  • Price of steel
  • Price of labor
  • Engineering challenges
  • Stakeholder interests
  • Political leadership

Stable business environment largely influenced by
governments
12
Project Planning 2001ff
  • 150 people, 125 million
  • Technical, environmental, land issues
  • Costs and schedule
  • 80 ready for FERC application
  • Support of major Alaska Native communities and
    significant support of First Nations
  • Right-of-way through State lands
  • Draft fiscal agreement

13
Status
  • State rejected fiscal agreement
  • State doubled government take
  • New State law set up process to pick one
    preferred pipeline project and company
  • State picked TransCanada, promising 500 million
    to plan, permit a project
  • BP and ConocoPhillips pursuing Denali Pipeline
    project independent of TCPL
  • Viability of any project remains uncertain

14
Success or Failure?
  • Producers spent millions
  • State raised taxes
  • Huge increases in costs
  • State added barriers to success
  • Project sanction legislation
  • Point Thomson lease revocation
  • Disappointed stakeholders
  • Sunk costs, no returns
  • Butwith all that

15
What if companies had proceeded in 2001?
  • Unforeseen steel demand/price
  • Unresolved First Nation issues
  • Unanticipated market/supply issues
  • Faster depletion of Prudhoe oil resource
  • Even worse-case State tax and royalty regime?
  • Financial system crisis
  • Yes, but

16
The States action has been fatal
  • Canada Good Will
  • Large First Nation Support
  • Native Alaskan Sanction
  • Congressional Approval

The government with the most to gain has thus far
thrown up the greatest roadblocks
17
What next?
  • While planning for this project, local political
    opposition killed two other energy projects in
    Maine and California, and many others
  • Despite the Supremacy Clause and Eminent Domain,
    the Federal Government has no solution to state
    and local stonewalling on energy project permits
    and public/community landowner issues
  • While we focus on the price of gasoline, and
    dream of alternative energy, we continue to
    tolerate locally politicized barriers to
    execution of even the most environmentally
    friendly energy projects of the future

18
An essential consensusA new way to move forward
  • We need a new focus on state and local barriers
    to essential energy projects
  • The emphasis should be on things important to
    national energy and economic security
  • It must be collaborative, not authoritarian
  • It must recognize the needs of the entire
    community, the nation as a whole, and our
    obligations to each other, our global friends,
    and future generations
  • Without significant changes, the promise of
    developing the environmentally friendly energy of
    the future and delivering it efficiently cannot
    be achieved

19
What?
  • (Surely not!)

A National Energy Policy?
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