Aker BP Makes North Sea Find

Monday, February 4, 2019

Aker BP has discovered an oil and gas reservoir while drilling near its Alvheim field in the North Sea, the Norwegian firm said on Monday.

Known as Froskelaar (Frog's Leg) Main, the reservoir is estimated to hold between 45 million and 153 million barrels of oil equivalents, and may straddle Norway's maritime border with Britain, the company added.

"The drilling operation will continue, and a comprehensive data collection program will be performed to determine the size and quality of the discovery," Aker BP said in a statement.

When reserves are found to stretch across the British-Norwegian offshore border, the two nations share the revenue from production based on estimates of how much oil and gas is located on each side.

Aker BP is operator of the licence with a 60 percent stake, while Sweden's Lundin Petroleum and Eni's Vaar Energi each hold 20 percent.

Aker BP is 40 percent owned by Norway's Aker ASA and 30 percent by BP Plc.


(Reporting by Terje Solsvik; Editing by Shreejay Sinha)

Categories: Drilling Activity Europe

Related Stories

Vantage Drilling’s Ultra-Deepwater Drillship Heads to India Under $260M Contract

Exploration Well in Black Sea Offshore Block Comes Up Dry

Equinor Gets Permit to Drill North Sea Wildcat Well

Current News

Aquaterra Energy Gets Multi-Year Well Intervention Job off Spain

Two DOF Vessels Get Work in North Sea and Australia

Seatrium Unit Launches Arbitration Against Petrobras over FPSO Contract

Transocean-Valaris Tie-Up to Create $17B Offshore Drilling Major with 73 Rigs

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News