Italy's Eni Arrives Arctic as Shell Departs

By Aiswarya Lakshmi
Thursday, October 1, 2015

 As Shell retreats from the Arctic, the Italian oil giant Eni is making final preparations for its own oil exploration venture in the Norwegian Arctic, reports the Guardian.

Eni has vowed to press ahead with oil production - a $5.5bn (£3.6bn) project - in the Norwegian Arctic. in the Arctic by the end of the year, undeterred by Shell’s decision to abandon its quest for Arctic oil.
The project - Goliat - is set to become the world’s northernmost offshore oil field to come on stream, eventually pumping 100,000 barrels of oil per day from reserves believed to hold around 175m barrels of oil and 8bn cubic metres of gas.
Goliat has been hit by several cost overruns and delays during construction, but Eni said last month it was only a few weeks away from starting production.
The project’s 64,000-tonne floating platform is already in place and its wells have been drilled, ready for imminent production.
Quoting anonymous sources with close knowledge of the development, engineering publication Teknisk Ukeblad (TU)  said Norway’s Petroleum Safety Authority had doubted production could start this year.
When the field comes on stream, it would become the world’s northernmost producing offshore oilfield, the operator has said.
Operator ENI has a 65 percent stake in the field, while its partner Statoil holds the remaining 35 percent.  
Categories: Offshore Energy Marine Power Arctic Operations Offshore Energy

Related Stories

Shell Condemns Australia's LNG Plans

Tariffs Bite: Venezuela Oil Loading Slows

Port & Terminal Technology USA Set for Miami

Current News

DP World, Asian Terminals Inc. Invest $100M to Boost Capacity at Manila South Harbor

PD Ports Outlines Plans to Develop UK Offshore Wind Hub

DP World Begins $165 Million Expansion of Maputo Container Terminal Capacity

Port Canaveral Invests $500 Million in Five-Year Port-Wide Improvement Plan

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News