Statoil Hands Back 3 Greenland Exploration Licenses

OSLO, Jan 14 (Reuters) – Norway's Statoil handed back three out of its four Greenland offshore oil and gas exploration licenses, it said on Wednesday, in yet another sign of cost cuts by energy firms following the recent plunge in oil prices.
Statoil earlier said that it would slow its Arctic exploration efforts, one of its priority areas, to control capital spending. Statoil has Arctic licences from Greenland to Russia.
Britain's Cairn Energy has been the biggest explorer in Greenland so far but its eight-well, $1.2 billion campaign in 2010 and 2011 yielded no commercial finds.
Statoil's three licenses off the west coast of Greenland were handed back by the end of 2014, but the company kept one license off the island's east coast where the deadline for drilling is longer.
"We have now completed the working programme and have no further obligations, and we don't see any potential in taking on further obligations in these licenses," spokesman Knut Rostad said.
French utility GDF Suez said it has handed both of its Greenland licenses back as it did not see any prospects of actually drilling any wells.
Danish newspaper Politiken reported that Denmark's Dong Energy has also quit its licenses on Greenland's west coast.
With untapped hydrocarbon and mineral resources, Greenland hopes to gain wealth, but harsh weather, a lack of infrastructure and high costs make oil companies wary of launching big exploration campaigns in the country - especially during a time where energy companies curb spending due to falling crude prices.
Last week Maersk Oil, a unit of Denmark's A.P. Moller-Maersk , postponed a decision on whether to drill for oil at an exploration licence off the coast of Greenland.
(Reporting by Stine Jacobsen, editing by Terje Solsvik)
WHAT DO YOU THINK?
Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.
- Weatherford CEO's Rebound Plan Relies On Getting Smaller
- Iran Says Oil Market Is Too Tight For US Zero Exports Target
- China's Squeezed 'Teapots' Eye Petchem Path To Riches
- Baker Hughes: US Drillers Add Oil Rigs For Second Week In Three
- Venezuela Hands China More Oil Presence, But No Mention Of New Funds
- Finland Loses Main Gas Supply
- Brent-WTI Oil Price Spread Inverts
- Gasoline Price Records Mount
- ADNOC Announces 650MM Barrel Oil Find
- Privateers Push Permian Delaware Output To Record Heights In 2022
- Vattenfall Gets Funds For First-Ever Hydrogen Producing Wind Turbine
- Chevron Launches Carbon Capture Project In California
- 6 Power Generating Facilities in Texas Just Tripped
- Excelerate And Gasgrid Sign 10-Year FSRU Charter Deal
- Woodside Chooses ABL For Scarborough Warranty Work
- Russian Oil Producers Start Using Tankers the World Did Not Want
- Ban on Excessive Gasoline Prices Heading for Vote
- The US Cannot Make Enough Fuel
- China in Talks With Russia to Buy Oil for Reserves
- UK Activists Stop Russian Tanker With $36.5M Of Diesel
- Henry Hub Price Expected to Average $8.69 in 3Q
- USA Oil and Gas Employment Set to Rebound
- USA Lease Sale Cancellation Leaves Industry in Limbo
- USA Gasoline Price Hits Another Record
- No Offshore Oil Auctions Devastating To Americans, NOIA Says
- Russian Oil Producers Start Using Tankers the World Did Not Want
- Ban on Excessive Gasoline Prices Heading for Vote
- Oil and Gas Discovery Confirmed at Hamlet
- Be Prepared to Pay More at the Pump from June
- This Is Where the Oil Price Would Be Without the War
- Top Headlines: Be Prepared to Pay More at the Pump from June
- Gas Prices Could Rocket in the Near Term
- Exxon Does It Again - Three More Discoveries Offshore Guyana
- Top Headlines: Gas Prices Could Rocket in Near Term and More
- Europe Braces for Diesel Deluge