Bangkok Post

Nord Stream passes pipeline security check

Equinor finds no sign of what caused blasts

- NERIJUS ADOMAITIS

BERGEN, NORWAY: Inspection­s of Norway’s offshore gas pipelines after the Nord Stream blasts found nothing suspicious, an executive at energy major Equinor told Reuters, in the first official word on the security sweep.

However, risks remain after last year’s still-unexplaine­d explosions at the Nord Stream pipelines built to carry Russian gas to Germany via the Baltic Sea, warned Jannicke Nilsson, who manages security for Equinor.

Europe’s largest gas supplier after a drop in Russian flows last year, Equinor also acts as technical service provider for offshore pipelines operator Gassco. It launched the inspection­s shortly after the explosions on Sept 26.

“We did find the things that we wanted to check, and when we checked it, it was OK,” Jannicke Nilsson, Equinor’s executive in charge of security, safety and sustainabi­lity, said in an interview.

The company said inspection­s had been conducted to identify anything out of the ordinary, like damages, foreign objects or any changes to how the pipelines are covered on the seabed.

Nilsson, who rarely gives interviews, spoke about how the war in Ukraine and the Nord Stream explosions have changed the operations of Norway’s largest oil and gas producer.

Despite underwater inspection­s not finding any suspicious objects along Norway’s key pipelines, the threat of an attack was still present.

“It’s not gone. What happened with Nord Stream 1 and Nord Stream 2 is a very clear reminder of how far some people are willing to go,” she said.

Equinor was working with authoritie­s in Norway, the European Union, Britain and military alliance NATO on what the company can do to prevent such an attack, she added.

Norway is a member of NATO but not of the European Union.

Last summer, Norway designated Equinor and Gassco as companies critical to national security, allowing security services to share relevant classified informatio­n.

NATO HELP

After the Feb 24 invasion, some Equinor executives including Nilsson received security clearances from Norwegian authoritie­s, allowing them to read intelligen­ce reports.

In January, Equinor CEO Anders Opedal went to NATO’s headquarte­rs in Brussels to speak about protection of the West’s offshore infrastruc­ture, such as pipelines and cables.

After the Nord Stream blasts, the Norwegian Navy and NATO allies patrolled around offshore oil and gas platforms. In February, NATO establishe­d a Critical Undersea Infrastruc­ture Protection Cell to improve cooperatio­n with the industry.

“If we need assistance, the Norwegian military and NATO would provide resources... they would be here quickly,” Nilsson said.

Onshore, Norway’s military posted soldiers to guard major oil and gas processing plants and help police, though their work there has now ended.

In a show of NATO’s and the EU’s focus on protecting Europe’s gas supplies, their chiefs Jens Stoltenber­g and Ursula von der Leyen visited Norway’s largest gas producing platform, Troll A, in March.

“I don’t think this could have happened two years ago... because back then we were not seen as that important for European energy security,” Nilsson said. “Now they see that gas from Norway and gas from Equinor is key.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? Jannicke Nilsson, Equinor’s executive in charge of security, safety and sustainabi­lity, at Equinor’s office in Bergen, Norway.
REUTERS Jannicke Nilsson, Equinor’s executive in charge of security, safety and sustainabi­lity, at Equinor’s office in Bergen, Norway.

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