Europe’s largest LNG export terminal, Hammerfest LNG—aka Melkoeya, aka The Drama Queen of the Barents Sea—is taking a little summer siesta. Equinor shut the plant down Tuesday for its annual maintenance ritual, which started at 04:00 GMT and is expected to last until July 10. This time, at least, it’s planned. No fires, no gas leaks, no compressor tantrums—just good old-fashioned upkeep.
Located on Norway’s Melkoeya Island, Hammerfest LNG is a heavy hitter in the continent’s gas game. It slurps up supply from the offshore Snoehvit field and spits out enough liquefied gas to heat 6.5 million homes—roughly five percent of Norway’s total gas exports. That’s no small feat considering Norway is now Europe’s gas MVP, stepping up big-time after Gazprom took its ball and went home in 2022.
Downtime—whether planned or unplanned—at Hammerfest still raises eyebrows. The plant has a rap sheet: a fiery blowout in 2020 that sidelined it for a staggering 18 months, a gas leak in 2023, another gas leak in 2024, and a surprise compressor failure that knocked it offline at the beginning of this year.
No comment yet from Equinor on the planned outage, but transparency filings confirm the shutdown. Co-owners Petoro, TotalEnergies, Vaar Energi, and Harbour Energy are probably crossing their fingers that this one ends quietly and on schedule.
With winter in the rearview mirror and storage levels healthy across Europe, the timing isn’t catastrophic. Still, when 6.5 bcm of gas goes offline—planned or not—traders, policymakers, and households alike start paying attention.
After all, when Hammerfest sneezes, Europe reaches for a sweater.
Equinor has already flagged problems ahead of its Q1 2025 results, warning of reduced production, in part due to maintenance and outages.
By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com
More Top Reads From Oilprice.com