Ormen Lange (gas field)
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Ormen Lange is a natural gas field on the Norwegian continental shelf. It is situated Template:Convert northwest of Kristiansund, where seabed depths vary between Template:Convert. The field is named after the famous longship Ormen Lange of Olaf Tryggvason, a 10th-century Viking king of Norway.
History
Production of gas began with three wells in September 2007.<ref>Facts about Ormen Lange - Statoil.</ref> The King and Queen of Norway attended the official opening<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> of this project, delivered on time and within budget, on 6 October 2007, at the football stadium in Molde. During the opening, King Harald officially opened the terminal which would supply Great Britain with enough natural gas to cover 20% of its total annual needs.
The proposal to build the Langeled subsea pipeline, the world’s second longest subsea export pipeline after Nord Stream 1,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> was approved in February 2003. The 1,166 km (725 mi) pipeline runs across the North Sea from Nyhamna to the Easington Gas Terminal near the mouth of the Humber estuary on the UK’s east coast.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Reserves
The reservoir is approximately Template:Convert long and Template:Convert wide, and lies about Template:Convert below sea level. Recoverable gas reserves are estimated to be ~300 billion cubic meters.
Technical description
The Ormen Lange field has been developed without using conventional offshore platforms. Instead, 24 subsea wellheads in four seabed templates on the ocean floor are connected directly by two Template:Convert pipelines to an onshore process terminal at Nyhamna. After processing, the gas is exported by the world's second longest subsea gas pipeline - Langeled pipeline - approximately Template:Convert from Nyhamna to Easington in England. The northern section of the export pipeline has a diameter of Template:Convert, and the section from Sleipner to Easington has a diameter of Template:Convert. The field produces 70 million cubic meters of natural gas per day.
Total cost is estimated to reach 66 billion Norwegian kroner (around US$12 billion) by the time of completion.
The onshore facility at Nyhamna was designed by Aker Solutions Engineering in 2003-2007.
Natural conditions
Extreme natural conditions at the site (subzero temperatures part of the year, stormy seas, strong underwater currents, uneven seabed) put great demands on the technology used in the project. The Storegga Slides that occurred in the area about 8,000 years ago have been investigated, with the conclusion that the risk of recurrence is negligible.
Ownership and operators
Several companies share ownership of Ormen Lange.<ref name="NPD">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Petoro AS: 36.4850%
- Statoil: 25.3452%
- Norske Shell: 17.8134%
- DONG Energy: 14.0208%
- ExxonMobil: 6.3356%
Ormen Lange was operated by Statoil during the development stage. On 30 November 2007, Norske Shell took over as the operator.