Categories
Sports Fox

Mexico vs. South Africa World Cup Opener Makes History With Three Red Cards

Thursday’s 2026 World Cup opener between Mexico and South Africa made history with three players seeing red cards and being sent off. Neither team finished Mexico’s 2-0 win over South Africa with 11 players on the field. South Africa had two players sent off in its 2-0 loss to Mexico at Mexico City Stadium, joining Cameroon in 1990 as the only nations to have multiple players receive red cards in a World Cup opener. Surprisingly, Cameroon won that game 1-0 over defending champions Argentina. Thursday’s match is the first World Cup game since 2006 to see three or more red cards. Back in 2006 was the infamous Portugal vs. Netherlands game in the Round of 16. In that match, infamously known as the “Battle of Nuremberg,” four red cards and 16 yellow cards were awarded. Portugal won 1–0 thanks to a first-half goal from midfielder Maniche. Only six red cards have ever been awarded in an opening World Cup match, and five of them have come in two matches; the other came in 1938 (Germany’s Hans Pesser). South Africa went behind early as Mexico winger Julián Quiñones capitalized on a mistake by midfielder Sphephelo Sithole to score the first goal of the tournament in the ninth minute. That was just the start of Sithole’s bad day. In the 49th minute, Mexico midfielder Brian Gutierrez was through on goal when he was taken down by Sithole from behind. Brazilian referee Wilton Sampaio was quick to award Sithole a straight red card. Eighteen minutes later, Mexico striker Raul Jimenez doubled the host country’s lead with a free header. South Africa’s day went from bad to worse in the 84th minute, when substitute Themba Zwane was sent off. Sampaio went to the VAR screen and judged that Zwane had struck Mexico winger Roberto Alvarado. Mexico did not escape the match unscathed, though. Captain César Montes was given a straight red card for a hard tackle on South Africa right back Khuliso Mudau, who was charging down the right wing into the 18-yard box.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

Categories
Entertainment

Phil Mickelson Accused of ‘Inappropriate’ Conduct With Woman, Banned From …

Reading Time: 2 minutes

We have troubling news to report from the world of sports.

Golf legend Phil Mickelson is facing serious allegations that have reportedly resulted in his removal from a club where he had been a fixture for decades.

According to a new report from Golf Digest, the six-time major champion is no longer a member at The Farms Golf Club near San Diego after a female employee accused him of inappropriate physical contact earlier this year.

Phil Mickelson attends The Workday Charity Classic, hosted by Stephen and Ayesha Curry's Eat. Learn. Play. and Workday, at Franklin Elementary School on September 10, 2021 in Oakland, California.
Phil Mickelson attends The Workday Charity Classic, hosted by Stephen and Ayesha Curry’s Eat. Learn. Play. and Workday, at Franklin Elementary School on September 10, 2021 in Oakland, California. (Photo by Kelly Sullivan/Getty Images for Eat. Learn. Play.)

Multiple sources told the outlet that the alleged incident occurred prior to a round of golf this spring. The employee reportedly informed supervisors that Mickelson engaged in what Golf Digest described as “nonconsensual and inappropriate physical contact.”

According to the report, club officials confronted Mickelson while he was still on the course and asked him to leave before completing his round.

The Farms Golf Club did not identify Mickelson by name in a statement provided to Golf Digest, but the club confirmed that it had investigated a complaint involving a member.

“Following a staff member report of member misconduct, the Club provided immediate and ongoing support to the staff member, conducted a thorough independent investigation of the incident and took decisive action,” the statement read.

“This individual is no longer a member of The Farms Golf Club.”

Multiple sources have now identified the former member as Mickelson.

The golf legend has not publicly addressed the allegation himself, but a spokesperson offered a brief statement to the publication.

“Any misunderstanding has been cleared up,” the spokesperson said. “Phil continues to attend to a family health matter and is uncertain when he will be able to return to professional golf.”

The allegations arrive during a period in which Mickelson has largely been absent from the public eye.

The 55-year-old LIV Golf star has missed several high-profile events in 2026, including both the Masters and the PGA Championship, citing an ongoing family health issue.

