«Awarding acreage in mature areas in annual predefined areas is an important part of the Norwegian Government’s commitment to a stable and long-term petroleum policy,» says Minister Terje Søviknes in a press-statement from Oslo on May 9th.

With the announcement, the predefined area off the coast of Northern Norway has been expended with 103 new blocks, 47 in the Norwegian Sea and 56 in the Barents Sea. For the Barents Sea, the new areas include blocks east of the existing predefined areas, that means closer to Norway’s maritime border with Russia.

Terje Søviknes is Minister of oil and energy. Photo: Thomas Nilsen

Last summer, a major drilling campaign in the Barents Sea failed to discover commercial oil-fields, but the Petroleum ministry remains optimistic.

«Access to prospective exploration acreage is crucial in order to make new petroleum discoveries. New discoveries on the Norwegian continental shelf ensure value creation, employment and Government revenues,» minister Søviknes says. He underlines it is an important pillar of the Government’s policy to facilitate oil companies in a continued safe and effective exploration.

Oil companies now have until 12 noon on September 4th to apply for the new blocks.

Environmental groups are critical to Norway’s push for more Arctic oil in times of record little sea ice and sharply increasing carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere.

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«[Minister] Søviknes don’t care about knowledge and drives on with more oil in vulnerable areas,» says head of Nature and Youth Gaute Eiterjord. He calls on the environmental minister to pull the emergency brakes.

Gaute Eiterjord is head of Nature and Youth.

«Production of oil and gas is Norway’s largest source of greenhouse gas emissions. Norway is the seventh largest exporter of fossile fuels. Since the world already has discovered far more oil and gas then ever can be burned, we believe awarding new blocks is irresponsible and violates Norway’s climate commitments,» Gaute Eiterjord argues.

Nature and Youth’s views are shared by other eco-groups like Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth, Bellona, WWF and the Norwegian Coastal Fishermen’s Association.

This weekend, the Mauna Loa Observatory on Hawaii told that the concentration of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere for the first time exceeded an average of 410 parts per million (ppm) for an entire month. The observatory is part of a global network of research monitoring stations. Since measuring started in 1958, the readings shows a 30% increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide.

Also, the Colorado based National Snow & Ice Data Center recently announced depressing news on the state of Arctic environment. April sea ice extent was the second lowest on record. More worrying, the center says, is the dramatic loss of the oldest sea ice, five years or older. As averaged over the Arctic Ocean, the multiyear ice cover has declined from 61% in 1984 to 34% in 2018. Only 2% of the Arctic Ocean’s ice cover is now five-plus years, the least recorded during any winter period.

Norway’s Ice Service told in a tweet about an 116,906 square kilometers lower ice extent around Svalbard for May 7th than the 1981-2010 average.

In the past few days, North Pole temperature has shot up to unusually high levels to be early May with some 17 to 19 degrees Celsius above normal, the Washington Post reports.