Denmark will end oil and gas exploration in the North Sea, in a shift away from fossil fuels by 2050

The Nordic country has one of the world’s most ambitious climate targets of reducing emissions by 70 per cent by 2030 and being climate neutral in 2050.

The jack-up rig Maersk Invincible, located in the middle of the North Sea, in the waters between the British Isles, Norway and Denmark in October 2019

The jack-up rig Maersk Invincible, located in the middle of the North Sea, in the waters between the British Isles, Norway and Denmark in October 2019 Source: RITZAU SCANPIX via AAP

Denmark’s government has agreed with a majority in parliament to put an end to all oil and gas exploration and extraction in the North Sea by 2050 as well as cancel its latest licensing round.

The future of Denmark’s oil and gas operations in the North Sea has been a political issue after the Nordic country agreed last year on one of the world’s most ambitious climate targets of reducing emissions by 70 per cent by 2030 and being climate neutral in 2050.
The deal agreed by lawmakers late on Thursday (local time) will cancel a planned eighth licensing round and any future tenders, while also making 2050 the last year in which to extract fossil fuels in the North Sea.

“We are now putting a final end to the fossil era,” Climate Minister Dan Joergensen said in a statement.
Scrapping of the Tyra East and Tyra West oil and gas processing platforms underway at the portt of  Frederikshavn in Denmark, on 15 September, 2020.
Scrapping of the Tyra East and Tyra West oil and gas processing platforms underway at the portt of Frederikshavn in Denmark, on 15 September, 2020. Source: AFP
The eighth licensing round faced large uncertainty after energy major Total withdrew from the tender process in October, leaving only one applicant remaining.

Denmark is the largest producer of oil and gas in the European Union, which does not include Norway and the UK, both much larger producers.

Denmark is estimated to produce 83,000 barrels of crude oil and another 21,000 barrels of oil equivalent in 2020.
The cancelled tender and an end-date in 2050 would translate into a total loss of 13 billion Danish crowns A$2.9 billion, the Ministry of Climate, Energy and Utilities estimated, but it said this amount was subject to substantial uncertainty.

In June, an independent government adviser recommended ending any future oil and gas exploration in the North Sea, saying a continuation would hurt the country’s ambitions as a front-runner on fighting climate change.


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Source: Reuters, SBS


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