For years, Mickelson was among the most popular and recognizable figures in professional golf, winning six major championships and building a reputation as one of the sport’s biggest stars.

But the latest report adds another controversy to a career that has faced increasing scrutiny in recent years.

At this point, nothing has been proven, and the allegations remain uncorroborated accusations.

Still, the report has already sent shockwaves through the golf world, as fans await any additional response from Mickelson or his representatives.

Phil Mickelson Accused of ‘Inappropriate’ Conduct With Woman, Banned From … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

Categories
Politics

The Knicks are the (only) talk of the town

Fans celebrated all across New York City at various Knicks watch parties during Game 4 of the NBA Finals against the San Antonio Spurs.

VERY SUPERSTITIOUS: For the first three quarters, it looked like the San Antonio Spurs were going to cream the Knicks in last night’s Game 4 of the NBA Finals.

But in an epic comeback, the Knicks overcame the Spurs’ 29-point lead — a new record in an NBA Finals game — and beat San Antonio 107-106, putting the hometown team just one win away from claiming its first championship in over five decades.

In New York political circles, there was an almost singular explanation for the unbelievable come-from-behind victory: The Trump curse had been lifted.

“THANK YOU TO THE PEOPLE WHO BLESSED MSG TODAY TO GET THE STANK VIBES OUT,” Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez wrote on X just before midnight. “YOUR SERVICE IS APPRECIATED.”

The progressive lawmaker’s all-caps missive was a reference to superstitious Knicks fans burning sage outside Madison Square Garden to cleanse it of what they saw as the bad juju President Donald Trump cast over the team by attending Monday’s Game 3 (which the Spurs won 115-111).

Queens Borough President Donovan Richards suggested Staten Island’s own Wu-Tang Clan — which performed last night’s halftime show at MSG — had a hand in rooting out the bad vibes. “Wu-Tang is for the children!!!” Richards wrote on X in response to a video of the rap group’s performance captioned: “Wu-Tang Clan have broken Donald Trump’s curse on the Knicks.”

No matter what brand of superstition is at play, it’s unmistakable that the Knicks’ playoff prowess has led New Yorkers to search for otherworldly explanations — and it seems to be the only thing local politicians can talk about.

In an Instagram video posted late last night, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries suggested there was a more cerebral catalyst for the Knicks’ latest win.

“Wemby tried to taunt the Knicks when they were up by about 29, suggesting that he was in our heads,” Jeffries said in a video, referring to Spurs center Victor Wembanyama. “No. Actually Wemby, we were in your head.”

For his part, Mayor Zohran Mamdani turned to God for guidance about the Knicks.

“Knicks in five — inshallah, baby, let’s go,” he practically shouted on Hot 97 radio this morning, using the Arabic term for “God willing.”

Game 5 of the Finals is Saturday in San Antonio. If the Knicks win, they will claim the championship trophy for the first time since 1973.

Not everything has been peaches and cream in the Big Apple when it comes to the Knickerbockers, though.

An NYPD spokesperson said 56 Knicks fans were taken into custody last night after massive and destructive crowds converged near The Garden to “celebrate” the victory.

According to the spokesperson, 10 officers were injured in the rampage, including one who got hit in the head with a glass bottle as the crowds jumped on top of moving vehicles, tried to flip over a parked cab and set off fireworks.

“This demonstrates exactly why the NYPD has increased our presence in and around Madison Square Garden,” the police spokesperson said.

The chaos unfolded after Knicks owner James Dolan canceled last night’s ticketed watch party outside MSG because he was angry with Mamdani and NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch for blocking unauthorized pedestrian traffic in a large swath of Midtown around the arena due to security concerns. — Chris Sommerfeldt

From the Capitol

Gov. Kathy Hochul held a roundtable today with immigration organizations to respond to the threat of an ICE surge into the state.

MESSAGE RECEIVED: Gov. Kathy Hochul responded today to White House border czar Tom Homan’s threat of an ICE surge into the Empire State.

