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Norway and Sweden oil firms merge in 12 billion euro deal

Norwegian oil company Aker BP said Tuesday it would acquire Sweden's Lundin Energy's oil and gas activities in a merger valued at 125 billion Norwegian kroner ($13.9 billion, 12.3 billion euros).

Pictured are oil rigs in the North Sea.
The two firms have agreed a merger. Pictured is two oil rigs in the North Sea oil. Photo by Jonathan Nackstrand / AFP

The company will be the largest of its kind “focused purely on the Norwegian Continental Shelf”, the companies said in a statement, creating a new heavyweight after Norway’s state-owned energy giant Equinor.

The combined firm is expected to produce 400 million barrels of oil equivalent next year. With reserves estimated at 2.7 billion barrels, it hopes to raise production to more than 500 million barrels by 2028.

Aker BP chief executive Karl Johnny Hersvik said the merger will create an exploration and production “company of the future which will offer among the lowest CO2 emissions, the lowest cost, high free cash flow and the most attractive growth pipeline in the industry”.

He said it would also provide investors with strong dividends, pledging to increase them by at least five percent per year if oil prices remain above $40 per barrel.

The merger will see Lundin Energy shareholders receive $2.2 billion in cash plus newly-issued stock in Aker.

British oil major BP, which held a nearly 28 percent stake in Aker, will have a 15.9 percent stake in the combined company.

Norway will not grant new oil exploration licences in virgin or little-explored areas in 2022. But the deal does not rule out awarding oil licences in already heavily exploited areas.

Since the North Sea has been extensively explored, the agreement mainly concerns the Barents Sea in the Arctic

The oil industry was a major issue in legislative elections in September, indicating Norway’s growing difficulties in reconciling environmental concerns with exploiting energy resources.

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BUSINESS

Norway invites proposals for blocks for controversial deep-sea mining

Norwegian authorities on Monday took another step towards the controversial mining of its seabed, by inviting potential actors to nominate blocks that would be of interest in a first licensing round.

Norway invites proposals for blocks for controversial deep-sea mining

Already Western Europe’s largest oil and gas producer, Norway could become the first country to authorise seabed mining, arguing the importance of not relying on China or authoritarian countries for minerals essential for renewable technology.

“This marks the starting point for something that could become a new industry on the Norwegian shelf,” Torgeir Stordal, director of the Norwegian Offshore Directorate, said in a statement.

While deep-sea mining is contentious due to the potential impact on vulnerable marine ecosystems, Norway’s parliament in January formally gave its green light to open up parts of its seabed to exploration.

By allowing the prospecting, Oslo says it wants to fill in gaps in knowledge, stressing that “environmental considerations” will be taken into account in all stages of the process.

In addition, “extraction will only be authorised if the licensee’s extraction plan demonstrates that extraction can take place in a sustainable and responsible manner.”

Several countries, including France and the UK, have called for a moratorium on deep-sea mining, and the European Parliament expressed concern following Norway’s decision to move forward.

“More people have been to space than in the deep sea,” Kaja Lonne Fjaertoft of WWF Norway told a conference in early April, calling it the “last wilderness on the planet.”

“However what we know is that our deep sea is vastly important to us that live here on land,” she added, referring to its role in the production of oxygen and the sequestration of CO2.

In early 2023, the Norwegian Offshore Directorate published a report concluding that “substantial resources are in place on the seabed” including minerals such as copper, zinc and cobalt.

Among other uses, they are crucial for the manufacturing of batteries, wind turbines, computers and mobile phones.

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