News

Russian oil majors head to Barents Sea with rickety technology

Publish date: April 25, 2005

Russian majors Gazprom and Rosneft plan to start offshore oil extraction next year off the north shore of Siberia's Nenets Autonomous Region in the Barents using a Hutton design platform that was retired from duty 21 years ago, NTB reported.

The severely aged derrick will be towed to the Prirazlomnaya field, which was opened to offshore drilling in 1989, but is only now experiencing an upswing in oil production. The project has major financial problems, but Gazprom and and Rosneft hope that the endevour with the retired rig will become an important new showcase for drilling possibilities.


Prirazlomnaya has extractable reserves equalling 83 million tonnes. The oil contains a high level of sulfer and is not accepted by all buyers. Between 1989 and 1994, five exploration wells were drilled at Prirazlomnaya, four of which contained significant amounts of oil. The depth of deposits in the area is approximately 20 meters.


The field is located 60 kilometres off the coast of Varandey (Nenets AO) and 320 kilometres from the town of Naryan-Mar. The oil from the field will be exported to western Europe. Small-size tankers will ship the oil to the Belokamenka tanker in the Kola Bay, near Murmansk, where it will be reloaded and shipped further to Rotterdam in the Netherlands.

More News

All news

6th meeting of the Carbon Removal Expert Group summary and feedback 

The Carbon Removal Certification Framework (CRCF) has been formally approved by the Council on the 19th of November 2024 and entered into force on the 9th of December 2024, providing an official mandate for the Commission to develop methodologies on carbon farming and carbon removals. However, the technical documents and specifications are still being drafted and revised for input from the Carbon Removals Expert Group (CREG), of which Bellona is a member. 

Photo: Christening of Northern Lights’ first CO₂ carrier in Stavanger in 2025, by Olav Øye

A great leap towards a scaled European market for CCS: Northern Lights expands storage capacity, will store CO₂ from Stockholm  

Europe’s only multi-source, injection-ready CO₂ storage site will more than triple its capacity by 2028. The decision follows an agreement with Stockholm Exergi to transport and store up to 800 – 900 kilotonnes of CO₂ per year. “This decision is years in the making, and the culmination of decades of hard work from many, Bellona included” says Bellona Europa Director Jonas Helseth.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Get our latest news

Stay informed