“It’s not how we do things in New York,” Hochul said at an event in Queens. “Maybe Washington is a different breed there, and they think that intimidation and creating fear is a way to govern, and we’re just rejecting that here in the state of New York. That’s not who we are, never has been, never will be.”

Homan’s threats come after Hochul and state lawmakers sealed a deal on a package of measures meant to protect undocumented immigrants, following ICE’s deportation operation in Minneapolis. The bills would limit civil deportation warrants from being executed in sensitive locations and prevent law enforcement, including ICE agents, from wearing masks.

Homan blamed Hochul for the threatened surge after she signed legislation ending so-called 287(g) agreements that enable local law enforcement to share resources with federal authorities.

Hochul said such a surge would be “contrary” to what Trump previously told her. The governor also mentioned that Homan’s reasoning does not apply since only nine counties in New York previously participated in the 287(g) program — and none of those include any of New York City’s five counties.

“New York City, where we’re predicting he’ll send the agents to, has never had a 287(g) agreement. They’ve never been allowed to use the jails. Never been allowed to use local police enforcement,” the governor said. “It is irrational. It shows that they do not comprehend what is happening in the state of New York.” — Leah Clark

FROM THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL

Former City Comptroller Brad Lander speaks to the press after a judge found him not guilty of an obstruction charge on June 11, 2026.

TRIALS AND TRIBULATIONS: A federal judge found former New York City Comptroller Brad Lander not guilty of misdemeanor obstruction Thursday for blocking an elevator while protesting last year outside an immigrant holding area.

Lander was hit with the obstruction charge in September while demonstrating in support of detained immigrants at 26 Federal Plaza in Lower Manhattan. He was offered a deal to drop the charge but opted instead for a trial to draw attention to the federal government’s immigration policies.

Lander said he was there with state legislators to view the facility’s conditions, not to purposefully block an elevator — and that he would have moved if asked. In reading his findings, Judge Henry Ricardo described Lander’s testimony as consistent with video evidence, noting that his movements didn’t suggest he was purposefully trying to block the elevator and that Lander appeared “tired and a bit resigned.”

“No offense to Mr. Lander,” the judge said.

Lander — who entered the courtroom in good spirits and holding a Knicks hat — told reporters after the verdict: “I didn’t feel tired.”

“I felt an urgency to show up that day and try to fight what ICE is doing,” he said.

After a month’s delay, Lander finally had his first day in court Wednesday — less than two weeks before the primary election — bringing immigration even more to the forefront in the waning days of his campaign against Democratic Rep. Dan Goldman.

Goldman, who often highlights his oversight visits at immigrant detention centers and his “triage center” to support detainees near 26 Federal Plaza, has repeatedly criticized Lander for his approach to immigration. On Wednesday, he referred to Lander’s case as “performative” and “self-promoting.” At a debate last week, Goldman chided him for the rhetorical refrain that he puts his “body on the line” for immigrants and for fundraising off of it.

“While Brad never did get the information he sought from ICE, I have all of that information from my weekly oversight visits and would be happy to brief him,” Goldman said in a statement.

Read more from Madison Fernandez in POLITICO

POLL POSITION: The race between Rep. Adriano Espaillat and primary challenger Darializa Avila Chevalier is close in the final stretch of the campaign, according to a pro-Avila Chevalier poll.

The survey, conducted by Data for Progress for Justice Democrats, the progressive group that recruited the challenger, found Avila Chevalier with 39 percent of support compared to Espaillat’s 35 percent. Twenty-two percent of respondents were undecided.

The poll was conducted among 319 likely Democratic primary voters from June 3 to 9, after Mamdani endorsed Avila Chevalier — and as pro-Espaillat entities bombarded the airwaves with negative attacks against her. It has a margin of error of plus-or-minus 5 percentage points.

The survey also shows that 86 percent of respondents in the district either have a very favorable or somewhat favorable view of the mayor. Avila Chevalier is leaning heavily into Mamdani’s endorsement.

