We’re changing the pace of how we work on the Norwegian Continental Shelf. We need to explore more and move faster. We also need to work in a more standardised way and collaborate more closely. In short: we need to do it like Eirin.
Eirin may sound like a person but it’s a field near Gina Krog, about 250 kilometres west of Stavanger. It was first discovered in 1978 during surveys around the Sleipner Vest discovery. At the time, it was considered far too small.
Back then, Eirin was a ‘David’ up against the era’s huge ‘Goliath’ developments - it just couldn’t make the case to be brought on stream. Times have changed and today it’s the smaller projects that matter, because we don’t expect to find many more large fields. That means developing smaller fields around the installations we already have.
That’s why we put a team together in 2023 to take a fresh run at developing Eirin. It wasn’t a simple task. They had to move fast, work closely together and manage major financial uncertainty while working on a tight schedule.
Major field developments have typically taken up to 10 years. For little Eirin, the team had a maximum of three.











