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DoD, Norway Partner On Ramjets For Navy Hypersonic Missiles

WASHINGTON: DoD and Norway’s Defense Ministry today announced an umbrella agreement for partnering on development of ramjet propulsion technologies, which the US Navy and Army have been eying to power future hypersonic missiles. The agreement is the first to be publicly revealed under DoD’s new Allied Prototyping Initiative (API), led by Mike Griffin’s office for research and engineering.

The bilateral effort to explore advanced solid fuel ramjet technologies is called the “Tactical High-speed Offensive Ramjet for Extended Range, or THOR-ER,” DoD said in its press release. THOR-ER “aims to cooperatively develop and integrate advancements in solid fuel ramjet technologies into full-size prototypes that are affordable, attain high-speeds, and achieve extended range, culminating in flight demonstrations in operationally relevant conditions,” DoD explained.

Bloomberg: Norway’s $1 Trillion Wealth Fund Expands US Stakes Amid Rout

Norway’s $1trillion sovereign wealth fund has been bulking up on stocks that got hammered during March’s historic market decline, adding to stakes in companies such as Carnival Corp. and Royal Dutch Shell Plc.

The fund has acquired holdings of 5% or more in seven U.S.-traded companies since mid-March, according to filings by Oslo-based Norges Bank. The list includes Australian mining giant BHP Group Ltd. and Liberty Broadband Corp. as well as Shell, where the Norwegian fund doubled its holding.

Read entire article HERE.

Reuters: Norway pledges $1 billion to vaccines against COVID-19, other diseases

OSLO (Reuters) – Norway will give $1 billion to support the distribution worldwide of any vaccine developed against COVID-19 as well as for vaccines against other diseases, Prime Minister Erna Solberg said on Monday.

Oslo made the pledge as part of a donor conference held on Monday by the European Union to raise 7.5 billion euros ($8.23 billion) towards the testing, treatment and prevention of the respiratory disease caused by the novel coronavirus.

Non-EU member Norway is a co-chair of the event as a long-standing donor to global health initiatives.

Read entire article HERE.

Mercer Launches 2020 Global Talent Trends Study

With headwinds to navigate, companies are looking for a beacon to guide their actions. Drawing on input from 7,300+ C-suite executives, HR leaders and employees in 34 countries, Mercer’s latest study reveals how organizations are transforming their workforce and workplace. By comparing what enables people to feel they are thriving and energized, and by taking note of what organizations are doing to effectively balance economics and empathy, the study identifies four trends that will enable companies to stay ahead in 2020.

For more information and to download, click HERE.

TechnipFMC vil kutte 700 stillinger i Norge

TechnipFMC opplyser mandag om beslutningen overfor E24.

– Vi ser at aktiviteten i markedet blir betydelig lavere de neste årene – vi snakker om en nedgang på i overkant av 30 prosent, sier kommunikasjonsdirektør Lars Ole Bjørnsrud.

Av de 3.100 som jobber i TechnipFMC i Norge vil opp til 700 nå miste jobben, opplyser selskapet. Tallet inkluderer konsulenter. Det er innkalt til allmøte tirsdag 5. mai.

Les hele saken HER

gCaptain: ARC Wins Major Global Household Goods Contract from U.S. Transportation Command

U.S.-flag ro-ro carrier ARC has been awarded a major contract to provide global relocation services for the Department of Defense and U.S. Coast Guard.

The Global Household Goods Contract, valued at over $7 billion, was awarded to ARC this week by the U.S. Transportation Command. ARC is a subsidiary of Oslo, Norway-based Wallenius Wilhelmsen. 

After an introductory setting up period, the contract will start in early 2021 with volumes gradually building by the end of the year. From 2022, the contract is estimated to provide revenues of more than USD 2 billion per year, Wallenius Wilhelmsen said in a statement.

Read entire article HERE.

Regjeringen: Koronapandemien hovedtema i samtale med Pompeo

Utenriksminister Ine Eriksen Søreide skulle denne uken ha besøkt Washington, D.C. for samtaler med blant andre utenriksminister Mike Pompeo. I stedet møtte hun i dag sin amerikanske kollega til en telefonsamtale.

Håndteringen av Covid-19 var en av hovedsakene i utenriksministerens samtale med Pompeo.

– USA er spesielt hardt rammet av pandemien, men Covid-19 har store konsekvenser for alle land og for det globale fellesskapet. Mitt hovedbudskap til utenriksminister Pompeo var at grenseoverskridende kriser som denne må håndteres gjennom internasjonalt samarbeid. Vi var enige om at fortsatt tett samarbeid mellom allierte vil være av stor betydning i tiden som kommer. Utvikling av vaksiner er høyt prioritert av både Norge og USA. Vi deler bekymringen for desinformasjon og propaganda under Covid-19, sier utenriksministeren. 

Les hele saken HER.

