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OIL AND GAS
Norway's offshore service sector unites
by Daniel J. Graeber
Stavanger, Norway (UPI) Feb 6, 2017


Good start for Norway's Aker BP
Oslo, Norway (UPI) Feb 6, 2017 - A Norwegian major that emerged as a result of a merger involving BP said its fourth quarter performance was indicative of long-term durability.

Aker BP, a merger of Norwegian energy companies and a national subsidiary of BP, reported adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization at $485 million for the fourth quarter, which it attributed to a string of milestone achievements in its short track record.

"Aker BP continued to deliver a solid performance in the fourth quarter with stable, safe and efficient operations," CEO Karl Johnny Hersvik said in a statement. "The company paid its first dividend in December and aims to sustain a minimum dividend level of $250 million per year going forward."

The Norwegian government confirmed an Aker BP discovery in December near the Frigg field in the North Sea at between 25 million and 75 million barrels of recoverable oil equivalents. In January, the company boasted that its Valhall and Hod complex in the North Sea passed a production milestone of 1 billion barrels of product, far more than expected and well ahead of schedule.

The company said it realized an average price of oil during the fourth quarter at $52 per barrel, leading to petroleum revenues of $542 million. The merged assets under the Aker BP umbrella, meanwhile, means the company is the largest independent oil company in Europe.

Norway is a lead oil producer for the European economy, apart from Russia. The government reported preliminary production for December was around 2 million barrels per day, which was 3 percent lower than November. Full-year production, however, showed an increase for the third straight year.

Maneuvering through a weakened energy sector by joining forces is a "necessary" step for Norway's offshore service vessel market, executives said.

Three companies -- Farstad Shipping, Deep Sea Supply and Solstad Offshore -- said they would team up under a united restructuring plan aimed at giving them leverage at a time when industry spending is suppressed.

Citing sentiments expressed by industry experts, Jon Are Gummedal, CEO of Deep Sea Supply, said the nature of doing business in the post-$100 per barrel era required consolidation.

"The proposed combination is a necessary structural measure in today's offshore service vessel market, which will enable the combined company to achieve significant synergies through more efficient operations and a lower cost base," he said in a statement.

The three companies said their combined fleet would surpass 150, making it a world leader in the supply vessel market. The united front would do business as Solstad Farstad.

"When including all vessel classes and lower spec vessels, the company ranks fourth globally," it said.

Industry estimates find investments in Norway's petroleum sector account for about 25 percent of the productive capital in the country. Most spending and expense metrics decline through 2018 before slow recovery emerges.

Farstad Shipping CEO Karl Johan Bakken said the merger gives all three companies an industrial platform on which to survive the current market downturn and be primed for growth once recovery emerges.

Norway is the main supplier of oil and natural gas to the European economy, apart from Russia.


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