UKCS Still Worth Investment Despite Brexit -Equinor

Monday, December 10, 2018

Norwegian oil and gas firm Equinor will remain committed to the mature British continental shelf regardless of the country's plans to leave the European Union, a senior executive told Reuters.

British Prime Minister Theresa May abruptly decided on Monday to pull a parliamentary vote on the Brexit deal, thrusting U.K.'s divorce from the EU into chaos, with possible options including a disorderly Brexit with no deal.

"We are putting more investments into the U.K. despite Brexit, the perception of North Sea as being very mature and dying and oil price gyrations," Al Cook, Equinor's executive vice president for strategy, told Reuters, speaking before the vote Brexit vote was postponed.

"We want to make the most out of U.K.'s common geology with Norway."

The majority state-owned company, formerly known as Statoil, could apply lessons learned from the Norwegian continental shelf in slashing breakeven costs for new developments and increasing recovery rates from producing fields, he added.

Cook said Equinor planned to focus its activities around the Rosebank project, acquired from Chevron in October, and the Mariner heavy oilfield, expected to start in the first half of 2019.

"We will see what we can sweep up in the areas and how we can turn them into hubs in the future," Cook said.

Equinor said on Monday it completed its previously announced transaction to sell a 17 percent interest in Chevron-operated Alba oilfield to HitecVision-backed Verus Petroleum to focus on its core activities.

Equinor holds interests in more than 20 exploration licences off Britain, and plans to drill at least three exploration wells there in 2019.

The Norwegian company says it has a capacity to supply around a quarter of Britain's peak gas demand, and its Sheringham Shoal and Dudgeon offshore wind farms are able to supply power to 630,000 British households.

The company is expected to make the final investment decision with its partner SSE on Britain's Dogger Bank offshore wind project next year.

"The U.K. is attractive for us because it is a double AA rated country with stable tax regime where we can replicate our Norwegian offshore success," Cook said.


(Reporting by Dmitry Zhdannikov, writing by Nerijus Adomaitis; editing by David Evans)

Categories: Finance Energy Offshore Energy Europe Oil Regulations Government

Related Stories

Low Demand, High Supply Keeps Asia LNG Spot Prices Flat

Following Big Loss in 2025, Oil Steadies

Saipem Lands $425M Turkish Gas Contract in Sakarya Expansion

Saipem Nets Multibillion-Dollar Job at World's Largest Offshore Gas Field

Russia Seeks to Boost Oil Exports to China as Sanctions Tighten

Sponsored: Energy and Finance Chiefs Call for Sound Policy, Stable Frameworks at ADIPEC

Sponsored: Energy Sector Urged to Scale AI Adoption at ADIPEC

Sponsored: Policy, AI, and Capital Take Center Stage at ADIPEC 2025

ABL Secures Rig Moving Assignment with India's ONGC

Eni-Petronas Gas Joint Venture Up for Launch in 2026

Current News

Woodside to Supply LNG to JERA During Japan's Winter Peak

Fugro, PTSC G&S Extend Partnership for Vietnam's Offshore Wind Push

Thailand's Gulf Energy Eyes Long-Term LNG Supply

OceanMight Gets Petronas’ Offshore Construction Job in Malaysia

Vantris Energy Lands Petronas Job on Malaysia’s Offshore Fields

Murphy Oil Appraisal Well Boosts Resource Outlook at Field off Vietnam

Viridien Kicks Off Multi-Client Reimaging Program off Malaysia

Petrovietnam Agrees First-Ever LNG Term Deal with Shell

ADNOC Takes FID on SARB Deep Gas Project Offshore Abu Dhabi

Jereh Group Delivers Oil Separation Systems for Petrobras’ FPSO Units

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com