The U.S. Bureau of Land Management narrowed the field of oil companies hoping to exploit vast oil-shale reserves in Utah and Colorado, government officials said Monday.
In a second elimination round, Exxon Mobil Corp. and a tiny Utah company, Oil-Tech Inc., were knocked out of the running for research and development leases to work 160-acre parcels of BLM land.
Exxon wasn't prepared to commence research for years as late as 2014 for a government program meant to expedite experimental works by this summer, said Jim Edwards, chief of the solid minerals branch of the BLM in Colorado.
Oil-Tech failed to advance because of uncertainty over how it would work an abandoned mine and control furnace emissions and runoff discharges, he said.
That leaves four companies in contention out of 16 that originally submitted applications. Each of the four companies is hoping to win final environmental approvals to set up experimental works on federal lands by midsummer.
In Colorado, the surviving nominees are Shell Frontier Oil & Gas Co.; Chevron Shale Oil Co.; and EGL Resources Inc.
In Utah, Alabama-based Oil Shale Exploration Co. was picked over Oil-Tech to work an abandoned mine. Both companies applied to work the same mine, ensuring one would be eliminated.
The companies provided their best and final proposals, said James F. Kohler, chief of the solid minerals branch for the BLM in Utah.
Oil Shale Exploration Co. plans to use a rotary kiln to bake shale oil out of a supply of 30,000 tons of rock left outside the White River mine. If the technology works, the company would use the mine to reach more oil shale deep underground.
In western Colorado, Shell is seeking approval to work three separate parcels of federal land, subject to environmental reviews. Shell is perfecting a method of baking shale oil from the ground using heating rods drilled into layers of rock, an alternative to mining.
The BLM advanced variations on that "in-situ" technique for Chevron and EGL Resources. Each is seeking approval to work a parcel of federal land that, like Shell's, are inside Colorado's Rio Blanco County.
Colorado's oil-shale deposits can be found closer to the surface than in Utah.
A panel of experts scored the companies based on how their proposals would advance oil-shale technology, promise economic viability and protect the environment.
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