There’s no public polling in the race, though it’s evident Espaillat’s allies are anticipating a tight battle, considering the millions of dollars being poured into the race on his behalf in the homestretch. Madison Fernandez

FROM CITY HALL

Mayor Zohran Mamdani says he needs to start fundraising now due to possibly

2029 VISION: Most political players in New York are focused on this month’s primary elections — but Mamdani is already looking well beyond them.

In a text message blast this afternoon, the mayor asked supporters to donate “any amount” they can to his 2029 reelection campaign, telling them he needs to start fundraising now because the opposition will “be better funded, better organized and ready to spend earlier than before.”

“Their fundraising is constant and prolific,” he wrote in the text obtained by Playbook. “In closed-door meetings, wealthy donors and insider operatives consider how to influence our politics year-round. That’s how our opponents secured the resources to spend $83 million against our movement last year … That’s why we’re making investments in our movement starting right now.”

Mamdani’s missive did not identify the individuals behind the opposition he described.

But a group called NYC Common Sense, spearheaded by former independent mayoral candidate Jim Walden and political consultant Phil Singer, launched last month with a stated goal of fighting his agenda with ads, policy papers and lawsuits. The group, whose formation was first reported by The New York Times, has already raised $1 million from as-of-yet unidentified donors.

Mamdani’s pivot to 2029 fundraising indicates he’s taking the nascent opposition to his democratic socialist project seriously. Trip Yang, a longtime Democratic strategist, acknowledged it’s relatively early to fundraise for 2029. Still, he said it’s a smart move.

“A strong early fundraising number is important to show the reelection is well-positioned,” Yang said.

Read more from Chris Sommerfeldt in POLITICO.

STILL LOADING: City Council Speaker Julie Menin exuded confidence today over the newly introduced protest buffer zone bill around education facilities, which has the backing of 35 council members, a veto-proof super majority.

“I did speak with the mayor about the bill. We had a brief conversation about it,” Menin said at a press conference. “I think the new bill really addresses some concerns that we had heard.”

Menin said the revised measure would still achieve the original proposal’s goals but more narrowly defines which types of locations are included. Universities, which were flash points for some of the country’s most heated demonstrations, have been excluded from the new bill.

The original measure was vetoed by Mamdani in April after he raised concerns about its broad definition of educational facilities and the potential impacts on protests tied to ICE, fossil fuel divestment and Palestinian rights.

He allowed a similar bill to become law in April while voicing opposition to both buffer-zone bills’ framing of “all protest as a security concern.”

A spokesperson for the mayor said the administration is still “reviewing the new version of the legislation.”  — Gelila Negesse

IN OTHER NEWS

BAIT AND SWITCH: A year after New York City banned broker fees, renters say the charges never really left. (Gothamist)

COURT-ORDERED VISITS: New York will begin to require judges to make recurring visits to prisons after years of a long-neglected oversight rule not being met. (The City Reporter)

STRAPPED FOR CASH: The Mamdani administration is considering invoking a fiscal exception to delay required payments to nonprofits, citing cash constraints. (NBC New York)

Missed this morning’s New York Playbook? We forgive you. Read it here.

