The Kuparuk River Oil Field, or Kuparuk, located in North Slope Borough, Alaska, United States, is the second largest oil field in North America by area. It started production in 1982, peaking in 1992. As of 2019, it produced approximately 71,021 barrels per day (~3.539×10 6 t/a) of oil for ConocoPhillips and has been estimated to have 2 billion barrels (320×10 6 m3) of recoverable oil reserves.[1] It is named for the Kuparuk River.
Kuparuk River Oil Field | |
---|---|
Country | United States |
Region | Alaska North Slope |
Offshore/onshore | onshore |
Coordinates | 70°20′14″N 149°51′01″W / 70.3372°N 149.8504°W |
Operator | ConocoPhillips |
Field history | |
Discovery | April 1969, Sinclair's Ugnu 1 well |
Start of development | 1979 |
Start of production | December 13, 1981 |
Peak of production | 322,000 barrels per day (~1.60×10 7 t/a) |
Peak year | 1992 |
Production | |
Current production of oil | 71,021 barrels per day (~3.539×10 6 t/a) |
Year of current production of oil | 2019 |
Estimated oil in place | 6,000 million barrels (~8.2×10 8 t) |
Producing formations | Kuparuk sandstone on the Colville structure |
Production history
editIn April 1969 Sinclair Oil discovered oil at the Ugnu Number 1 well, named for the nearby Ugnuravik River.[2] Oil was found in the Kuparuk sandstone on the Colville structure.[3]
In 1979 ARCO announced first production, and planned to start in 1982. Production actually began December 13, 1981, on five small gravel drilling pads. Oil recovery was expected to peak in 1986 at 250,000 barrels per day (40,000 m3/d), but did not peak until 1992 at 322,000 barrels per day (51,200 m3/d) from 371 wells.[4]
In December 2002, the production averaged 166,155 barrels per day (26,416.5 m3/d) from 448 wells, but by September 2016 the average declined to 78,755 barrels per day (12,521.0 m3/d). For the first six months of 2017 production averaged 84,334 barrels per day (13,408.0 m3/d) with a water cut of 87.4 percent. During the first half of 2019 the pool averaged 71,021 barrels per day (11,291.4 m3/d) with a water cut of 88.7 percent.[5]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Kuparuk oil field from mtri.org
- ^ Petroleum News. Kuparuk discovery made by Sinclair at Ugnu No. 1
- ^ Sweet, J.M., 2008, Discovery at Prudhoe Bay, Blaine: Hancock House, ISBN 0888396309, pp. 162-163
- ^ Petroleum News. Production begins 3 months early - Kuparuk comes online in December ’81 from 5 gravel drill sites in 20-mile square ARCO-owned area.
- ^ "Pool Statistics - Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission".
Further reading
edit- Jamison, H.C., Brockett, L.D., and McIntosh, R.A., 1980, Prudhoe Bay - A 10-Year Perspective, in Giant Oil and Gas Fields of the Decade: 1968-1978, AAPG Memoir 30, Tulsa: American Association of Petroleum Geologists, ISBN 0891813063.