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Norway’s rise to power: How one giant company became Europe’s gas lifeline

- B P A R  K L With assistance from Petra Sorge, Ewa Krukowska, John Ainger, Anna Shiryaevsk­aya and Olga Tanas/ Bloomberg

WHEN the world’s top gas traders met in late April at a canal-side hotel on the outskirts of Amsterdam, the atmosphere was business-as-usual: coffee, croissants and wrangling over deals for the upcoming winter. en came news of a leak at Europe’s biggest liquefied natural gas plant, located above the Arctic Circle in Norway.

The problem—discovered during a planned test of the facility’s safety systems—was quickly repaired, but not before it caused a momentary spike in the price of natural gas. Back in the Netherland­s, it served as an uncomforta­ble reminder of the power of a single company, Equinor ASA.

In the more than two years since Russia invaded Ukraine, sending energy prices soaring, the Norwegian oil and gas giant has quietly picked up the crown that once belonged to Russia’s Gazprom PJSC. Norway now supplies 30 percent of the bloc’s gas; Gazprom provided about 35 percent of all Europe’s gas before the war. And of the more than 109 billion cubic meters of natural gas Norway exported to Europe last year—enough to power Germany until 2026—roughly two-thirds was marketed and sold by Equinor.

So long as the bloc continues to depend heavily on fossil fuels, Norwegian hydrocarbo­ns will be essential to keeping the lights on in Europe.

Equinor’s visibility “dramatical­ly changed with reduced flows from Russia,” said Irene Rummelhoff, the company’s head of midstream, marketing and processing. “There was a point in time where [Europe] almost took us for granted. That is no longer the case.”

The company’s new prominence has also raised questions about whether European leaders are, once again, putting their countries at risk by relying too heavily on a single supplier. Although Norway is perceived as a steady trading partner with a long and consistent history of delivering energy to Europe, extended outages and its handling of maintenanc­e challenges, both of which affect energy prices, have had ripple effects across the continent.

Part of the company’s good fortune has to do with a broader shift in Europe’s relationsh­ip to fossil fuels, Thina Margrethe Saltvedt, chief analyst for sustainabl­e finance at Nordea Bank Abp, said in an interview.

Five years ago, “there was a lot of talk about the green transition and how we were starting to see the oil and gas industry sunset,” she said. “Then Covid happened, then the war in Ukraine, and now you simply don’t see it anymore. The focus has turned to energy security.”

The notion that gas won’t disappear anytime soon, a view strongly endorsed by the gas industry, has thrust Norway to the center of the conversati­on around securing Europe’s energy resources. German Economy Minister Robert Habeck—who is also in charge of climate policy in the region’s biggest economy—made an official visit to Oslo in early January 2023. Commission President Ursula von der Leyen travelled two months later to Norway’s Troll natural gas field, which provides 10 percent of the continent’s supplies.

EU energy czar Kadri Simson has also visited Norway twice in the past two years. Speaking at an event in the Norwegian capital in March, Simson told a hall filled with the country’s oil and gas elite that “the EU continues to count on Norway as a partner for convention­al sources,” and offered her appreciati­on for its help during the energy crisis.

Because Norway’s gas prices are higher than Russia’s, there was some fuming after Russian exports shrank about Norway benefiting at Europe’s expense. But criticism abated as government­s and traders accepted the new market conditions. The non-eu member has never been shy about the importance it places on gas—norway has long advocated that gas should place a central role in the bloc’s green transition—and now it is finding more willing counterpar­ts. In late April, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz thanked Norway for enabling his country to become independen­t of Russian gas “within just a few months,” and praised it as “the perfect partner” for securing Germany and Europe’s supply.

Norway’s new role as gas purveyor to Europe has been very profitable—gas exports hit a record high of 1.4 trillion kroner ($130 billion) in 2022—but it has also cast a question mark over Norway’s green future. While the country has become a leader in initiative­s like the transition to electric vehicles, the recent surge in demand for gas has had the effect of redirectin­g financial resources and talent back into the oil and gas sector. Organizati­ons such as Greenpeace have expressed concern that Europe’s embrace of Norwegian gas could come at the expense of the broader green transition.

And for traders, going all in on Equinor brings a different set of problems.

Equinor’s growing relevance in Europe came into sharp focus last summer, when the company announced that maintenanc­e at some of its biggest gas facilities was being extended. Within minutes, gas prices rose almost 20 percent.

The response was especially intense, as traders had mostly been betting that prices would slump. Sluggish demand and the fact that the region’s gas inventorie­s would be full by the end of the summer had led them to think that Europe had finally gotten over the worst of the energy crisis. Unusually hot weather on the continent, which normally increases energy use, amplified concern.

The unplanned outages severely reduced Norway’s exports for a few weeks and prompted trading desks across the continent to weigh the “Equinor maintenanc­e effect” more heavily in their models. As the price of gas became even more exposed to the company’s status, traders started to pay closer attention to the daily messages sent out by another Norwegian company, Gassco AS, about changes to maintenanc­e schedules across the country.

Within Equinor, there are “informatio­n barriers and procedures to ensure compliance with regulation­s so that all market participan­ts can access market sensitive informatio­n at the same time,” a company spokesman said, adding that Gassco acts as a “neutral and independen­t system operator.”

Traders were already on alert for surprise outages. Until the end of 2021, Gazprom had mostly been a reliable supplier—a big reason why gas prices stayed stable over the last decade. When interrupti­ons suddenly started to happen more frequently, prices spiked, triggering the energy crisis.

What nobody knew back then is that reducing gas flows was part of the run-up to Putin’s invasion of Ukraine. Around November, traders started to account for the loss of Russian supply in their pricing models.

Europe is on a far better footing than it was a year ago, but circumstan­ces remain volatile. Any threat to fuel supply can roil markets, and that, in turn, can have downstream effects: persistent price swings in the natural gas market can encourage industrial companies to limit their fuel usage and push household bills higher. “Norway is expected to meet more of Europe’s gas needs this summer as its facilities bounce back from the extensive maintenanc­e seen last year,” Bloombergn­ef’s Nnenna Amobi wrote in a note on May 1. “But,” she added, “unplanned outages could yet curtail flows and send prices upward.”

At the same time, natural gas supplies from Norway may reach a new record this year. Equinor has been working to increase its capacity, and to reduce bottleneck­s by streamlini­ng maintenanc­e work. The mantra within the country’s government – often repeated by energy minister Terje Aasland – is that Norway will be a “stable and long-term supplier of energy” for decades to come.

It remains to be seen whether that will pan out. With a new wave of LNG from the US and Qatar coming online in the next few years, “the importance of Equinor and Norway’s gas to Europe is going to eventually decline,” said Christophe­r Kuplent, Bank of America Corp.’s head of European energy research, noting that Norway will “find it hard to organicall­y grow its gas production and therefore export substantia­lly more.” The new projects will, he added, “make it, at least on paper, a little more comfortabl­e for the European gas consumer to negotiate prices down.”

Moreover, said Equinor’s Rummelhoff, a jump in the volumes of liquefied natural gas being imported to Europe recently has already helped “normalize the market.”

For now, focus within Equinor is on keeping things running as smoothly as possible. “Do we feel under pressure? We’ve always felt that,” remarked Kjetil Hove, the company’s head of production in Norway.

 ?? CARINA JOHANSEN/BLOOMBERG ?? EQUINOR’S natural gas facility in Karsto, Norway, in April 2023.
CARINA JOHANSEN/BLOOMBERG EQUINOR’S natural gas facility in Karsto, Norway, in April 2023.

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