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Martin Linge on stream

Thursday, July 1 2021

Fossil energy – Norway

Around midnight on 30 June, the Martin Linge oil and gas field in the North Sea came on stream.

(Photo: Jan Arne Wold & Øyvind Gravås / Equinor)

The field is powered from shore, resulting in low CO2 emissions, and operated from its onshore control room.

“This is a big day for everyone working on the Martin Linge project, for Equinor and for our partner Petoro. I would like to thank everyone who has worked hard to deliver this project,” says Arne Sigve Nylund, Equinor’s executive vice president for Projects, Drilling & Procurements.

Expected recoverable resources are approximately 260 million barrels of oil equivalent (boe). At plateau the field will produce around 115 000 boe per day.

“Martin Linge is an important contribution to Norwegian oil and gas production. Thanks to new infrastructure in this area it will be possible to realise new discoveries in the future. Equinor has formed a cross-disciplinary team who is looking into the opportunities of a wider area surrounding Martin Linge,” says Rune Nedregaard, senior vice president for operations south of Exploration & Production Norway.

The Martin Linge platform receives power via the world’s longest alternating-current sea cable measuring 163 kilometres from the onshore substation at Kollsnes in Western Norway.

“Electrification is one of our main measures for reducing CO2 emissions from our activities,” says Nedregaard.

The platform was connected to shore power in December 2018 and was soon followed by the storage vessel on the Martin Linge field. This is the world’s first storage vessel receiving power from shore.

Martin Linge is also the first platform on the Norwegian continental shelf to be put on stream from shore. The production wells and processing plant are operated from the control room in Stavanger, and the offshore operators use tablets in the field to interact with their colleagues in the onshore control room and operations centre. Onshore control room will reduce costs in the operating phase.

Related posts:

  1. Development plans for Troll West electrification handed over to authorities
  2. Sleipner field centre to be partly electrified
  3. Significant oil discovery close to Fram field 
  4. Turnkey high-voltage AC order to provide power from shore to Troll West

Filed Under: Electrification, Equinor, International News, Martin Linge, Norway, Oil and Gas Tagged With: electrification, Equinor, Martin Linge, north sea


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