​Politics

Categories
Sports Fox

After Last Year’s Scuffle, USA’s Alex Freeman Wants To Keep It Cool vs. Paraguay

U.S. Men’s National Team Training Base (IRVINE, Calif.) — The last time the U.S. men’s national team faced Paraguay, things got spicy. American defender Alex Freeman and Paraguay captain Diego Gómez set off a scuffle that cleared the benches in stoppage time during a friendly last November. After a ball rolled out of bounds, both players raced to retrieve it. Possession belonged to the United States, but Gómez challenged Freeman, which is when both teams went at it for several tense minutes. In the end, Paraguay’s Omar Alderete was shown a red card, while U.S. midfielder Christian Roldan was given a yellow. This time around, when the two nations face off in their World Cup opener on Friday at Los Angeles Stadium, cooler heads must prevail. And the 21-year-old Freeman, who will likely be making his World Cup debut as the youngest player on this U.S. roster, knows it. “We matched the intensity versus Paraguay in the last match, and now it’s, how can we be protagonists and strike first in this game as well?” Freeman told me and reporters ahead of the team’s final training session Thursday morning. “How can we do that and be able to keep our heads on a swivel as well? “In these games, heads can go loose and you kind of get out of your head spaces and get stupid yellow or red cards. And I think that’s what we want to avoid. How can we keep the intensity, but how can we keep our head down?” That moment cemented Freeman’s status in the team, and he backed it up three days later by scoring a brace against Uruguay. Since making his senior debut against Türkiye on June 7, 2025, Freeman has become a fixture in the lineup, starting 12 of his 17 total appearances, including each of the last three matches. And if last week’s sendoff match vs. Germany was any indication — which it probably is — he will start for the U.S. at the World Cup. “He’s a beast,” Christian Pulisic told a group of reporters pitchside before he got warmed up for practice. “He’s really impressed me, especially in these first two games here in this camp [against Senegal and Germany]. I think he’s done such a good job, just his overall presence and what he brings. Not even just his physicality and athleticism, but he’s made some good forward progression with the ball and played good balls in behind and I feel like he seems a lot calmer. “And I like what I’ve seen.” Freeman admitted that he’ll have some pre-tournament jitters. But he wants to make them work in his favor. “How can I take those nerves and make it impact the way I play?” said Freeman, who joined La Liga side Villarreal from MLS club Orlando City earlier this year. “If you don’t have nerves, I feel like you’re not going to enjoy the moment to the fullest. For me, I want to put those nerves aside and just have the confidence to be able to play my game.” Freeman’s family is no stranger to major events and massive moments, though. His father, Antonio, is a Super Bowl champion wide receiver and Green Bay Packers Hall of Famer. He’ll be at Friday’s match and the younger Freeman already knows what his dad will tell him ahead of kickoff. “It’s knowing that you’ve gotten to this point, having confidence in yourself, betting on yourself and now, it’s a big opportunity to better yourself again,” Freeman said. “Now, what can you do with the chance, with the opportunity, to make an impact?” Freeman said his family is already in town, and he plans to hang with them on Thursday night to get his mind right for Friday. “My mom and dad and all my family are coming so I can hopefully spend a little time with them and thank them for everything,” Freeman said. “To have that calm moment with my family to prepare me for the game knowing that it’s gonna be a lot of pressure [is important]. They’re the kind of people who can calm the moment down and make it feel like everything is easy.”​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

Categories
Music

Post Malone’s Big A– Stadium Tour Set List Is Here! [PICTURES]

Post Malone played 22 songs during his first Big A– Stadium Tour stop in Charlotte, N.C. Continue reading…​The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs

Categories
Music

Post Malone’s Big A– Stadium Tour Set List Is Here! [PICTURES]

Post Malone played 22 songs during his first Big A– Stadium Tour stop in Charlotte, N.C. Continue reading…​Country Music News – Taste of Country

Categories
Alaska News Featured Juneau News juneau Juneau Local Juneau Local Ketchikan Local News Feeds Sitka Local

Court keeps international teacher visa fees affordable for Alaska districts, but it may be too late

By: Corinne Smith, Alaska Beacon

Lockers line the halls of Ben Eielson Junior Senior High School on April 22, 2024. (Photo by Claire Stremple/Alaska Beacon)

Alaska school districts that have grown to rely on international teacher hires are likely to do without them this year, even after a federal judge blocked the Trump administration’s fee hikes for highly skilled worker visas on Monday.

The Trump administration raised the fee from $5,000 to $100,000 last September, which put Alaska school districts’ international teacher hiring on hold. Districts have increasingly relied on international hiring to fill an ongoing teacher shortage across the state, particularly in rural and remote districts. The nearly 2,000% cost increase put the visas out of reach for districts that are already facing severe budget deficits and school closures.

Lisa Parady, executive director of the Alaska Council of School Administrators, a non-profit leadership and advocacy group that supports districts in hiring, said the court ruling was welcome news. However, she said there is concern the federal government could appeal and reinstate the fee. 

“So that puts us in a really hard place. We are thrilled because we believe this is the right interpretation of the law, and we really hope that it will be sustained, and that the government will not be able to get a stay or would lose in an appeal, but in the meantime we’re still a little bit in limbo,” she said.

