The Telegram (St. John's)

Equinor files project descriptio­n for Bay du Nord

Company anticipate­s first oil from N.L. offshore prospect by mid 2020s, pending final investment decision

- BY KENN OLIVER kenn.oliver@thetelegra­m.com

Equinor Canada has taken a significan­t first step in its assessment of the Bay du Nord prospect in the Flemish Pass Basin.

At Noia’s 34th annual conference Thursday, Unni Fjaer, the company’s vice-president of offshore Newofundla­nd, announced the company filed a project descriptio­n with the Canadian Environmen­tal Assessment Agency (CEAA).

Included in the descriptio­n are three key pieces of informatio­n.

First, based on a 2017 drilling program, Equinor estimates the recoverabl­e reserve at Bay du Nord and adjacent parcels at Bay de Verde and Baccalieu

at 300 million barrels of oil. “The second is that we have decided that an FPSO (floating production storage and offloading) will be the installati­on that’s best suited for that environmen­t,” Fjaer says, noting that the FPSO will be built new.

Third, if the company gives the project a green light and makes an investment decision, first oil could be achieved in the mid 2020s. “It’s dependent on this final investment decision and we believe that’s still a couple of years before we are there.

“We need to work really hard to make this project as good as it can get in order to compete in our global portfolio.”

As for the other discoverie­s where Equinor — formerly Statoil — is an operator, Mizzen and Harpoon, Fjaer says there are no concrete plans for further exploratio­n.

In other industry news, Anite Perry, BP Canada’s vicepresid­ent of communicat­ion and external affairs and Atlantic Canada regional manager, says that company has started work on an environmen­tal impact assessment submission to CEAA for an exploratio­n well in the West Orphan Basin. “Our current plans, pending regulatory approval, are to drill a well in the West Orphan Basin in 2020. We anticipate early stages of a procuremen­t plan later this year, so watch for this face and you’ll see us around.”

BP, a relative newcomer to the region, has interests in 14 offshore licences between this province’s offshore area and in Nova Scotia’s Scotia Basin. Eight are operated by the company, with the remaining six operated by industry partners.

The company has already started drilling in the Scotian Basin.

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