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Project
Update
Pikka
Preparation
Cruz Construction and North Star Equipment Services work to help Santos move toward production
By Vanessa Orr
Sheet pile installation on the Oliktok dock expansion project took about two months of steady work.
Sheet pile installation on the Oliktok dock expansion project took about two months of steady work.
Pikka Preparation
Cruz Construction and North Star Equipment Services work to help Santos move toward production
By Vanessa Orr
W

ork started in November 2023 on the Santos Oliktok dock expansion, which will provide expanded capability and capacity for a seawater treatment plant that will serve Pikka Oil Field development. Led by general contractor Cruz Construction, Inc., the civil portion of the dock was completed last winter, despite delays caused by the weather.

Australia-based oil company Santos owns 51 percent of the onshore Pikka Oil Field. Spain-based Repsol owns the remaining 49 percent share. The project sits just east of the Colville River and the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska. Repsol conducted exploration in the ‘10s that indicated the Nanushuk formation below Pikka may hold more than 750 million barrels of oil, with the possibility of much more oil lying in the geologic layer just below the Nanushuk formation. Total output from the Pikka project could reach 400 million barrels, with an estimated daily output amounting to 15 percent of oil carried through the Trans Alaska Pipeline System to Valdez, a flow estimated to last thirty years. Santos and Repsol hope to begin production in 2026.

aerial view of 3,000 pieces of sheet pile at the Oliktok dock expansion project
Nearly 3,000 pieces of sheet pile were installed as part of the Oliktok dock expansion project last winter.
Challenged by Late Ice Road Season
Michael Connelly, Cruz Construction project engineer, says the company began pre-packing the ice road, followed by flooding and alignment, in November 2023. Cruz Construction then mined gravel to build the road, which was completed in December.

Subcontractor North Star Equipment Services, or NSES, and Cruz Construction then installed 2,935 sheet pile at Oliktok Point, about fifty miles west of Prudhoe Bay, and Cruz Construction backfilled the dock with gravel. Alaska Test Labs was also a subcontractor on the project.

“The weather was really bad this winter, so we were three to four weeks late on ice-road season, which put a lot of schedule pressure on the project,” says Matt Jones, North Slope operations manager for Cruz Construction. “This was a difficult project to accomplish in one year from a planning perspective, and it was a question if it even could be completed with the weather making things so difficult.

“All things considered, the project came together really well,” he continues. “We finished the majority of work that was dependent on the ice road structure three to four weeks before we had to be off the ice.”

Installation of the sheet pile took about two months, though prepping and building the needed templates began in October 2023, according to Randy Beltz, vice president of NSES Operations.

“There were inherent challenges—which all contractors this past winter season faced—because weather held up the start of the project,” he says. “But weather always tends to be an issue working in the Arctic.”

A Hiring Boom
In order to complete its portion of the project, NSES employed more local operators from the International Union of Operating Engineers, or IUOE Local 302, than it had ever employed before. In addition to the fifteen people already working on the project, the company hired another fifteen personnel through Local 302, as well as ten piledrivers from the Piledrivers & Divers Alaska Local 2520.

“Everybody out there, from our employees to the people from Santos and Cruz Construction, worked well together to execute the job about as flawlessly as possible,” says Beltz of the largest job NSES has done in its 60-year history.

This summer, Cruz Construction will thaw and recompact the gravel, which is expected to take about a month.

“While the dock will be finished, the barge grade associated with this work will not be completed until next summer,” says Jones, noting that that project will entail pumping out the seawater, reworking the barge grade material, filling it with water, and cutting pile to open it up.

A 200- x 400-foot barge will then be towed to the area, filled with water, and sunk to create a permanent berth filled with gravel on which the seawater plant will sit. The plant is scheduled to be installed in 2025.

“We appreciate Santos’ investment in Alaska. It was an absolute pleasure working with their leadership team on this challenging, time-sensitive project,” adds Jeff Miller, president of Cruz Construction.

Hundreds of Holes
NSES has also been busy working on another North Slope project at the Pikka Oil Field this past winter. Working with general contractor Price Gregory International, LLC, or PGI, the project turned out to be far different than what was first expected.

“We were originally subcontracted to vibratory drive roughly 669 casings in wet hole locations to stem the water flow so that PGI could set the pile and slurry it in,” says Beltz. “However, because the wet holes weren’t as prevalent as first assessed, we had to switch gears and basically become a drilling subcontractor for PGI, drilling out the holes for the piles they were going to set and slurry.”

aerial view of tractor and trucks installing sheet pile
After installing sheet pile, Cruz backfilled the dock with gravel.
While it was first thought the project might require more than 669 casings, Beltz says that because everything was frozen, no water was able to seep into the holes, preventing the need for casings.

“You never know what the underground conditions will be until you get there,” he explains. “It required a pretty drastic switch in gears, but our crews were able to go with the flow. We’re here to provide PGI and Santos with whatever services they need, and our flexibility in being able to change gears or directions provided a real benefit to our clients. We’re adaptable as heck.”

Drilling Complete
Because NSES had an ABI multipurpose rig at the location, the company was able to use the same equipment package already on site to install a drilling attachment.

“We went into the project knowing that if casings didn’t need to be installed, we could offer this up as an alternative so that PGI didn’t need to bring in additional equipment and people to run it,” says Beltz, noting that the companies had worked out this scenario ahead of time, with NSES providing rates for drilling and completing holes versus casing holes. “We could just change out the attachments to go from driving pile to drilling holes.”

“You never know what the underground conditions will be until you get there.”

–Randy Beltz
Vice President of Operations, North Star Equipment Services
A total of six rough-terrain cranes were on site, with a mix of bare and operative leases. The majority of NSES personnel came from IUOE Local 302 with crews, including six to eight mechanics, moving to different sites depending on what was needed. NSES also provided support for four rough-terrain cranes for Price Gregory and its sister company, Conam Construction Co., while setting the pile.

“As far as our portion of the project, it is completed as far as drilling,” says Beltz, noting that there is still work to be done in winter 2025 as part of the multiyear project. “It’s a great project, and we found that being adaptable was key to completing our part of the job. We hope to continue to offer whatever Santos and their construction partners need to support this project.”

Vanessa Orr is a freelance writer formerly based out of Juneau, where she was editor of the Capital City Weekly and Boat Broker Outdoor Recreation magazine. Photos provided by Cruz Construction, Inc.