A Norwegian oil workers' strike has shut down 240,000
barrels a day, or 15%, of the country's oil production, and 11.9 million
cubic
meters a day, or 7%, of its natural-gas output, the Oil Industry
Association
told Dow Jones Newswires Wednesday, a significant cut which could push
oil
prices upwards.
The strike was launched Sunday, due to a disagreement about an early
pensions
deal. Some 700 oil workers on four different offshore installations,
including
the Heidrun and Oseberg platforms, are now striking.
Unions will consider Friday whether to expand the strike, a move which
would
take effect July 3.
"The companies' losses are now 201 million kronor ($33 million) per
day," Oil Industry Association spokeswoman Eli Ane Nedreskar told Dow
Jones Newswires. "That means that the companies have lost NOK744 million
since the strike began Sunday. Friday night we will reach NOK1 billion."
The strike has affected the Norwegian oil giant Statoil ASA the most.
The
company said Tuesday it had to shut down four new installations and that
it was
losing NOK150 million a day.
Offshore unions said that no new negotiations were planned for now, and
that
they haven't heard from the Oil Industry Association, which has denied
discussing pensions as part of wage agreements.
"No, nothing at all. But we haven't been going on for that many days
yet," said Leif Sande, leader of Industri Energi, one three striking
unions. "The longest strike ever in the oil sector lasted for 12 weeks.
The
longest one I've taken part in lasted for five weeks."
The Oil Industry Association said out of the oil companies' losses,
NOK148
million a day was due to production shut downs. About NOK50 million was
due to
other costs, such as a delay in the work on the BP -operated Skarv
floating production and
storage unit, which is set to produce from the fourth quarter, and costs
related to the shutdown of Statoil's west coast Tjeldbergodden methanol
plant.
The strike is shutting down production on the Norwegian continental
shelf only
a few days before the European Union launches an oil embargo against
Iran on
July 1, and could add upwards pressure to the oil price, which earlier
this
month fell below $90 from around $130 in March, but turned somewhat
upwards
Tuesday.
"If [the strike] lasts for a while, it could have an extra effect here
in
Europe, especially due to the upcoming embargo," said Nordea analyst
Thina
Saltvedt.
For now, the strike has stopped production at Oseberg, Oseberg East,
Oseberg
South, Heidrun, Huldra, Veslefrikk and Brage.
The total oil and gas production from these fields equaled 391,127
barrels a
day in March and 290,663 barrels a day in April, according to figures
retrieved
from the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate's oil field database.
Production numbers can vary significantly from month to month, due to
maintenance and price considerations.
The government of Norway doesn't comment whether it will take action to
stop
the strike, or what it takes for it to ask Parliament to impose
compulsory
arbitration, in which a committee forces the parties into an agreement.
The Norwegian government has been criticized by the International Labor
Organization for curbing workers' right to strike on previous occasions,
and is
likely to be reluctant to end the strike as long as people's life and
health is
not in danger.