Vigdis is a producing conventional oil field located in shallow water in Norway and is operated by Equinor Energy. According to GlobalData, who tracks more than 34,000 active and developing oil and gas fields worldwide, the field is located in block 34/7P (PL 089), with water depth of 1,059 feet. Buy the profile here.

Field participation details

The field is owned by BASF, Eni, Equinor, HitecVision, Idemitsu Kosan, Inpex, LetterOne Holdings and Petoro.

Production from Vigdis

The Vigdis conventional oil field recovered 93.46% of its total recoverable reserves, with peak production in 1999. The peak production was approximately 87.98 thousand bpd of crude oil and condensate. Based on economic assumptions, production will continue until the field reaches its economic limit in 2030. The field currently accounts for approximately 1% of the country’s daily output.

Remaining recoverable reserves

The field is expected to recover 31.23 Mmboe, comprised of 31.23 Mmbbl of crude oil & condensate. Vigdis conventional oil field reserves accounts 0.01% of total remaining reserves of producing conventional oil fields globally.

About Equinor Energy

Equinor Energy AS (Equinor Energy) is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Equinor ASA. The company provides oil and gas exploration and production services. It extracts, refines, and transports natural gas, crude oil, and wind power for manufacturing of synthetic fabrics, plastics, asphalt, cosmetics, and medicines. Equinor Energy is headquartered in Stavanger, Norway.

For more details on the Vigdis Conventional Oil Field, buy the profile here.

GlobalData

GlobalData, the leading provider of industry intelligence, provided the underlying research used to produce this article.

This information is drawn from GlobalData’s Oil & Gas Intelligence Center, which provides detailed profiles of 34,000+ oil and gas fields, 400,000+ exploration blocks, 1,100+ LNG terminals, 3,400+ gas processing plants, 5,000+ storage terminals, and 8,000+ pipelines, 1,400+ refineries and 13,000+ petrochemical plants worldwide.