Caelus Energy Alaska said Tuesday it has made a "world-class" oil discovery that, if estimates prove true, could be one of the largest finds ever in Alaska.

The Smith Bay site, in shallow waters about 50 miles southeast of Barrow, could "provide 200,000 barrels per day of light, highly mobile oil," the company said in a press release Tuesday.

If correct, that production level would make the field more prolific than ConocoPhillips' Alpine unit that began production in 2000 and reached a production peak of 139,000 barrels in 2007.

The statement from Caelus does not indicate analysis by a third-party engineering firm. The estimates are the company's internal numbers, a spokesman said Tuesday morning.

The statement also notes that flow-tests, a step in verifying a well's capabilities, were not conducted "due to seasonal time constraints."

It said, however, that "extensive sidewall coring and subsequent lab analyses confirm the presence of reservoir-quality sandstones containing light oil."

David Houseknecht, one of the region's foremost geologists and project chief for the U.S. Geological Survey's Energy Resources Program for Alaska, said Caelus' announcement comes in a little-explored rock formation with potential to support large oil deposits.

He said the company could certainly be sitting on a large find, based on the work done so far, including seismic mapping showing the extent of the reservoir, and two wells drilled about 5 miles apart that show the thickness of pay zones containing oil.

One thing in the project's favor, if Caelus' reports are correct, is that the oil flows easily.

Still, Houseknecht cautioned that it's early in the process, and more will be known with additional testing.

"I would not want to get too bullish right now," he said.

"I'd say we will know more when Caelus actually does well testing," he said, providing a better idea of potential production rates.

Houseknecht said that in 1990 ARCO Alaska - the predecessor of ConocoPhillips -announced a 1 billion barrel oil discovery called Kuvlum, offshore from the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

"That's never been developed and one reason is that when they drilled two more wells they found, 'Whoops, the reservoir is not quite what we expected it to be based on the first well,' " he said. "So I don't want to denigrate this press release because it sounds great, but you have to a certain amount of caution, at least I do, working at the USGS."

If the project is developed, that could easily take five to 10 years, with permitting requirements, limited work seasons and other challenges, he said.

The company said its discovery comes after two wells were drilled early this year, and after it conducted 3D seismic exploration across 126 square miles.

"Caelus estimates the oil in place under the current leasehold to be 6 billion barrels," the statement said. "Furthermore, the Smith Bay fan complex may contain upwards of 10 billion barrels of oil in place when the adjoining acreage is included."

Light oil can flow as easily as water or corn oil and is easier to extract than viscous or heavy oil.

"Caelus expects to achieve recovery factors in the range of 30-40 percent," the statement said. "Additional drilling and seismic should improve estimates of oil in place via delineation of undrilled fan lobes and channel complexes imaged on the original 3D seismic."

The recovery rates, if correct, would put the field's estimated oil potential between 1.8 billion barrels and 4 billion barrels.

Caelus has estimated the field's oil recovery potential as below Prudhoe Bay and just below the Kuparuk River field, two of the largest fields in the U.S. that continue to dominate Alaska oil production.

The field is about 50 miles from existing oil field infrastructure, officials said. At the very least a lengthy pipeline would need to be constructed to move the oil to existing pipelines.

In addition to exploration, Caelus Energy, headquartered in Dallas, produces oil at the small Oooguruk field on the North Slope. The company acquired the field in 2013 from Pioneer Natural Resources when that company left Alaska to focus on shale opportunities in Texas.

Caelus owns 75 percent of the leases at Smith Bay. NordAq Energy Inc. holds 17.5 percent and L71 Resources holds 7.5 percent.

The company's chief executive, James Musselman, said in the statement that "fiscal stability" will be critical for the Smith Bay field's development, a reference to a stable tax program as cash-strapped Alaska continues to look at reducing subsidies to the oil industry. He said tax credits offered by the state were critical to the discovery.

The leases are in state waters, so royalty and tax benefits would flow to the state, officials said. Royalty terms would be negotiated, but the state typically owns 12.5 percent of a field's produced oil, a figure that reaches 16.67 percent for newer leases.

The oil would be produced from a new unit and would qualify as "new oil," a designation under the state's production tax code resulting in extra-generous tax from the state.

Gov. Bill Walker and the Legislature altered the oil-tax system this year, including placing a sunset on the "new oil" designation, limiting it to a 7-year window.

New oil - generally from fields that began producing in 2008 - will not begin to pay a production tax until North Slope oil prices reach $73 a barrel, according to an analysis in February by Ken Alper, director of the Alaska Tax Division.

Prices for North Slope oil have hovered around $50 a barrel for almost two years. The state's decade-long price forecast released this spring projects prices below $70 a barrel through 2025.

The Walker administration is currently discussing additional changes to limit tax benefits to be considered during the next legislative session starting in January.

Walker called the Caelus announcement "good news" for Alaska.

"My administration will continue to work with the industry to identify new development opportunities in Alaska's oil and gas sector, and provide appropriate investment incentives given our current fiscal climate," he said, without providing additional detail.

This story first appeared in Alaska Dispatch News and is reprinted here with permission.