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OIL AND GAS
New Arctic disappointment for Norway's Statoil
by Staff Writers
Oslo (AFP) July 22, 2014


Norwegian energy regulator confirms oil and gas in Barents Sea
Stavanger, Norway (UPI) Jul 22, 2013 - The Norwegian government said Tuesday it confirmed a sizable discovery of oil and natural gas at the Snohvit field in the Barents Sea.

The Norwegian Petroleum Directorate, the nation's energy regulator, said it confirmed a Norwegian subsidiary of Lundin Petroleum discovered oil and natural gas at the Gohta area of the field.

NPD said the discovery may hold as much as 525 billion cubic feet of recoverable natural gas and more than 130 million barrels of recoverable oil reserves.

Lundin in a separate statement said a well at the site tested at 4,300 barrels of oil per day. Neither the company nor the NPD provided details on when the discovery would enter into full-scale production.

Norway is the largest oil producer and the third-largest natural gas producer in Europe. It's the second-largest supplier of natural gas to Europe after Russia. Nearly three quarters of the oil it produces is exported to European countries.

Norway's Statoil has not yet found a viable gas field in the world's northernmost drilling sites, the country's oil industry administrative body said Tuesday, in a new blow for Arctic exploration.

The Atlantis well, at a latitude of 74 degrees North, only contains a non-commercial volume of gas according to the first estimates, the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate said in a statement.

It is the second disappointment for Statoil in the so-called Hoop area, located far north in the Norwegian waters of the Barents Sea.

In June, the group announced that the Apollo well, the most northerly well ever drilled in Norway, was dry.

Melting ice has attracted energy companies to the region, which the US Geological Survey (USGS) estimated in 2008 hides 22 percent of the world's undiscovered fossil fuel reserves.

But exploration has faced fierce opposition from environmental groups such as Greenpeace, whose activists have boarded ships in a bid to prevent drilling near sensitive natural sites.

Exploration is also complicated by extreme weather and the long distances to land, making the region less attractive at a time when large deposits of non-conventional fuels are coming onstream.

"It's a region that remains largely unexplored. Statoil is there for the long-term," Statoil spokesman Knut Rostad told AFP.

"We still consider the Barents Sea as a very exciting region."

Statoil is about to begin drilling the Mercury well, its third and last in the Hoop area, some 20 kilometres (12 miles) from a spot where oil was detected last year.

phy/efb/ph/cah

STATOIL

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