The Associated General Contractors of Alaska logo
Member Profile
M-W Drilling
AGC MEMBER SINCE 01/08/2020
The Associated General Contractors of Alaska logo
Member Profile
M-W Drilling
AGC MEMBER SINCE 01/08/2020
A tall industrial drilling rig silhouetted against a vibrant pink and orange sunset sky at a snowy Alaskan construction site
Crews are treated to a colorful sunrise over a water
well being drilled at the Port of Alaska in Anchorage.
Crews are treated to a colorful sunrise over a water well being drilled at the Port of Alaska in Anchorage.
Well on the Way
M-W Drilling counts more than 5,000 wells drilled across the state
By Nancy Erickson
Well on the Way
M-W Drilling counts more than 5,000 wells drilled across the state
By Nancy Erickson
W

ayne Westberg had no idea a delay in construction of the Trans Alaska Pipeline System (TAPS) in the early ‘70s would launch the drilling company he’s still running almost sixty years later.

Westberg and business partner Mike Miller started M-W Drilling in 1968, buying their first drill rig with the intent to do foundation and piling work for the startup of TAPS. Miller dropped out of the partnership shortly after it was formed. Without an established reputation in Alaska, the fledgling drillers found themselves facing a hefty rig payment and no work to pay for it when pipeline construction was delayed. So, what to do, except start drilling water wells?

The company grew exponentially when TAPS construction resumed in 1974, and by 1976 it was operating three drill rigs full time. Wayne Westberg died in 2023 and M-W is now under the second-generation direction of his son, Kris Westberg.

“M-W Drilling is a very diverse company, specializing in drilling projects for the construction, mining, oilfield and pipeline industries,” says 49-year-old Kris Westberg, president and owner of the company. “We’ve completed over 5,000 new wells for private land developers, construction companies, oilfield companies, municipalities, and the federal government.”

In addition to drilling water wells, M-W also offers cathodic protection wells, as well as grounding, geothermal, cooling, and dewatering wells.

“We’ve completed over 5,000 new wells for private land developers, construction companies, oilfield companies, municipalities, and the federal government.”
–Kris Westberg, President and Owner, M-W Drilling
The company made its mark by pioneering drilling slant wells into thaw-bulb aquifers beneath lakes and rivers on the North Slope. Thaw-bulb aquifers are unfrozen zones within otherwise frozen ground where groundwater can be tapped.

“When a thaw-bulb aquifer is identified, a drill rig can be set up on the bank of a lake or river and drill at an angle into the bulb to construct a producing water well,” Westberg explains. “We made it possible to construct wells in areas previously thought incapable of producing a viable subsurface source of water.”

Westberg has witnessed significant changes in the water well drilling profession since his father started the company.

Top drive rotary rigs have replaced the ‘60s-model cable tool drill rigs, resulting in safer, more efficient operation. However, the price tag for top drive rigs can run between $800,000 and $1.5 million.

Drilling commercial and public drinking water wells has also become more engineered and standardized, with emphasis on maximizing well efficiency and protecting aquifers from surface and cross contamination, Westberg says. Testing water quality after drilling a well is more common, too.

A side view of a yellow M-W Drilling truck-mounted well rig with "WATER WELLS" on the side
M-W Drilling sets up to drill a cathodic protection well at a 30-degree angle; the borehole is used to install deep anode systems that protect buried or submerged metal infrastructure.
A yellow M-W Drilling truck-mounted rig with its mast extended diagonally into the ground at a snowy Alaskan industrial site
Equipment is set up to drill a 45-degree slant water well at Oliktok Point, a remote scientific research location on the Beaufort Sea coast near the western end of the Prudhoe Bay oil fields.
A large, yellow, track-mounted mobile drilling rig with its mast extended vertically, standing on a grassy bank overlooking a wide river with forested mountains under a partly cloudy sky
A drill rig is set in place at a remote site in Ruby, with the Yukon River in the background. The village is only accessible by riverboat in summer, snowmachine in winter, or by air.
Mutual Trust, Consistent Performance
Daniel Caldwell, civil infrastructure division manager of Ahtna Builders, LLC, says his company has worked with the M-W team on several occasions when specialized drilling expertise was needed.

One challenging project was in the village of Koyukuk, located on the Koyukuk River, 90 miles south of the Arctic Circle.

“The project required careful planning and execution due to its remote location, limited access, and reliance on river transportation for personnel, equipment, and materials,” Caldwell recalls. “M-W Drilling’s crew demonstrated strong field experience and adaptability, successfully performing under constraints.”

“M-W Drilling’s knowledge and technical capacity is what keeps clients coming back for complex and highly technical projects where failure is not an option.”
–David Kranich, Principal, Northern Utility Services
Northern Utility Services has worked with M-W Drilling for more than forty years in partnership on high capacity, critical infrastructure wells in the public-utility sector, according to Principal David Kranich.

“M-W Drilling’s knowledge and technical capacity is what keeps clients coming back for complex and highly technical projects where failure is not an option,” says Kranich.

M-W contracted with the Alaska Department of Natural Resources to drill three exploratory wells for the Nenana-Totchaket Agricultural Project, overcoming challenges of access to undeveloped areas, saturated soil conditions, and variable groundwater resources.

“M-W Drilling was highly communicative and professional throughout the test drilling process,” says Dan Jenkins, a natural resource specialist with the Division of Mining, Land, and Water (DMLW). “Kris also spent time with DMLW after the project was completed to debrief the project with state specialists.”

Resilience Is Required
M-W Drilling’s main base of operation is Anchorage, but it also has an equipment yard and shop in Mat-Su and Nome. “We keep a drill rig in Nome full time to service the Seward Peninsula and Western Alaska,” Westberg says.

Tammy Kellard has held the job of office manager for the past eight years and works closely with the crew.

“M-W has a niche because we do the challenging logistics of getting our equipment and crews to rural villages,” says Kellard. “This includes coordinating short summer barge schedules, sparse village accommodations and resources, and crew travel with clashing flight schedules.”

“We have a great group of guys,” Kellard says of the company’s eight employees. “Well drilling can encounter all kinds of difficulties, whether within the well, the rigs and equipment, severe weather, and more. Oftentimes they are in remote locations with limited resources, yet with their vast skill-sets and creativity, they figure it out.”

“When I applied for this ‘specialty construction’ company, I envisioned winter vacations,” she adds. “Surprisingly, winter is great for well drilling with better access in some areas. We’re busy year-round.”

A low-angle close-up of a drilling rig in operation, forcefully discharging a stream of muddy water through a side hose against a bright blue sky, with a yellow loader and white service truck visible on the ground below
Water blows out a discharge head of the casing hammer while drilling an 18-inch cooling water well, mainly used to air condition buildings.
“Oftentimes [crews] are in remote locations with limited resources, yet with their vast skill-sets and creativity, they figure it out.”
–Tammy Kellard, Office Manager, M-W Drilling
Membership Is critical
Being a member of the Associated General Contractors of Alaska since 2020 has many advantages for M-W Drilling.

“It provides our company with critical advantages in safety, workforce development, and project execution,” says Westberg. “Membership also ensures access to industry specific training, regulatory guidance, and advocacy on contract and labor rules, helping us manage risk in Alaska’s challenging and remote environments. It also connects us to engineers, project managers, and peers, improving project planning, logistics, and bid competitiveness.”

Nancy Erickson is a freelance writer who lives in Moose Pass. All photos provided by M-W Drilling.