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Ekofisk was Norway’s first commercial oil discovery in 1969, with first production in 1971. Another redevelopment phase could extend production to 2050 and beyond. This is a good example of how technology and reservoir management can extend field life indefinitely. Finite resources are not really finite.

ConocoPhillips and partners have approved the redevelopment of three gas and condensate fields depicted below — Albuskjell, Vest Ekofisk, and Tommeliten Gamma. Better well placement and the use of horizontal well technology will increase resource recovery.

The $1.8 billion project consists of four new subsea templates and 11 production wells tied back to the Ekofisk complex. First production is planned towards the end of 2028. Recoverable gas and condensate reserve additions are estimated at between 90 million and 120 million barrels of oil equivalent.
If you ever get to Stavanger, be sure to visit the Petroleum Museum! HIghly recommended!

Posted in Norway, Offshore Energy - General | Tagged ConocoPhillips, Ekofisk, enhanced recovery, North Sea, Norway, offshore oil and gas, Petroleum Museum, Stavanger | Leave a Comment »

The attached Memorandum of Understanding between Vineyard Wind (VW) and the Town of Nantucket is long on bureaucratic procedures and short on risk mitigation and penalties.
The agreement details requirements for monthly reports, liaisons, written correspondence, plan reviews, and participation on incident management teams, but excludes any monetary penalties for past or future incidents. (With regard to penalties, should BSEE have assessed civil penalties for the 2024 turbine incident in accordance with 30 CFR § 285.400 (f)? This was a major pollution event.)
This MOU provision gives the impression that the Town is subordinate to VW:
“The Town will provide Vineyard Wind 1 up to 4 business days, if required, to identify and correct errors in the Town’s intended public communications about the Project.”
The responsible party should not be exercising oversight over the communications of an affected local government. Can you imagine Santa Barbara County reaching such an agreement with Sable Offshore?
Finally, the MOU further establishes the Town as a de facto partner in the project. VW, not the Town, is the responsible party and must be held fully accountable for project performance.
Posted in accidents, Offshore Wind, Regulation, energy policy | Tagged accountability, blade failure, MOU, Nantucket, penalties, Vineyard Wind | Leave a Comment »

The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) has initiated the process for a potential mineral lease sale in Federal waters off Virginia. BOEM’s action is in response to a request by Odyssey Marine for a critical minerals sale.
Odyssey’s primary targets are phosphate, which is now on the critical minerals list, and rare earth element’s titanium and zirconium. This would be a shelf dredging operation, in partnership with Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Company, rather than the deepwater module collection being proposed for the Pacific.
The fact that the sand recovered during the dredging process could be used for beach nourishment should appeal to adjacent coastal communities.
Odyssey Marine’s CEO discusses the proposed Virginia offshore program starting at the 4:00 minute mark in the video below.
Posted in deep sea mining, energy policy, Offshore Energy - General | Tagged beach nourishment, BOEM, Great Lakes Dredge Co., marine minerals, Odyssey Marine, phosphate, sand, titanium, Virginia, zirconium | Leave a Comment »






While the majors and large independents garner most of the attention, smaller companies are an integral part of the mosaic that is the Gulf of America petroleum province. Some focus on producing and identifying remaining reserves on the shelf; others partner in deepwater projects.
Sale participants like Arena, Cantium, Walter, W&T, Beacon, Kosmos, and Houston Energy are well established Gulf leaseholders. Red Willow has attracted attention as a successful Southern Ute energy corporation.
Some BBG1 participants may be lesser known:
- Wyotex Offshore
- Ridgewood Energy Corporation
- Byron Energy Inc.
- CSL Exploration, LP
- Renaissance Offshore, LLC
- Navitas Petroleum US, LLC
- CL&F Offshore LLC
- KUSA Inc. – wholly owned by the Australian company, Karoon Energy.
- Harvester Energy (US) Inc.
Collective bids by category:
- Majors (BP, Shell, Chevron, Oxy/Anadarko, Total, Equinor. Eni, Repsol) submitted 151 bids
- Large independents (LLOG, Woodside, Murphy, Talos) submitted 51 bids (individually or as part of a group)
- Other independents submitted 46 bids (individually or as part of a group)
Posted in energy policy, Gulf of Mexico, Offshore Energy - General | Tagged big beautiful Gulf of America, independents, lease sale, majors, number of bids, Sale BBG1 | Leave a Comment »

See the updated comparison table in the previous BOE post.
The questions raised prior to the sale have been answered:
- Which majors will be the most active bidders? BP (50 high bids), Chevron (22), and Shell (12)
- Will former Gulf of Mexico stalwarts Exxon and Conoco Phillips participate for the first time in years? They did not.
- How many companies will submit bids? Would like that to be a number >35. Only 30 companies participated.
- How many tracts will receive bids? A number >300 would be very encouraging. Only 181 tracts received bids.
- Will the total high bids exceed $400 million? No, the total was $279.4 million.
- Will we see an increase in shelf interest? Shelf bidding continued to be limited (map). Renaissance, Byron, Arena, GOM Shelf LLC, Walter, W&T, Cantium, and WYOTEX Offshore submitted bids for shelf leases.
- Which independents will be the most active? Woodside and Murphy are large independents, and their participation was most impressive. Murphy submitted 14 high bids totaling $27.4 million. Woodside had 8 high bids including the sale’s two highest for a total of $38.1 million, second only to BP in terms of the sum of their high bids.
See the sale summary data. The top bidders list is pasted below.

