SANDEFJORD, Norway -- Norway has awarded 60 new
production licenses to 42 oil companies in the "biggest ever" award in
so-called predefined areas, Energy Minister Ola Borten Moe said Tuesday.
He said the companies were awarded 34 licenses in the North Sea, 22
licenses in the Norwegian Sea and 4 licenses in the Barents Sea, Moe
said at an oil conference here.
The licenses are situated in mature areas on the Norwegian
Continental Shelf, where 27 of the companies have been awarded
operatorships.
Only one of the 43 companies which had shown an interest didn't get a license.
Moe also said that the recent Aldous/Avaldsnes discovery in the North
Sea will be renamed Johan Sverdrup, after a former Norwegian
politician.
Statoil ASA's (STO) Chief Executive Helge Lund said that the company
aims for production start at Aldous/Avaldsnes "well ahead of 2020" and
reiterated his demand for new acreage to increase production after that
date.
"Unless we get new discoveries, production can halve from 2020 to 2030," Lund said.
Asked whether he doesn't now need access to the controversial Lofoten
and Vesteraalen areas, after recent large discoveries elsewhere, he
said that "it is important" to evaluate these areas.
The Petroleum Directorate is the only entity allowed to gather seismic
data from Lofoten and Vesteraalen in northern Norway, as they aren't
yet open for exploration. Lofoten is closed for oil business at least
until after the next election in 2013, in an agreement between the
Socialist party, SV, and its two government partners.
Dow Jones Newswires
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