Norway restarts oil, gas fields after govt. order to end strike

Norway restarts oil, gas fields after govt. order to end strike

PanARMENIAN.Net - Norway was restarting some key oil and gas fields on Tuesday, July 10 after the government ordered to end a strike by offshore workers, still unhappy about pensions and retirement issues but unable to repeat the action for at least two more years, Reuters said.

"We are not going to give up, but now we have to wait another two years before we can take new actions legally," said Leif Sande, leader of Industri Energi, the biggest of the three unions who went on strike on June 24.

The strike had choked off some 13 percent of Norway's oil production and 4 percent of its gas output and pushed oil prices above $100 per barrel on fears of a full loss of supply from the world's eighth largest oil exporter.

About 10 percent of Norway's 7,000 offshore workers -- the best paid in the global oil industry - went on strike over retirement with full pensions at 62. Norway is also the world's second-biggest gas exporter by pipeline.

The employers threatened a complete shutdown of the entire Norwegian continental shelf, putting pressure on the government to intervene and force a settlement in the strategic industry.

The Norwegian government intervened late on Monday ordering staff back to work. The move helped ease supply fears with Brent crude trading $1.29 down on Tuesday at $99.03 per barrel at 0912 EDT.

The relationship between the oil industry and the unions is based on a master agreement setting the ground rules for conduct during negotiations and strikes, with negotiations on salaries and other contract-related matters coming up every two years. A forced arbitration will most likely take place in a few weeks.

A full closure of output in Norway would have cut off more than 2 million barrels of oil per day.

Gas operator Gassco said on Tuesday it expected its Oseberg field, a key area of production which has been shut since the start of the strike, to restart operations on Friday.

Statoil, the biggest player on the Norwegian continental shelf, said it would resume production immediately.

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