Repsol cleared to drill deepwater Stordal probe

OE Staff
Friday, March 3, 2017

Spain's Repsol has cleared a hurdle to drill the Stordal prospect in the Norwegian Sea using Transocean's semisubmersible drilling rig Transocean Spitsbergen.

The Petroleum Safety Authority has given the firm permission to drill the Stordal well 6705/7-1 in 1410m water depth, about 395km west of Bodø. 

Drilling, already approved by the Ministry of Petrolum, is due to start in early March and to last 33 days, or 48 days if a discovery is made.

The license is close to Statoil's Aasta Hansteen development, into which a discovery could be tied back. Repsol holds 40% in PL705, with partners DEA Norge (30%) and M Vest Energy (30%). M Vest Energy had bought its stake from Atlantic Petroleum, which had named the license Napoleon North. 

It is the first well to be drilled in the license area.

Categories: Exploration Europe Deepwater Drilling

Related Stories

Føn Energy Gets Offshore Wind Services Job in Poland

QatarEnergy, ExxonMobil Declare Cyprus Gas Discoveries Commercial

Dutch Firm Secures $465M Funding for Mexico-Bound FSO

Current News

Hugin B Platform Topside En Route to North Sea Development

BP Exits Canada's Bay du Nord Project as Equinor Acquires Full Interest

Fincantieri Strikes Four Deals in $687M Underwater Expansion

Fresh Ghana Well Lifts Kosmos Energy’s Jubilee Production

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News