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Thursday, November 21, 2024

After drilling in Alaska, ConocoPhillips wants to keep data from competitors

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ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Legal Newsline) - ConocoPhillips wants to keep secret the information it has gathered while drilling the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska.

ConocoPhillips Alaska filed a lawsuit May 13 in Alaska federal court, hoping to prevent the spread of corporate data collected while drilling wells in the reserve. The Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission has the info and is able to disclose it to the public after wells are completed.

The lawsuit hopes to extend that timeframe to protect the tens of millions of dollars ConocoPhillips has spent. 

"CPAI made these investments based on the federal government's express confirmation that the highly valuable data obtained from this exploratory work would be held confidentially for the duration of CPAI's leases, thus preventing competitors from taking unfair advantage of CPAI's efforts," the complaint says.

"In addition to the federal government's express assurances of confidentiality, CPAI is entitled to confidential treatment of this well data pursuant to federal law."

The reserve consists of close to 24 million acres on Alaska's North Slope and is the country's largest single unit of public land, the suit says. CPAI began exploring and drilling wells in response after legislation passed more than 30 years ago that included a confidentiality provision for any company that obtained a lease to drill, the suit says.

It has made disclosures to the Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission that, under a state law, can release the information now. The data is 24 months old, and 30 days have gone by since completion of wells.

ConocoPhillips wants to use a provision in state law that allows an extension if the "commissioner of natural resources finds that the required reports and information contain significant information relating to the valuation of unleased land in the same vicinity."

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