88 Energy has blown out South Prudhoe prospective resources by 35 per cent to 768.9 million barrels on Alaska’s giant North Slope after adding a maiden Brookian oil estimate and upgrading the Ivishak reservoir. Augusta-1 will now test 133.7 million barrels across stacked producing formations beside Prudhoe Bay, with Rig-3 secured and farmout talks progressing ahead of drilling in 2027.
88 Energy has supercharged the scale of its South Prudhoe project on Alaska’s North Slope, lifting total gross unrisked prospective resources by 35 per cent to 768.9 million barrels (MMbbls) of oil and natural gas liquids and sharpening the case for its potentially transformational Augusta-1 exploration well.
The company says the upgraded estimate has strengthened South Prudhoe’s credentials as a stacked, multi-reservoir oil system sitting immediately south of the giant Prudhoe Bay and Kuparuk River fields. Together, the monster fields have produced more than 16 billion barrels of oil, while Santos’ emerging giant Pikka, sitting to the west-southwest of South Prudhoe, officially joined Alaska’s producing ranks with first oil today.
88 Energy’s sprawling 52,000-acre project lies beside existing roads, pipelines and processing infrastructure in one of North America’s most prolific petroleum provinces.
A fresh interpretation of the Schrader Bluff 3D seismic dataset, updated seismic velocity analysis and regional calibration, along with integration of nearby production and well data, have materially reshaped the scale of South Prudhoe’s stacked oil system.
The project’s North-West Hub now hosts 301.3 million barrels unrisked prospective resources across the stacked Ivishak, Kuparuk and Brookian targets. In comparison, the South-East Hub contains 467.6 million barrels, largely weighted towards the broader Brookian Schrader Bluff fairway.
A maiden Brookian estimate across the North-West Hub has now added a further 181.5 million barrels of unrisked prospective resources to the inventory, materially expanding the project’s shallow oil upside and future development optionality. The new resource includes 61.2 million barrels in the West Sak reservoir and 120.3 million barrels in the Upper Schrader Bluff interval.
At the same time, 88 Energy has upgraded the deeper Ivishak estimate in the North-West Hub by 44 per cent to 69.9 million barrels of unrisked prospective resources after sharpening reservoir definition around the priority Augusta prospect.
Augusta-1 has now evolved into a stacked multi-zone test targeting up to 133.7 million barrels of unrisked prospective resources across the Ivishak, Kuparuk and Upper Schrader Bluff reservoirs in a single strike. The target breakdown includes 57.5 million barrels in the Ivishak, 23.5 million barrels in the Kuparuk and 52.7 million barrels in the Upper Schrader Bluff sands.
All three reservoirs are proven North Slope producers with nearby well control and direct analogues in adjacent producing fields, including historical drill stem tests from the Hemi Springs State-1 well, flowing up to 515 barrels of oil per day from the Kuparuk reservoir.
The new shallow Brookian intervals also come with a heavyweight pedigree. Nearby West Sak producers inside the Kuparuk River Unit have collectively delivered millions of barrels of oil, including the 1J-115 well, which has produced about 6 million barrels to date.
South Prudhoe is increasingly shaping as a hybrid North Slope play, sandwiched between giants, pairing Prudhoe-style deep conventional targets with the stacked Brookian upside now underpinning developments such as Santos’ Pikka project to the west-southwest.
88 Energy managing director Ashley Gilbert said: “This updated Prospective Resource Estimate represents another major step forward for 88 Energy and confirms our South Prudhoe Project as a significant-scale, multi-reservoir oil with nearby production analogues and proximity to established infrastructure.”
Operationally, Augusta-1 remains the company’s highest-priority near-term activity. According to management, Nordic-Calista Services’ fully winterised Rig-3 has already been secured for the campaign, with permitting, logistics, road access planning, site preparation and long-lead procurement all making solid progress ahead of a targeted first-quarter 2027 spud. 88 Energy is continuing a farmout-led funding strategy for the well, backed by existing cash reserves.
The company says the resource upgrade has reinforced its broader strategy of balancing lower-risk, infrastructure-adjacent North Slope development opportunities with scalable follow-on growth and selected frontier upside.
Alongside South Prudhoe, 88 Energy is advancing its Phoenix project. A planned 2027 horizontal production test will aim to prove oil can flow commercially from the Brookian reservoirs at the company’s earlier Hickory-1 discovery and support a contingent resource of 378 million barrels of oil equivalent.
Further upside sits east of South Prudhoe at Kad River East, where the company is interpreting a 17,920-acre 3D seismic dataset across another infrastructure-linked trend. At the same time, the company’s Namibian acreage provides longer-dated exposure to the emerging Damara Fold Belt play.
With the mapping sharpened and the stacked oil potential defined across South Prudhoe’s North-West and South-East hubs, Augusta-1 will be the litmus test for whether these reservoirs can perform like the Prudhoe Bay and Kuparuk giants to the north.
If the drill bit delivers, the well could sit front and centre of a much larger multi-reservoir oil system, providing a transformational near-term catalyst for the punters.
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