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Norway north sea oil fields

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10.12.2020

Oil from the giant Johan Sverdrup field in the North Sea has arrived at the Mongstad plant north of Bergen. The event is celebrated at the plant today. October 21, 2019 This list of oil and gas fields of the North Sea contains links to oil and natural gas reservoirs beneath the North Sea. In terms of the oil industry, North Sea oil often refers to a larger geographical set, including areas such as the Norwegian Sea and the UK "Atlantic Margin" (west of Shetland) not, strictly speaking, part of the North Sea. Recoverable resources are estimated at 6-16 million standard cubic metres of oil equivalent, which corresponds to 38-100 million barrels of oil equivalent. The licensees in production licence 090 are Equinor Energy AS (45%), ExxonMobil Exploration and Production Norway AS (25%), Idemitsu Petroleum Norge AS (15%) and Neptune Energy Norge AS (15%). The location of the new Equinor discovery. Image: Equinor. Exploration well 35/11-23, Echino South, was drilled 3.2 kilometres south-west of the Norway’s petroleum era started more than 50 years ago, and a number of the early fields are still producing. The first fields to be developed were in the North Sea, and the industry has gradually expanded northwards into the Norwegian Sea and the Barents Sea.

10 Mar 2014 Ekofisk, the oldest oil field in the Norwegian North Sea, contained approximately 129 million cubic metres of remaining recoverable reserves as 

10 Mar 2014 Ekofisk, the oldest oil field in the Norwegian North Sea, contained approximately 129 million cubic metres of remaining recoverable reserves as  At the end of 2019, 87 fields were in production: 66 in the North Sea, 19 in the reserves are given in million standard cubic metres of oil equivalents (mill. The first fields to be developed were in the North Sea, and the industry has were rich oil and gas deposits to be discovered on the Norwegian continental shelf. 18 Oct 2019 The country is debating climate change, even as its offshore oil fields offshore Norwegian Continental Shelf, the heart of the North Sea's oil  31 Dec 2019 The field in the North Sea has become the biggest in western Europe but polarises opinion. Read about Equinor, the Norwegian continental shelf, natural gas, our fields and When we first found oil in the North Sea, few people realised the values and 

10 Jan 2020 fanfare when the Johan Sverdrup field in the North Sea was officially opened. This was the launch of 50 new years of oil history in Norway.

19 Nov 2019 Barnacle, in the northern part of the UK North Sea, is being developed as a single well tie-back to the Statfjord B platform in Norway. The field is  24 Dec 2019 A newly-discovered oilfield in the Norwegian part of the North Sea is on track to Equinor's Johan Sverdrup oil field depicted in August 2019. 19 Jan 2020 This overview shows the Johan Sverdrup oil field in the North Sea west of Stavanger, Norway, on January 7, 2020. (Photo by CARINA 

6 Nov 2018 Construction work on the Johan Sverdrup field in the North Sea in October 2018. Oil production is set to start in 2019. Norway must gradually 

3 Sep 2019 The rise of a huge new Norwegian oil field is poised to give North Sea output one of its biggest boosts in years. The surge won't last. 5 Dec 2019 N orwegian oil worker Nils Magne Lunde is preparing to drill a well at Johan Sverdrup, a North Sea offshore field which started in October and  2 Nov 2019 Its latest giant offshore oil field project is proof that the North Sea still has decades of life left as a major producing basin. The UK Government  Initial plateau production is 440,000 barrels of oil per day. The development of The Johan Sverdrup field centre, North Sea, Norway. Driller on the Johan  10 Jan 2020 fanfare when the Johan Sverdrup field in the North Sea was officially opened. This was the launch of 50 new years of oil history in Norway. 14 Jan 2020 Discovered by E&P company Lundin Petroleum in 2010, the field is one of the largest oil discoveries ever made on the Norwegian continental  Oil was first discovered in the North Sea in late 1960s and the rapid expansion of Most of all Norwegian oil production has been from giant oil fields. Since the 

Norway’s petroleum era started more than 50 years ago, and a number of the early fields are still producing. The first fields to be developed were in the North Sea, and the industry has gradually expanded northwards into the Norwegian Sea and the Barents Sea.

Norway’s petroleum era started more than 50 years ago, and a number of the early fields are still producing. The first fields to be developed were in the North Sea, and the industry has gradually expanded northwards into the Norwegian Sea and the Barents Sea. Partner-operated fields in Norway Enoch. The Enoch field is located in the southern part of the North Sea. Vilje. On the Vilje field, oil rises naturally to the surface without any form of stimulation. Ringhorne Øst. The Ringhorne Øst field produces through four wells. Marulk. Marulk consists of With estimated recoverable reserves of 8bn barrels, Clair oil field is the biggest oil field in the North Sea and Europe. Image courtesy of Chevron Corporation. Discovered in 1974, the Statfjord field started producing in 1979 and holds has approximately 4.2bn barrels of oil. In the late 1950s, very few people believed that the Norwegian continental shelf (NCS) might conceal rich oil and gas deposits. However, the discovery of gas at Groningen in the Netherlands in 1959 caused people to revise their thinking on the petroleum potential of the North Sea. The largest field found in the past five years on the Norwegian part of the North Sea, is the Johan Sverdrup oil field which was discovered in 2010, with further oil of the same field was discovered the next year. Total reserves of the field are estimated at 1.7 to 3.3 billion barrels of gross recoverable oil and Johan Sverdrup is expected to produce 120,000 to 200,000 barrels of oil per day. The companies in Norway drilled around 5000 oil well till today that mostly located in North Sea. The Statfjord oil field in North Sea is the largest oil field which holds 3.4 billion barrels of recoverable oil and started production in 1979, Ekofisk oil field and Oseberg are the second and third largest with recoverable oil of 3.3 and 2.2 billion barrels.