Activists Halt Oil Exports from Equinor's Norway Terminal

Nerijus Adomaitis
Thursday, August 19, 2021

Crude oil loading at Equinor's Sture export terminal on Norway's west coast was interrupted on Thursday after activists from the Extinction Rebellion group breached the facility's safety zone, the company said.

Equinor halted the loading of the TS Bergen Aframax vessel, but other operations were not affected, a company spokesperson said.

Sture is a major export facility for crude, which arrives by pipeline from several offshore fields including Equinor's Oseberg, Lundin Energy's Edvard Grieg and Aker BP's Ivar Aasen, according to Equinor's website.

Activists entered the terminal's safety zone with a boat, and also blocked a road leading to the terminal.

"We decided to interrupt the loading, but the terminal operates as normal," Equinor spokesperson Eskil Eriksen said.

"We have notified the police and they are handling the situation," he added.

The TS Bergen's destination was Rotterdam, according to Eikon data.

(Reporting by Nerijus Adomaitis; Editing by Terje Solsvik and Jan Harvey)

Categories: Energy Coastal/Inland Industry News Activity Europe Production

Related Stories

Equinor Secures Permit for North Sea Drilling Operation

Transocean’s Ultra-Deepwater Drillship Up for $130M Australian Job

Equinor’s First Hybrid Power Complex Starts Operations

Current News

Shell Seeks Buyer for 20% Stake in Brazilian Oilfield Cluster

VAALCO Energy Spuds First Well in New Drilling Campaign off Gabon

US Judge Overturns Trump’s Freeze on Wind Energy Permits

EnerMech Gets Onboard Woodside’s Pluto Train 2 LNG Project

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News