The US Interior Department has cancelled leasing offshore
tracts in Alaska's Cook Inlet that was tentatively scheduled for later this
year. So-called lease sale 219 was called off because of lack of sufficient
interest by energy companies to search for oil or natural gas in the area. Cook
Inlet sale 219 was scheduled to occur under the government's revised 5-year
offshore drilling plan for the 2007-2012 period. The last oil and gas lease
sale in federal waters of the Cook Inlet was held in 2004, and no qualifying
bids were received.
There are currently no active federal leases in the Cook
Inlet. The only federal leases that were the subject of recent development
activity were those in Pioneer Natural Resources' Cosmopolitan field, located
near the city of Homer. The site has oil reserves that were discovered in the
1960s, and has been drilled in recent years from shore. But Pioneer in January
announced that it was abandoning Cosmopolitan.
Cook Inlet, the channel that runs from the Anchorage area
south to the Gulf of Alaska, is home to Alaska's oldest producing oil and gas
basin. With oil reserves mostly depleted, development in Cook Inlet in recent
years has focused on natural gas.
Only LNG facility in
the region getting closed
ConocoPhillips and Marathon Oil in February announced that
they will close their liquefied natural gas plant in Kenai, which has been the
single largest user of Cook Inlet natural gas. The plant, scheduled to close
this spring, is the only LNG export facility in the United States, and has been
operating since 1969, shipping product to utilities in Tokyo. ConocoPhillips
and Marathon said they were unable to win renewal of their contract with Japanese
customers.
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