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Sverdrup oilfield, a massive Equinor field, is shut down by a power outage

A company spokesperson confirmed that Norway's Equinor stopped all production from its Johan Sverdrup field in the North Sea on Tuesday due to a failure in the offshore electricity system. This is the largest oilfield producing in western Europe.

The spokesperson did not elaborate. "Repair works have been started, and we're working on a plan to restart the system," he said.

The oil price could be supported by the outage, as it was under pressure Tuesday due to concerns over global demand after U.S. Tariffs on China went into effect.

Sverdrup produced up to 755,000 barrels per day of oil in 2024. Last year, the company stated that it expected the field to reach its peak production in early 2025.

Sverdrup has experienced power outages in the past that have resulted also in a shutdown of oil production.

Equinor, the operator, owns 42.63 % of the Sverdrup license, followed by Aker BP with 31.57% and Norwegian state-owned oil company Petoro with 17.36%. TotalEnergies has the remaining 8.44%. Reporting by Terje Adomaitis and Nerijus Solsvik. (Editing by Louise Rasmussen, Mark Potter and Mark Potter.)

(source: Reuters)