OSLO, Norway — Oil industry leaders met in
Norway's far north Thursday to discuss the prospects and challenges of oil
drilling in one of the world's last petroleum frontiers: the Arctic.
The international round table meeting, called the Arctic Energy Agenda, was
called by major exporter Norway at a time when the world's thirst for oil has
pushed prices to record levels of about US$60 per barrel.
The meeting drew a broad range of energy sector leaders, including European
Union Energy Commissioner Andris Piebalgs, acting U.S. Undersecretary of Energy
David Garman, Russian political leaders and top executives from Norwegian and
international oil companies.
In opening the conference, Norwegian Oil Minister Thorhild Widvey said forecasts
suggest that world demand for energy will increase by 60 percent in the next 25
years.
She said most of that has to be covered by fossil fuels, and that the Arctic was
seen as one of the most promising new sources.
"The world needs more energy," said a final statement summing up the
meeting. "Development of the Arctic energy resources can therefore be a
major contribution to the world's energy supply."
The statement said the officials and oil company leaders had agreed to meet
regularly on ways to push ahead with Arctic oil and natural gas projects.
Only Saudi Arabia and Russia export more oil than this Nordic country, with a
capacity of about 3 million barrels a day. And as production begins to decline
from older fields in the Norwegian sector of the North Sea, the country is
looking to the waters off its far north for new discoveries.
The meeting was held in the northern town of Kirkenes, on Norway's border with
Russia. Widvey said the city was a symbol of cooperation between Norway and
Russia, which share the potentially oil- and natural gas-rich Barents Sea off
their northern coasts.
Garman said the United States is looking to the Barents Sea as a new source of
natural gas.
"We need gas," Garman told Dow Jones Newswires. "We'd like to see
gas coming from a diverse set of suppliers and we'd love to have a new
supplier."
The Norwegian sector alone is estimated to have 8 billion barrels of oil
equivalents, which is a measure of the energy content rather than the volume of
petroleum.
But the Barents is also a valuable fishing grounds, with, as in much of the
Arctic, a fragile, cold water ecology that is highly sensitive to pollution.
"Looking at the challenges in these waters we meet a vulnerable
environment, ice conditions, darkness and long distances to markets," said
Widvey. "The potential rewards are also large. I believe the Barents Sea
could represent the new petroleum province of Europe."
On Friday, the gathering concludes with a tour of Norwegian oil facilities in
the far north rather than formal meetings.
Source: Associated Press