Plans for increased gas extraction from Oseberg approved

Dec. 2, 2022
The Oseberg Area Unit partners will be investing in upgrades designed to provide increased gas production and reduced CO2 emissions.

Offshore staff

STAVANGER, Norway  The Oseberg Area Unit partners will be investing in upgrades designed to provide increased gas production and reduced CO2 emissions. The plan for the Oseberg field was approved by the Ministry of Petroleum and Energy on Dec. 1.

In November 2021, Equinor submitted an amended application on behalf of the partners in the Oseberg licence for development and operation of the Oseberg Field.

The partners will be investing NOK 10 billion (US$1 billion) in infrastructure upgrades on the field.

The installation of two new compressors on the Oseberg Field Centre will make it possible to lower the process pressure on the platform, Equinor said.

This means a 54% increase in the remaining recoverable gas and oil reserves from Oseberg after 2025. Emissions from Oseberg's production will be cut through a partial electrification of the Oseberg Field Centre and Oseberg South platform.

"The production of highly sought-after gas from Oseberg can be maintained at the current high level for several years, since we'll be recovering more of the gas. At the same time, we'll be reducing CO2 emissions by about 320,000 tonnes per year. This project is going to be carried out in close cooperation with competent suppliers, and calculations show that the Norwegian content of the investments will be just over 80 percent," said Trond Bokn, Equinor's senior vice president for project management control.

Oseberg is the third largest oil field ever in Norway, but the field also contains a lot of gas, according to Equinor. Gas exports from Oseberg have increased significantly in recent years, from annual gas exports of about 3 Bcm leading up to 2018, to about 8 Bcm in 2022.

This reconstruction will make Oseberg Norway’s third largest gas field, after Troll and Snøhvit, measured in remaining reserves.

Oseberg is expected to produce 100 Bscm of gas between 2022 and 2040.

The annual production will be equivalent to the volume of energy from about one-quarter of all Norwegian hydropower production.

So far, Oseberg has produced about 80% oil and 20% gas in historical production. Gas production has outweighed oil production since 2021, and the gas accounts for about 80% of the remaining recoverable reserves.

Startup is scheduled for 2026.

12.02.2022

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Photo 128055867 © Nataliya Nazarova | Dreamstime.com
Offshore Norway
(Photo: Harald Pettersen / Equinor ASA)
The Oseberg field complex in the Norwegian North Sea.
(Photo: Harald Pettersen / Equinor ASA)
The Oseberg field center in the Norwegian North Sea.