This is the next state we come to in our series comparing the state oil & gas information sites to WellDatabase. We will continue to compare the two, as well as give a quick rundown on utilizing both systems. Hopefully along the way you will see what makes WellDatabase special as well as learn a little about how to use the existing state resources.
While Alaska’s oil production has been in a slow and steady decline over the past couple of decades, it remains the third largest oil producing state in the country. Existing reserve estimates vary widely, but there is little doubt that Alaska has much to offer the oil & gas industry for years to come.
The Alaska Division of Oil & Gas is responsible for all things oil & gas in Alaska. The group is a division of the Alaska Department of Natural Resources that handles everything from leasing to reporting of oil & gas information. Now onto the tools.
Directly off of the Division of Oil & Gas homepage is a link to the new Public Web Map Viewer. After accepting the required disclaimers, you are presented with an ESRI GIS system. The initial screen is zoomed far out with the major areas of interest highlighted (North Slope, North Slope Foothills, Beaufort Sea, Alaska Peninsula, and Cook Inlet). This initial screen highlights a couple of initial problems. One, it is very slow and two, there is very little detail to look at from a state level. In order to start looking at some wells, we will have to pick an area and zoom in very close. Before we do that, we will need to enable the wells on the map. At the top there is a toolbar like this one:
The far left icon is used to toggle the map contents menu. There you can check the box that reads AOGCC Wells. Now that wells will be viewable, we will zoom in until we can see something. For our purposes we will use the Prudhoe Bay area. Again, zoomed out there is very little detail; so you must know exactly where you want to look in order to find anything.
Zooming in all the way breaks down to individual well spots. If a particular wellbore has multiple sidetracks, a number will appear in the red well icon denoting
The major limitation of the GIS system (outside of being a bit cumbersome to navigate) is that it is not integrated with any detailed data about the well. There is an entire separate system if you want to do further research into wells in Alaska.
In order to dig deeper into the data, you have to navigate to the AOGCC Oil and Gas Web Application. Make sure you are opening it in Internet Explorer as it will not let you open it in any other browsers. Opening the application with the public login will bring you to the screen below:
On the left hand side you can see the list of search items available in the system. Note that the GIS system is no longer available as it has been replaced with the new one we just went over. There are a handful of options here, but we will focus on the the Well Information area as it has most of the well information we are looking for. When you click on the Well Information option you are given a new set of options. You can dig through these as they are pretty self explanatory, but the searching can be a little tricky if you’re not used to it. The good thing is that the searching is the same between all screens you go into and the query you are on will transfer from one screen to the next. We will show how this works in our example.
Of course if you had a single well you are interested in you might be
Now that’s about it for basic well data, but there are a couple of other useful items Alaska has to offer. Here is a quick list of just some of them:
We will dig into using WellDatabase.com to look at Alaska Oil & Gas information in our next post.