Norwegian Oil Strike Averted

Tuesday, June 4, 2019

Norwegian oil workers struck a wage deal with employers on Tuesday, averting the outbreak of a strike that would have cut production by 440,000 barrels of oil equivalents per day (boed), the Norwegian Oil and Gas Association (NOG) announced.

Altogether nine offshore fields had been at risk of a shutdown in case of a strike, the industry group announced ahead of the negotiations.

An outage would have corresponded to about 11% of the daily output from Western Europe's largest producer of petroleum.

Workers will on average get a 3.2 percent increase in pay, in line with what's earlier been obtained by two other labor unions, NOG said.

The Lederne union said however that it expected its members to obtain further gains in upcoming talks with their respective companies, while confirming that the threat of a strike had been averted.

The union had planned to strike at Neptune Energy's Gjøa field, Okea's Draugen, Aker BP's Ivar Aasen and Equinor's Kristin, Oseberg East and Gudrun fields.

In addition production would have had to shut at Equinor's Tyrihans, as well as at the Maria and Vega fields, both operated by Wintershall DEA. 


(Reporting by Terje Solsvik and Nerijus Adomaitis, editing by Gwladys Fouche)

Categories: Energy Activity Europe Production

Related Stories

Orbital Marine Grows UK and Canada Tidal Energy Orderbook to 32MW

UK Grants Consent for 1.5GW Outer Dowsing Offshore Wind Farm

Shell Reserve Decline Raises Need for Deals or Discoveries

Current News

Libya Awards First Oil Blocks Since 2007 to Chevron, Eni

TGS Embarks on Multi-Client 2D Survey off Angola

Orbital Marine Grows UK and Canada Tidal Energy Orderbook to 32MW

SIT, Seatrium Launch Offshore and Marine Digital Learning Lab

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News