- Energy in Norway
Since the discovery of
North Sea oil in Norwegian waters during the late 1960s, exports of oil and gas have become very important elements of theEconomy of Norway . With North Sea oil production having peaked, disagreements over exploration for oil in theBarents Sea , the prospect of exploration in theArctic , as well as growing international concern overglobal warming , energy in Norway is currently receiving close attention.Fossil fuels
Norway is the third largest oil exporter on Earth (8th largest producer), producing around 3 million barrels of oil/day, and the world's sixth largest producer of natural gas, having significant gas reserves in the North Sea. [http://www.iea.org/textbase/nppdf/free/2006/key2006.pdf Key World Energy Statistics. 2006 Edition] ,International Energy Agency 2006] [ [http://www.nationsencyclopedia.com/Europe/Norway-ENERGY-AND-POWER.html Norway: Energy and Power] , Encyclopedia of the Nations] Norway also possesses some of the world's largest potentially exploitable coal reserves (located under theNorwegian continental shelf ) on earth. [ [http://www.eroei.com/content/view/122/45/ 3000 billion tons of coal off Norway's coastline] , by R.J.Wideroe & J.D.Sundberg, Energy Bulletin by Verdens Gang,29 December 2005 ]North Sea oil
In May of 1963, Norway asserted sovereign rights over natural resources in its sector of the North Sea. Exploration started on
July 19 ,1966 , when Ocean Traveller drilled its first hole. Initial exploration was fruitless, untilOcean Viking found oil onAugust 21 ,1969 . By the end of 1969, it was clear that there were large oil and gas reserves in the North Sea. The first oil field wasEkofisk , produced 427,442 barrels of crude in 1980. Since then, largenatural gas reserves have also been discovered.Against the backdrop of the
1972 Norwegian referendum to not join theEuropean Union , theNorwegian Ministry of Industry , headed byOla Skjåk Bræk moved quickly to establish a national energy policy. Norway decided to stay out ofOPEC , keep its own energy prices in line with world markets, and spend the revenue - known as the "currency gift" – in the Petroleum Fund of Norway. The Norwegian government established its own oil company,Statoil , and awarded drilling and production rights toNorsk Hydro and the newly formedSaga Petroleum .The North Sea turned out to present many technological challenges for production and exploration, and Norwegian companies invested in building capabilities to meet these challenges. A number of engineering and construction companies emerged from the remnants of the largely lost shipbuilding industry, creating centers of competence in
Stavanger and the western suburbs ofOslo . Stavanger also became the land-based staging area for the offshore drilling industry.Barents Sea oil
It is thought that the
Barents Sea , off the coast of Norway andRussia , may hold one third of the world’s remaining undiscovered oil and gas [http://www.norway.org/policy/speeches/petersenspeech4mar05.htm] . A 2001 moratorium on exploration in the Norwegian sector, imposed due to environmental concerns, was ended in 2005 following a change in government [http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/33494/story.htm] . A terminal andliquefied natural gas plant is now being constructed atSnohvit and, as theArctic ice cap shrinks due to global warming, it is thought thatSnohvit may also act as a future staging post for oil exploration in theArctic Ocean [ [http://www.nytimes.com/2005/10/10/science/10arctic.html?pagewanted=1&ei=5088&en=1f4059714b781260&ex=1286596800 As Polar Ice Turns to Water, Dreams of Treasure Abound - New York Times ] ]Electricity generation
Electricity generation in Norway is almost entirely from
hydroelectric power plants. Of the total production in 2005 of 137.8TWh , 136 TWh was from hydroelectric plants, 860GWh was from thermal power, and 499 GWh was wind generated. In 2005 the total consumption was 125.8 TWh. [http://www.nve.no]Norway was the first country to generate electricity commercially using sea-bed
tidal power . A 300 kilowatt prototype underwater turbine started generation in theKvalsund , south ofHammerfest , on November 13, 2003. [http://www.e-tidevannsenergi.com/] [http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn4188]Since 6 May 2008, the Norwegian and Dutch electricity grids are interconnected by a submarine high-voltage (450 kilovolts) cable with a capacity of 700 megawatts. [http://www.tennet.org/english/projects/norned_/projectomschrijving.aspx]
Carbon emissions
Despite producing the majority of its electricity from hydroelectric plants, Norway is ranked 12th in the 2004
list of countries by carbon dioxide emissions per capita and 37th in the 2004list of countries by ratio of GDP to carbon dioxide emissions . Norway is a signatory to theKyoto Protocol , under which it agreed to reduce itscarbon emissions to no more than 1% above 1990 levels by 2012.On April 19, 2007, Prime Minister
Jens Stoltenberg announced to the Labour Party annual congress that Norway'sgreenhouse gas emissions would be cut by 10 percent more than its Kyoto commitment by 2012, and that the government had agreed to achieve emission cuts of 30% by 2020. He also proposed that Norway should becomecarbon neutral by 2050, and called upon other rich countries to do likewise [http://www.regjeringen.no/en/dep/smk/primeminister/Prime-Minister-Jens-Stoltenberg/Speeches-and-Articles/2007/Speech-to-the-congress-of-the-Labour-Par.html?id=463749] . This carbon neutrality would be achieved partly bycarbon offset ting, a proposal criticised byGreenpeace , who also called on Norway to take responsibility for the 500m tonnes of emissions caused by its exports of oil and gas [http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/story?id=3057439&page=2] .World Wildlife Fund Norway also believes that the purchase of carbon offsets is unacceptable, saying 'it is a political stillbirth to believe thatChina will quietly accept that Norway will buy climate quotas abroad' [http://www.norwaypost.no/cgi-bin/norwaypost/imaker?id=71002] . The Norwegian environmental activistBellona Foundation believes that the prime minister was forced to act due to pressure from anti-European Union members of thecoalition government, and called the announcement 'visions without content' [http://www.norwaypost.no/cgi-bin/norwaypost/imaker?id=71002] .In January 2008 the Norwegian government went a step further and declared a goal of being carbon neutral by 2030. But the government has not been specific about any plans to reduce emissions at home; the plan is based on buying carbon offsets from other countries. [http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/22/world/europe/22norway.html?pagewanted=print]
Carbon capture and storage
Norway was the first country to operate an industrial-scale
carbon capture and storage storage project at theSleipner oilfield , dating from 1996 and operated byStatoil . Carbon dioxide is stripped from natural gas withamine solvent s and is deposited in a saline formation. The carbon dioxide is a waste product of the field's natural gas production; the gas contains 9% CO2, more than is allowed in the natural gas distribution network. Storing it underground avoids this problem and saves Statoil hundreds of millions ofeuros incarbon tax es. Sleipner stores about one milliontonne s of CO2 a year [http://www.iku.sintef.no/projects/IK23430000/] .ee also
*
Carbon footprint
*Climate change
*Energy policy
*European Economic Area
*Future energy development
*Peak oil
*Proposedoil phase-out in Sweden External links
* [http://www.aftenbladet.no/energi/energymap Interactive Map over the Norwegian Continental Shelf] , live information, facts, pictures and videos.
* [http://www.ife.no/publications/2006/ensys/publication.2007-02-14.4281061540/fss_download/Attachmentfile Energy efficiency policies and measures in Norway 2006]
* [http://www.kaldor.no/energy/berlin20060315-barents.html Oil and gas in the Barents Sea - A perspective from Norway]
* [http://www.cicero.uio.no/fulltext.asp?id=2722&lang=en CICERO: A green certificate market may result in less green electricity]
* [http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/22/world/europe/22norway.html?pagewanted=print Lofty Pledge to Cut Emissions Comes With Caveat in Norway]References
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