For some strange reason (political) the EIA plan doesn't start work on the oil delivery system until year 5 and they plan for the delivery system to take 4-5 years to build, hence 10 years to delivery.
The EIA case for the OCS assumes the ban is lifted in 2012 and production starts in 2017, hence the 5 year timeline I mentioned.
For some strange reason (political) the EIA plan doesn't start work on the oil delivery system until year 5 and they plan for the delivery system to take 4-5 years to build, hence 10 years to delivery. Why not start work on the delivery system on day 1 and have a 5 year plan?
That's in effect what they have done. The restrictions on access to the OCS will expire in 2012, the EIA have based their report on what would happen then if they were not reinstated.
As to ANWR, the EIA timeline is:
• 2 to 3 years to obtain leases, including the development of a U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) leasing program, which includes approval of an Environmental Impact Statement, the collection and analysis of seismic data, and the auction and award of leases.
• 2 to 3 years to drill a single exploratory well. Exploratory wells are slower to drill because geophysical data are collected during drilling, e.g., rock cores and well logs. Typically, Alaska North Slope exploration wells take two full winter seasons to reach the desired depth.
• 1 to 2 years to develop a production development plan and obtain BLM approval for that plan, if a commercial oil reservoir is discovered. Considerably more time could be required if the discovered oil reservoir is very deep, is filled with heavy oil, or is highly faulted. The petroleum company might have to collect more seismic data or drill delineation wells to confirm that the deposit is commercial.
• 3 to 4 years to construct the feeder pipelines; to fabricate oil separation and treatment plants, and transport them up from the lower-48 States to the North Slope by ocean barge; construct drilling pads; drill to depth; and complete the wells.
I'd say that's optimistic, given the political difficulties involved. The EIA also provide 2 examples:
The Alaska North Slope Badami and Alpine oil fields are recent examples of how long it might take to develop new ANWR oil fields. Located near the western border of ANWR, on State lands, the Badami field was discovered in 1990 and went into production in 1998, thereby taking 8 years between the oil discovery and initial production. On the western border of the State lands, near the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska, the Alpine field was discovered in 1994 and initial oil production occurred in 2000, thereby taking 6 years from discovery.
These Alaska North Slope oil field development time delays do not include the time delays associated with BLM leasing, the collection and interpretation of seismic data, and the drilling of exploratory wells