Norway’s Equinor said on Aug. 28 it is considering whether to build a pioneering offshore wind farm with floating turbines to supply electricity to two North Sea oilfields as part of a strategy to curb greenhouse gas emissions.
The project at the Gullfaks and Snorre oilfields would cost about $592 million and could reduce Norway's emissions of carbon dioxide by more than 200,000 tonnes/year, Equinor said.
“This could be the first time an offshore wind farm is directly connected to oil and gas platforms,” state-controlled Equinor said in a statement. The two fields currently are powered by generators running on natural gas at the platforms.
Norway’s greenhouse gas emissions have remained high despite pledges for deep cuts under international accords such as the Paris climate deal. In 2017, Norway’s annual emissions were 2.4% above 1990 levels at 52.4 million tonnes.
“To maintain profitable operations (offshore Norway) in the long term, it is essential that we do our utmost to further reduce the carbon footprint from our activities,” Executive Vice President Arne Sigve Nylund said.
Formerly known as Statoil, Equinor earlier this year changed its name to underscore a push into renewable energy under Chief Executive Eldar Saetre, although oil and gas will remain the company's dominant business.
The company’s first floating offshore wind farm began operating off Scotland last year, supplying electricity to the onshore market. Equinor has also announced plans for bottom-fixed offshore wind projects in the United States, Poland and Britain.
A final investment decision on the plan for Snorre and Gullfaks, known as the Hywind Tampen floating wind farm, will be made in 2019, Equinor said. The company will seek to reduce the cost from the preliminary estimate.
Equinor said it hoped Norwegian government subsidies would cover half the capital expenditure for the project, where 11 turbines, each with a capacity of eight megawatts, would meet about 35% of the power demand from the two fields.
Electricity generation costs could be 40-50% less than the $229 a megawatt hour at the Scottish project.
“This will help reduce Norway’s overall carbon emissions,” Marius Holm, head of environmental foundation Zero, told Reuters. “The move will also help industrialize offshore wind and bring costs down.”
The Gullfaks Field is owned by Equinor, OMV and Norway’s state-owned Petoro, while Snorre is held by Equinor, Petoro, Exxon Mobil, Idemitsu, DEA and Point Resources.
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