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Home International Customs Norway

Noway gas exports increase in 2016

byCT Report
12/01/2017
in Norway
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OSLO: A new record for gas exports from Norway was set in 2016, when 108.56 billion standard cubic metres (scm) (3.8 tcf) were delivered within Gassco’s operatorship to Germany, Belgium, France and the U.K.

In 2015, 108.44 billion scm of gas were exported from the Norwegian continental shelf to European buyers. Deliveries of natural gas liquids and condensate from the Gassco-operated process plants at Kårstø and Kollsnes (via Vestprosess) in western Norway also rose in 2016, reaching 10 million tons compared to 9.6 million tons the year before.

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“Deliveries show that European demand for Norwegian gas is higher than ever,” says Frode Leversund, CEO of Gassco. “It’s also gratifying that we’ve been able to set a new record in a year characterised by extensive maintenance work.”

State-owned Gassco is the operator for Norway’s natural gas pipeline network, including the network of international pipelines and receiving terminals that exports Norway’s natural gas to the United Kingdom and continental Europe. The pipelines are owned by Gassled, a joint venture between the Norwegian government (46 percent ownership) and Statoil (five percent ownership). The remaining 49 percent is owned by two Canadian pension funds, other institutional investors and private companies.

Norway’s largest producing natural gas field is Troll, which produced 1.2 tcf in 2015, representing 30 percent of Norway’s total natural gas production that year. The four next-largest producing fields in 2015 were Ormen Lange (0.6 tcf), Åsgard (0.3 tcf), Kvitebjørn (0.2 tcf), and Snøhvit (0.2 tcf). These five fields accounted for 63 percent of Norway’s total dry natural gas production in 2015.

Norway is the largest holder of crude oil and natural gas reserves in Europe, and it provides much of the petroleum liquids and natural gas consumed on the continent. Norway was the third-largest exporter of natural gas in the world after Russia and Qatar in 2015. Natural gas production increased nearly every year since 1993, except for a small decline in year-over-year production in 2011 and 2013.

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