She said that school districts are unlikely to hire through the H-1B visa program now, due to the risk of losing tens of thousands of dollars of application processing fees if the federal government appeals the court decision successfully. 

“The chance of taking a risk of losing those fees, if they could submit now, is just a risk. And I think our districts are largely risk averse because they don’t have those kinds of funds to take risks with,” she said. 

Jennifer Schmitz, director of the Alaska Educator Recruitment and Retention Center, a division of the Alaska Council of School Administration, said some districts previously lost processing fees and even new international hires from the Philippines when the Trump administration enacted the increased visa fee last fall.

“Most districts are going to want to wait and watch over the next month or two and see what happens, and then maybe move forward,” she said.

Currently, roughly 570 international teachers are working in Alaska via the visa program. And there are over 1,200 teacher and staff openings in Alaska posted on a job board run by the Alaska Educator Retention and Recruitment Center.

The H-1B visa is valid for six years. As those Alaska-based teachers’ visas expire in the next several years, Parady said Alaska schools will reach a crisis point for hiring.

“We’re going to be in a full-blown crisis, because we don’t have people standing in line to fill those positions,” she said. “We have been operating in the largest crisis and educator shortage in America, and at the local level in Alaska’s the worst crisis we’ve ever seen. And so while we aren’t feeling the full effect of those not being available to districts, we’re going to. Unless this terrain changes.”

The Alaska Legislature unanimously passed a resolution in May that urges the Trump administration to waive the steep visa fee to allow the continued recruitment and hiring of international teachers. 

Last year, Republican U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski introduced legislation to create an educator exemption from the increased fee. After the Monday ruling, her office said she will continue to work with the U.S. Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, Markwayne Mullin to create an administrative waiver from the fee to help bring teachers to Alaska.

“I will continue working to eliminate this fee permanently so that Alaska’s students are receiving the best education possible, regardless of the outcome of future legal challenges,” she said in a social media post on Monday.

Categories
Sports Fox

Which 2026 World Cup Group Is Most Exciting? Ibrahimović, Henry, Lalas Debate

Twelve groups, the most in FIFA World Cup history. But which one is the most exciting? For Zlatan Ibrahimović, Group L is the one to watch. “Group L. We have England. We have Croatia … Then, we have Ghana with big talents. Let’s see what they bring,” Ibrahimović said. “We have Panama. Unfortunately, in this group, I think they will be a punching bag for England and Croatia, and Ghana might disturb them and take some points.” Harry Kane and England are hoping to avenge a grueling loss to Lamine Yamal and Spain in the Euro 2024 final. England hasn’t won a major trophy was in 1966, when it won the World Cup. Thierry Henry has predicted it will be Group I, and not just because Les Bleus are in the group. “You have to think about Senegal and Norway, who are my two dark horses in this competition,” Henry, a World Cup winner with France in 1998, said on “FIFA World Cup Live” on Thursday. “It’s going to be tough for Iraq. I do think that the three teams will go forward, so I’m looking forward to that one, and there’s another one: Group C. “Obviously, Brazil and Morocco, but, somehow, the first game, Haiti against Scotland, I do somehow think that Haiti can create an upset with that one.” Kylian Mbappé and France lost to Lionel Messi and Argentina in penalty kicks in the 2022 FIFA World Cup final, but have reloaded with a deep squad that’s expected to make a deep run. Meanwhile, Senegal made the African Cup of Nations final. As for former USA soccer star and FOX Sports Soccer Analyst Alexi Lalas, he has his eyes on Group D, which includes the United States. “I think for the first time at a World Cup for the U.S. men’s team, that [the country] should not settle. [The country] should expect this U.S. team, given the talent, given the depth, given the experience, to win this group,” Lalas said. “We have not said that before. I don’t think that’s Pollyanna. I think that’s realistic. I wouldn’t say that if I didn’t believe this team was capable of doing that … I can say it’s an ‘easy’ group, and I know that’s a loaded type of word, but if I put it up against any group [they’ve] had in the past, I will take this all day long.” Paraguay, Australia and Türkiye are the three countries in Group D with Team USA. Team USA’s opening match of the 2026 FIFA World Cup is on Friday night against Paraguay.​Latest Sports News from FOX Sports

Categories
Alaska News

Meet the Spanish company at the heart of Alaska’s oil industry revival

Repsol chief executive Josu Jon Imaz, right, speaks at the Alaska Sustainable Energy Conference in Anchorage in May. (Nathaniel Herz/Northern Journal)

Josu Jon Imaz, a former member of European Parliament, runs Spain’s largest oil company.

