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Page 4 - நோர்வே பெட்ரோலியம் பாதுகாப்பு அதிகாரம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Equinor Relaunches Methanol Plant After Fire

Equinor Relaunches Methanol Plant After Fire Feb 22, 2021 8:10:am Summary by: Joe Murphy Posted in: Equinor Relaunches Methanol Plant After Fire Norway s Equinor has resumed production at its methanol plant at Tjeldbergodden, after a fire broke out at the facility s compressor building on December 2 last year, leading to its decommissioning. The safe start-up preparations have gone according to plan and the facility is now supplying methanol to the market, Equinor said in a statement on February 20. The Tjeldbergodden plant has been in operation since 1997 and produces up to 900,000 metric tons/year of methanol from gas supplied from the offshore Heidrun field. It accounts for around 25% of Europe s total methanol production and about 10% of its consumption. Equinor operates the facility with a 82% interest, while ConocoPhillips has 18%.

Norway: Equinor given consent to drill exploration well 7322/6-1 S in the Barents Sea

Norway: Aker BP given consent to use Maersk Integrator for production drilling on the Tambar field

Norway: Aker BP given consent to use Maersk Integrator for production drilling on the Tambar field 27 Jan 2021 Maersk Integrator for production drilling on the Tambar field. Tambar is a field in the southern part of the Norwegian sector in the North Sea, 16 kms southeast of the Ula field. The water depth is 68 metres. Tambar was discovered in 1983, and the plan for development and operation (PDO) was approved in 2000. The field has been developed with a remotely controlled wellhead facility without processing equipment. Production started in 2001. Source: norskpetroleum.no

Watchdog identifies serious breaches of safety on Equinor platform - News for the Oil and Gas Sector

Updated: 06/01/2021, 12:18 pm Martin Linge. Pic: Jan Arne Wold/ Woldcam / Equinor Register here for the Energy Voice daily newsletter, bringing you key news and insight from across the global energy landscape. Thank you for signing up to our newsletter. Something went wrong - please try again later. Sign Up Norway’s offshore health and safety watchdog has identified several “serious breaches” on board one of Equinor’s North Sea platforms. The Norwegian Petroleum Safety Authority (PSA) carried out an audit of control, monitoring and safety systems on the Martin Linge installation between October 20 and November 6 last year. A total of nine breaches of health and safety regulations were identified, as well as three conditions which were categorised as improvement points.

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