
Development and production operations in the Arctic offshore as a result of exploration have been limited, with the exception of the Barents and Norwegian seas. In Alaska, exploration subsequent to the discovery of the Prudhoe Bay oilfield has focussed on the onshore and shallow coastal waters.SummaryExploration for petroleum in the Arctic is expensive and challenging both technically and logistically. In the. .
There are 19 geological making up the region. Some of these basins have experienced and , most notably the where oil was first produced in 1968 from .. .
Drilling in the peaked during the 1970s and 1980s, led by such companies as in the Sverdrup Basin of the Arctic Islands, and by and in the Beaufort S. .
In June 2007, a group of returned from a six-week voyage on a , the expedition called . They had travelled to the , an underwate. .
In the years post 2000, sedimentary basins offshore were believed by some geologists to have high potential for large oil discoveries. In a comprehensive study of the potential of Arctic basins published in 2008, the.
[pdf] On January 13, 2015, the first public meeting North Slope fleet at Terminal 5. On February 9, the lease with Shell was signed by Port of Seattle CEO Ted Fick. When the deal became known, Seattle Mayor and the announced they would review it. On March 9, the city of Seattle began looking for ways it could hinder the deal. Murray asked Port to reconsider the.
[pdf] EVERETT -- Despite protests from environmentalists and Seattle city leaders, Royal Dutch Shell is still planning to move its Arctic oil drilling rigs to a Seattle port terminal. One oil rig, the Noble Discoverer, docked in the Port of Everett Tuesday night.
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