Posted in energy policy, Gulf of Mexico, Offshore Energy - General | Tagged BOEM, Gulf of America, OCS Sale BBG1, questions answered, sale results | Leave a Comment »
The sale was beautifully conducted by BOEM, and Leslie Beyer – Assistant Secretary for Land and Minerals Management, Dept of the Interior – and Matt Giacona, Acting BOEM Director, delivered strong messages in support of the OCS oil and gas program.
However, as a colleague commented just after the sale, it was beautiful but not big. He and I expected more given the time since the last sale and the attractive terms.
Below is a comparison with the previous 3 Gulf sales. More to follow.
| Sale No. | 257 | 259 | 261 | BBG1 |
| date | 11/17/2021 | 3/29/2023 | 12/20/2023 | 12/10/2025 |
| companies participating | 33 | 32 | 26 | 30 |
| total bids | 2233 | 2842 | 3161 | 219 |
| tracts receiving bids | 2143 | 2442 | 2751 | 181 |
| sum of all bids $millions | 198.5 | 309.8 | 441.9 | 371.9 |
| sum of high bids ($millions) | 101.7 | 263.8 | 382.2 | 279.4 |
| highest bid company block | $10,001,252.00 Anadarko AC 259 | $15,911,947 Chevron KC 96 | $25,500,085 Anadarko MC 389 | $18,592,086 Chevron KC 25 |
| most high bids company sum ($millions) | 46 bp 29.0 | 75 Chevron 108.0 | 65 Shell 69.0 | 50 bp 61.0 |
| sum of high bids ($millions) company | 47.1 Chevron | 108 Chevron | 88.3 Hess | 61.0 bp |
| most high bids by independent | 14-DG Expl. | 13-Beacon 13-Red Willow | 22-Red Willow | 14-Murphy |
1excludes 36 leases improperly acquired for carbon disposal purposes; 2excludes 69 leases improperly acquired for carbon disposal purposes; 3excludes 94 leases improperly acquired for carbon disposal purposes
Posted in energy policy, Offshore Energy - General | Tagged Gulf of America, lease sale, Lease Sale BBG1, Leslie Beyer, Matt Giacona, oil and gas | Leave a Comment »

Judge Patti Saris vacated part 2 of Trump’s 1/20/2025 “Wind Memo.” Part 1, which withdrew all OCS lands from wind leasing, was not in dispute. Part 2 suspended issuing wind energy permits and other authorizations.
The judge ruled (full order attached) that the suspension of wind permitting violates Administrative Procedures Act provisions requiring agencies “to proceed within a reasonable time and to set and complete proceedings expeditiously.”
She concluded further that “the moratorium halts all wind energy authorizations indefinitely, pending a comprehensive assessment with no timeline, which is inconsistent with statutory deadlines and general commands for prompt processing in laws like OCSLA, the Clean Water Act, and others governing wind projects.”
Although the judge’s assessment of the permitting moratorium seems sound, the merits of offshore wind as a primary energy source remain very much in doubt.
Posted in energy policy, Offshore Wind | Tagged Executive Order, Judge Saris, Offshore Wind, permitting moratorium | Leave a Comment »

Several BSEE Safety Alerts have just been released. Of particular importance to those interested in deepwater drilling is the attached alert describing two separate Emergency Disconnect Sequence (EDS) incidents.
The EDS (see the diagram above) is a critically important safety protocol that ensures that a well is sealed and the riser and rig are disconnected from the blowout preventer in the event of a well control emergency, unforeseen weather/ocean conditions, loss of power, or positioning system malfunction. Note that the Macondo blowout could have been prevented if the Deepwater Horizon crew had activated the EDS in a timely manner.
The two EDS events cited in the Safety Alert were presumably the March 28, 2025 and March 5, 2024 incidents investigated by BSEE district offices. The drillships were the Stanley Lafosse and the Deepwater Poseidon The investigation reports provide detailed information on these incidents.
Unintended riser disconnects not associated with EDS activations are a related safety and pollution concern that necessitated the issuance of a 2000 Notices to Lessees that was subsequently updated:
Posted in accidents, drilling, Gulf of Mexico, Offshore Energy - General, Regulation | Tagged BSEE, Deepwater Horizon, EDS, Emergency Disconnect Sequence, riser disconnect, Safety Alert | Leave a Comment »