Recently, though, his focus has drifted thousands of miles from Madrid, to the far north.

Imaz’s company, Repsol, is one of several oil and gas businesses racing to drill in Alaska’s Arctic — where, after a decades-long decline in production, the industry is undergoing a stunning revival amid a push by the Trump administration to open new areas to development.

American oil firms like ConocoPhillips and Hilcorp operate larger fields in the state and have tended to get more attention.

But Repsol is quickly emerging as one of industry’s most zealous players on the North Slope, where the company and its partners have snatched up hundreds of thousands of acres of oil and gas leases since last fall and recently began production at a multi-billion-dollar new field, Pikka.

“It’s an area that could change, in some way, the history of Repsol,” Imaz said in a May interview with Northern Journal on the sidelines of an energy conference in Anchorage.

In a series of speeches this spring, Imaz described Alaska as a “company-maker” for Repsol. The company has spent less money in the state than other players, but it’s significantly smaller than U.S. giants like ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips — so each dollar it spends represents a comparatively larger gamble.

The Spanish company has been investing in oil development in Alaska for nearly two decades. But it often has taken a passive approach, as a part-owner of projects where other companies were responsible for the day-to-day work of drilling and construction.

Now, Repsol is stepping into a more active role, and quickly expanding its reach across the North Slope.

Oil started flowing last month at the huge Pikka project, co-owned and operated by Australian company Santos. And Repsol has plans to search for more oil and expand production on nearby land.

The company expects to invest $1.5 billion on the North Slope over the next three or four years, Imaz said at the May conference. That could add up to nearly 15% of its planned global investments through 2028.

Imaz, a trained chemist who’s been Repsol’s chief executive for more than a decade, declined to provide a detailed breakdown of how the money would be divided between different projects. But he said some of it would fund further development at Pikka, and some would go toward exploration — including on new federal leases that Repsol acquired this spring in partnership with Shell.

Those federal leases are in the National Petroleum Reserve–Alaska, an Indiana-sized, largely roadless area of tundra and wetlands. The reserve comprises much of the western North Slope and is home to caribou, polar bears and migratory birds — and conservation groups are currently suing to slow development there.

Repsol and Shell have not finalized their plans for the reserve, according to Imaz. But next winter “could be a target” for exploratory drilling, he said.

“Exploration is a complex game,” Imaz added. “We are now organizing the team.”

Clad in a sleek Hugo Boss puffy jacket during last month’s conference, Imaz acknowledged that Alaska is not his “natural environment.”

But he pointed out that Madrid, where Repsol is based, gets snow in the mountains nearby. And he said that traveling to Anchorage isn’t as hard as it may seem, even though his company doesn’t have its own plane.

It’s just two commercial flights away — “not rocket science,” Imaz added. “You can do that without a private jet.”

Repsol is smaller than some of the other big oil companies doing business in Alaska. But it’s by no means small: With its stock valued at some $30 billion, the company operates in more than 20 countries, including the U.S., Venezuela, Norway and Indonesia; its business ranges from early-stage oil and gas exploration to the distribution of lubricants used in cars.

On the North Slope, Repsol could spur development by filling a niche that some analysts have called a “missing middle.” That label applies to a once-absent group of mid-sized companies that are more nimble and can make quicker decisions than the largest producers, but still have the financial horsepower to pay for big projects, according to Mark Oberstoetter, an analyst at the global research firm Wood Mackenzie.

