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  3. /‘We are talking about energy security for Europe’: Norway doubles down on oil and gas production
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‘We are talking about energy security for Europe’: Norway doubles down on oil and gas production

The Guardian World1h ago4 min readOriginal source →
‘We are talking about energy security for Europe’: Norway doubles down on oil and gas production

TL;DR

Norway plans to expand its offshore oil and gas production, reopening three gasfields by 2028 to address supply shortfalls due to the Ukraine war. The country aims to maintain stable production levels through the decade.

Key points

  • Norway will reopen three gasfields by 2028.
  • The decision aims to address energy supply shortfalls in Europe.
  • Norway has 97 offshore oilfields and expects to exceed 100 soon.
  • The Barents Sea is identified as a new oil and gas frontier.

Mentioned in this story

Norwegian Offshore DirectorateBarents SeaEurope

Why it matters

Norway's commitment to expanding oil and gas production is critical for maintaining energy security in Europe amid global supply challenges.

In case of any doubt about Norway’s commitment to maintain – and expand – its production of gas and oil offshore, the energy minister, Terje Aasland, has a pithy response: “We will develop, not dismantle, activity on our continental shelf.”

This week, to the alarm of environmental campaigners, he announced that three gasfields off the country’s southern coast would reopen by the end of 2028 – nearly threedecades after they closed – to meet a shortfall caused by the impact of the war in Ukraine and disruption to supplies from the Middle East.

The decision will help keep gas and oil production at about the 2025 level – which has been stable for almost 20 years – and stay broadly the same for the rest of this decade. Norway has 97 offshore oilfields, three of which came on stream last year, and its Norwegian Offshore Directorate expects “100 and beyond” within the next two years, still producing at least the present level of 2m barrels of oil daily.

The Barents Sea, in the high north, is the new gas and oil frontier – with the prospect of mining for seabed minerals between northern Norway and Greenland, a more distant prospect after initial surveys by the Norwegian Offshore Directorate – an agency of Aasland’s department – showed potential.

“Norwegian offshore production plays an important role in ensuring energy security in Europe,” says Aasland. “The world, and Europe, will have a need for oil and gas for decades to come and it is crucial that Norway continues to develop its continental shelf to remain a reliable and long-term supplier … and (with) a high level of exploration activity.”

Terje Aasland wearing a dark suit
Terje Aasland wearing a dark suit

Terje Aasland, Norway’s energy minister, is enthusiastic about providing energy security for Europe. Photograph: Martin Meissner/AP

The sector generates vast wealth for Norway, but the decision this week to reopen the Albuskjell, Vest Ekofisk and Tommeliten Gamma gasfields in the North Sea, which were closed in 1998, has received heavy criticism in some quarters.

It goes against the advice of the country’s environment agency, and the Socialist Left party accused the government of “greenwashing”.

Lars Haltbrekken, the deputy leader and environment spokesperson for the party, says: “It shows that the government is once again blatantly ignoring environmental advice from its own experts. All the talk about responsible oil extraction is nothing but nonsense. It’s greenwashing through and through, with vulnerable and important natural areas being put at risk with full awareness.”

The Norwegian energy company Equinor (formerly Statoil), in which the state owns 67%, says it is making a “big effort” to maintain its own 2020 production levels of 1.2m barrels daily up to 2035. The Norwegian’s state holding should yield about £2bn in dividends this year.

“It’s very important for the market value of the company to keep production higher now than in 2001 – yes, we had a lower production then than now,” says Equinor’s Ola Morten Aanestad. To arrest any decline, he says Equinor is committed to investing $6bn (£4.4bn) annually up to 2035 – “more drilling … a lot of new development, more pipelines … maybe smaller fields developing, but still important.”

Aasland – Norway’s longest-serving oil minister, a 61-year-old former electrician and trade union leader – says Norway has “a responsibility”.

“In Europe, before the war in Ukraine, there was much talk of how to get rid of oil and gas on our continental shelf … now they ask me every day ‘can you deliver more oil and gas’? We are talking about energy security for Europe and we have to increase investment. We have a responsibility. Our focus is very clear.”

Aasland also stresses the importance of job security for the 210,000 people employed by the energy industry in Norway. “It is really important that they wake up in the morning knowing they have a safe job for the future.”

Aanestad says Norway’s consistent tax rate on oil and gas firms has made it attractive to investors.

“We’ve had a 78% taxation level since the 1970s – a high tax, I know – but investors know what to expect; it’s predictable,” he says. That tax is a mainstay of Norway’s £1.5tn sovereign wealth fund, which helps it run a sizeable surplus.

Norway’s unashamed approach is at odds with the UK, it’s North Sea neighbour, where the government has ruled out new oil and gas exploration licences.

Terje Sørenes, the chief economist at the Norwegian Offshore Directorate, says the aim is to prolong production as long as possible, and increase output, that currently provides gas for a third of Europe’s consumption. For now, Europe’s energy superpower is prioritising ever more drilling and offshore production well into the 2030s and beyond.

Q&A

What is Norway's plan for oil and gas production by 2028?

Norway plans to reopen three gasfields by the end of 2028 to boost its oil and gas production.

How does Norway's energy production impact Europe?

Norwegian offshore production is crucial for Europe's energy security, especially amid supply disruptions from other regions.

What are the environmental concerns regarding Norway's oil and gas expansion?

Environmental campaigners are alarmed by Norway's decision to expand oil and gas production, fearing negative impacts on the environment.

How many oilfields does Norway currently have and what are the future projections?

Norway currently has 97 offshore oilfields, with expectations to exceed 100 within the next two years.

People also ask

  • Norway oil and gas production plans 2028
  • impact of Norway's energy production on Europe
  • environmental concerns Norway gasfields reopening
  • current number of oilfields in Norway
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At a glance

  • Norway will reopen three gasfields by 2028.
  • The decision aims to address energy supply shortfalls in Europe.
  • Norway has 97 offshore oilfields and expects to exceed 100 soon.
  • The Barents Sea is identified as a new oil and gas frontier.

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