Equinor Comes Up Dry Offshore Norway

Monday, December 23, 2024

Equinor and its partners have drilled two wells in the North Sea, both of which were proven dry.

The wildcat wells Kvernbit and Mimung (35/10-14 A and 35/10-14 S) are the first to be drilled in production license 1185, which was awarded in 2023.

Equinor is the operator of the license with 40% stake, with partners Vår Energi, Sval Energi, and Aker BP holding 20% working interest each.

The wells were drilled by the Odfjell Drilling’s Deepsea Stavanger semi-submersible drilling rig.

The 210-built drilling rig is of the GVA 7500 type, built by Daewoo Shipbuilding and Marine Engineering in South Korea. It is capable of working at water depths of 3,000 meters with drilling depth capacity of 10,670 meters.

The primary exploration target for the wells was to prove petroleum in Upper and Middle Jurassic reservoir rocks in the Kvernbit prospect (Viking Group) and the Mimung sør prospect (Brent Group), respectively.

The secondary exploration target was to prove petroleum in the Cook Formation in the Lower Jurassic.

Categories: Drilling North Sea Industry News Activity Europe Oil and Gas

Related Stories

TotalEnergies Completes UK Upstream Merger to Form NEO NEXT+

EnQuest Keeps 2026 Production View as UK Windfall Tax Hits Profit

Shell-Equinor JV Adura Signs $3B Financing Deal

Current News

DroneQ Robotics, Mark Offshore Collaborate with R/V Mintis

OMV Petrom’s Black Sea Well Fails to Find Significant Gas Volumes

Eco Wave Power Completes Los Angeles Wave Energy Pilot with Shell

Borr Drilling Secures New Drilling Rig Contracts Across Four Regions

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News