Other companies in that middle category include Santos and APA Corp., a Houston-based company commonly known by the name of a subsidiary, Apache, that’s been drilling for oil and gas on state land east of Repsol’s interests, Oberstoetter said.

Like Repsol, APA is expanding its footprint in Alaska: The company just announced a $70 million acquisition of Savant, a smaller business that owns the Badami oil field, which produces 40,000 barrels per day on the eastern North Slope.

Repsol entered Alaska in 2007, when it took a 20% stake in offshore oil and gas leases in the Beaufort Sea, alongside global oil giants Shell and Eni.

But it didn’t really make waves in the state until a little more than a decade ago, when North Slope oil production had fallen to about one-fourth of its 1980s peak.

In 2013, Repsol and partner Bill Armstrong, a Colorado-based wildcatter, made a seminal discovery: Other companies had drilled right through a shallow rock formation called the Nanushuk that held billions of barrels of oil but had never been noticed.

Their find sparked a new era of investment in the Arctic, culminating this spring in the largest federal lease sale onshore in Alaska in 20 years.

Repsol and Shell were the top bidders in that recent sale, spending more than $90 million to acquire 241,000 acres of leases. Repsol also, on its own, picked up 78,000 acres just outside the federal reserve in a separate state lease sale last fall.

Permafrost forms a grid-like pattern in the National Petroleum Reserve–Alaska, a vast federally managed region of tundra and wetlands on the North Slope. (U.S. Geological Survey)

Meanwhile, Repsol and Santos aim to reach a final construction decision next year on the second phase of development at Pikka, Imaz said.

That expansion project could bump production from 80,000 to 120,000 barrels a day — a sizable amount for Repsol, which currently produces the equivalent of some 550,000 barrels of oil each day across all of its operations.  The companies also are working to develop a nearby prospect called Quokka that could boost production further.

Pikka makes up about 16% of Repsol’s global portfolio — “quite material for a single asset,” said Oberstoetter, the analyst.

Repsol’s push to find new oil and gas deposits and to boost production in Alaska aligns with a global trend in the industry.

Five years ago, interest in renewable energy was surging, and future demand for fossil fuels looked uncertain, so big oil companies slashed spending on exploration and focused instead on short-term investments, Oberstoetter said.

After scaling back on developing new fields, many companies are now facing a decline in production in 10 or 20 years, he added.

But after Donald Trump’s re-election and a global turn back toward fossil fuels, the industry now forecasts long-term demand to stay high. So companies like Repsol, Oberstoetter said, have been investing more in exploration and are betting on Alaska oil deposits to stave off the expected production decline.

“They kind of need them within their global portfolio as other mature fields start to decline,” Oberstoetter said.

Still, Repsol is “years away” from producing oil from the leases it recently acquired, given the high cost and challenging logistics of development in the Arctic, Oberstoetter added.

The company could also face opposition from environmental groups, which are fighting the industry’s expansion on the North Slope — particularly in the federal petroleum reserve, where Repsol acquired leases this spring with Shell.

“Of course, we’re really worried about things,” said Andy Moderow, senior policy director at Alaska Wilderness League, a group that has sued over Arctic oil development.

But, Moderow added, there’s also a lot of “bluster” coming from the industry and the Trump administration that may not translate into new roads and drilling pads.

“It’s way too soon to know whether all this talk will impact lands and water in Alaska,” Moderow said.

Northern Journal contributor Max Graham can be reached at max@northernjournal.com. He’s interested in any and all mining related stories, as well as introductory meetings with people in and around the industry.

This article was originally published in Northern Journal, a newsletter from Nathaniel Herz. Subscribe at this link.

SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX.

Categories
Music

Even at 40, Chris Young Still Gets Amazing Gifts From His Mom

Chris Young will not only turn 41 years old on June 12, but that’s also the day the deluxe version of his album I Didn’t Come Here to Leave drops.
Young stopped by the Taste of Country Nights studio ahead of the release, and I wanted to get all the tea on how the country superstar celebrates his birthdays — and who gave him the best birthday gift he’s ever received.
"I… Continue reading…​The Boot – Country Music News, Music Videos and Songs