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POLITICS

EXPLAINED: Norway’s divisive decision to connect a gas plant to the power grid

Norway's government has approved a plan to connect the Hammerfest liquified natural gas plant to the power grid to cut greenhouse gasses. However, the move has been met with strong opposition. 

Pictured is a file photo of Equinor's LNG facility on Melkøya.
Norway has given teh green light to power Melkøya from the national grid. File photo: Equinor's liquified natural gas facility on Melkøya. PHOTO / NINA LARSON (Photo by NINA LARSON / AFP)

The Norwegian government has given the green light to plans to connect the Hammerfest liquified natural gas plant on the island of Melkøya in northern Norway to the local energy grid. 

The measure could cut up to two percent of Norway’s total annual emissions, according to plant operator Equinor. The plan involves shutting down a gas plant that powers the facility and replacing it with energy from the grid. 

Electricity supplied from the grid would be much cleaner than energy from the gas plant because the vast majority of Norway’s power needs are met by renewable sources. 

“This is an important day for building industry and creating jobs in northern Norway, and for the climate,” Norway’s Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre told a news conference held in front of the plant in Arctic Norway.

The planned power switch will take place in 2030. Equinor and its partners will invest 13.2 billion kroner to electrify Melkøya. The facility at Melkøya can deliver 6.5 billion cubic metres (bcm) of gas per year, enough to power about 6.5 million homes. By electrifying and upgrading the plant, it could remain in operation until 2040. 

Plans to electrify Melkøya have been met with heavy opposition. Norway’s parliament had previously asked the government to explore other options, such as carbon capture storage at the plant. This would involve capturing emissions and storing them permanently under the ground at the site.    

To prevent Melkøya from using all the energy in the region, the government has planned a large-scale expansion of the power grid in Finnmark. 

Several wind projects in the region have also received licences to meet the power demands of the electrification. However, issuing licences for new projects to expand energy capacity in the north typically conflicts with the interest of reindeer herders. 

“The problem is that many of the wind power projects for which a licence has been applied for are located in areas with reindeer herding. So it will be full of conflict and not entirely easy to carry out,” Olav Botnen at Volt Power Analytics told Norwegian financial newspaper Dagens Næringsliv (DN). 

Norway’s government has been in several disputes with reindeer herders over the development of energy projects. In 2021, the Norwegian government lost in the Supreme Court after it was ruled that the Fosen wind farms in central Norway encroached on the rights of indigenous Sami reindeer herders

The court ruled that the wind farms, which disrupted reindeer herding, violated the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. It said that traditional Sami reindeer herding is a protected cultural practice. Despite the ruling, the Norwegian government has not announced plans to remove the wind turbines deemed illegal. 

The Sami Parliament has condemned the government’s decision to electrify Melkøya.  

“It is completely unacceptable that the government announces the electrification of Melkøya in this way. Such a decision shows that the government is setting aside all promises about consideration for Sami rights holders. The promise of strengthened dialogue with the Sami Parliament also seems to be empty words,” Sami Parliament president Silje Karine Muotka said. 

Locally, the plan could also push up energy prices for households. This is because energy analysts predict it will be difficult to develop enough power to electrify the plant. 

This means supply could struggle to keep pace with demand. Northern Norway, generally, sees the lowest energy prices in the country as it produces far more power than it needs. 

There are also concerns that other green energy projects may find it hard to get off the ground as priority will be given to meeting Melkøya’s energy needs. 

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ENVIRONMENT

Norway to be taken to court by WWF over deep sea mining

The World Wide Fund for Nature's (WWF) Norwegian chapter said Thursday it would take legal action against Norway for opening up its seabed to mining before performing sufficient impact studies.

Norway to be taken to court by WWF over deep sea mining

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

While deep-sea mining is contentious due to its 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.

“Norway’s decision to proceed with opening up vast areas of ocean for destructive mining, is an unprecedented management scandal,” Karoline Andaur, CEO of WWF Norway, said in a statement.

“We have never before seen a Norwegian government so arrogantly ignore all scientific advice and defy the warnings of a united marine research community,” she continued.

According to WWF, the impact studies carried out by Norway’s energy ministry did not meet the criteria required by Norwegian law.

During the public hearing process, the Norwegian Environment Agency — a government agency — reached the same conclusion, citing “significant gaps in the knowledge about nature, technology and environmental impact.”

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.

Meanwhile, Oslo maintains that by allowing the prospecting it wants to fill in gaps in knowledge to determine whether undersea mining can take place without serious impact on the environment. Otherwise, it will not be authorised.

“We believe that a thorough process has been carried out with broad involvement, and that the applicable requirements have been followed,” Astrid Bergmal, state secretary at Norway’s Ministry of Energy, told AFP in an email Thursday.

On April 12th, the Ministry announced that it was opening up an area of the Norwegian Sea and Greenland Seas to exploration, with the aim of awarding the first licences in the first half of 2025.

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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