Reducing emissions from Sleipner and Gudrun
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The Sleipner field centre, along with the Gudrun platform and other associated fields, is now partly operating on power from shore. This will reduce annual emissions from the Norwegian continental shelf (NCS) by 160,000 tonnes of CO2.
Facts
- Partial electrification of the Sleipner field centre and Gudrun platform will reduce annual emissions from the NCS by 160,000 tonnes of CO2.
- The project also helps reduce Nox emissions in the order of 700 tonnes per year.
- The Sleipner field centre is supplied with onshore power via a 28-km long cable from the Gina Krog platform, which is connected to Johan Sverdrup with onshore power. The Gina Krog platform was connected to onshore power in September 2023.
- Overall investments in the project total NOK 1.08 billion.
- A total of about 500,000 hours have been worked, approx. 200,000 of which took place offshore, without any unwanted HSE incidents.
- The Sleipner field has removed CO2 from produced gas, captured, injected and stored around 20 million tonnes of CO2 since the start in 1996.
- The licensees in the Sleipner East licence are Equinor Energy AS (operator, 59.6%), Vår Energi ASA (15.4%), PGNiG Upstream Norway AS (15.0%) and Orlen Upstream Norway 2 AS (10.0%).
- The licensees in the Gudrun licence are Equinor Energy AS (operator, 36.0%), Vår Energi Norge AS (25.0%), OMV (Norge) AS (24.0%) and Repsol Norway AS (15.0%).
- With the entire Utsira High now electrified, emissions amounting to approximately 1.2 million tonnes per year is saved.
- The Utsira High power grid includes the following installations: Johan Sverdrup, Gina Krog, Sleipner, Gudrun (all operated by Equinor), Edvard Grieg and Ivar Aasen (both operated by Aker BP).