Washington Post: Upbeat news on a possible coronavirus treatment powers U.S. stocks, lifting Dow more than 500 points

Small but significant scientific advances against covid-19 sent stocks bursting upward Wednesday, all but ignoring sobering data that shows a U.S. economy in paralysis.

Stocks are on pace for one of their best months in decades as the United States ramps up coronavirus testing and states take steps to emerge from the weeks-long lockdown.

Wednesday’s rally picked up steam after Gilead Sciences reported “positive data” coming from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases’ clinical trial of its investigational remdesivir treatment for covid-19. The company said “the trial has met its primary endpoint.”

Read entire article HERE.

Press Release: Reducing oil production on the Norwegian Continental Shelf

The corona pandemic and the efforts to contain it in large parts of the world have had substantial impact on economic activity globally and thereby also for oil demand. In the current unprecedented situation cuts in oil production introduced by the government will contribute to a faster stabilisation of the oil market compared to letting the rebalancing take place only though the market mechanism.

– We are currently facing an unprecedented situation in the oil market. Both producers and consumers benefit from a stable market. We have previously stated that we will consider a cut in Norwegian production if several big producing countries implement significant cuts. The decision by the Norwegian Government to reduce Norwegian oil production has been made on an independent basis and with Norwegian interests at heart, says Minister of Petroleum and Energy, Tina Bru.

A faster stabilisation of the oil market is important for good resource management and for the Norwegian economy.

A group of oil producing countries within and outside of OPEC (OPEC+) has decided to reduce their production significantly from May 2020 to help stabilise the oil market. Norway – which accounts for approximately 2 per cent of global oil production – is not part of that cooperation. In an extraordinary energy ministers’ meeting in the G20 in April, the ministers committed to taking necessary measures to ensure energy market stability.

– We will cut Norwegian production by 250,000 barrels per day in June and by 134,000 barrels per day in the second half of 2020. In addition, the start-up of production of several fields will be delayed until 2021. Consequently, the total Norwegian production in December 2020 will be 300,000 barrels less per day than originally planned by the companies. The regulation will cease by the end of the year, Bru adds.

The basis for the regulation is a reference production of 1,859,000 barrels of oil per day. Thus, a cut of 250,000 barrels per day in June 2020 gives an upper limit for oil production on the Norwegian Continental Shelf of 1,609,000 barrels per day in June. A cut of 134,000 barrels per day in the second half of 2020 gives an upper limit for oil production on the Norwegian Continental Shelf in the same period of 1,725,000 barrels per day.

The cut will be distributed between individual fields and implemented by granting revised production permits to the relevant fields. Companies that hold licenses in fields covered by the regulation will be affected through their ownership shares in the various fields. The effect for individual companies will thus depend on their ownership share in the various fields. The oil companies will be consulted before revised production permits are granted.

– The cut will include oil fields on the Norwegian Continental Shelf and be fairly distributed between the fields and thereby between companies. It will imply a limitation of production for those oil companies with ownership shares in the relevant oil fields. Gas fields are exempt. Thus, the cut will not affect Norwegian gas production or Norwegian gas exports, Bru says.

Throughout the second half of 2020, oil demand is expected to grow gradually as economic activity is resumed. However, a low oil price will also affect oil production globally going forward. A significant reduction is expected in the more costly oil production – like shale oil and oil sands from North America.

Norwegian oil is produced with relatively low production costs. If global oil storage fills up, all producing countries will face a very demanding situation. This might also affect resource management on the Norwegian continental shelf. Norwegian production in 2020 will also be affected by the pandemic. Several oil fields where operators expected start-up of production in 2020 will be delayed until 2021. That is oil that will not enter the marked in today’s demanding situation. In total, these volumes amount to 166,000 barrels per day in December 2020

Production regulation will be implemented through a proportionate limitation for those fields covered by the regulation based on production permits granted, the reference production and other relevant information from the companies.

Background

Pursuant to section 4-4, third paragraph, of the Petroleum Act, the Ministry of Petroleum and Energy issues production permits to the individual field on an annual basis where the quantities permitted to be produced are given. When so required due to important interests of society, the King in Council may, according to Section 4-4 fourth paragraph of the Act, stipulate other production schedules than those stipulated or approved in accordance with section 4-4 first and third paragraphs of the Act. A decision by the King in the Council is planned to be made shortly.

The International Energy Agency’s (IEA) latest estimate from mid-April suggests a fall in demand for oil of approx. 23 percent (23 million barrels/day) in the second quarter This large, sudden and temporary fall in oil consumption represents an unprecedented event in the oil market. Efforts to contain the pandemic have so far only had a limited negative effect on world oil production. The combination of these factors has resulted in a large surplus of oil in the market and large quantities of oil in stock. Oil prices have fallen about 70 percent since the beginning of 2020.

The unstable situation in the oil market with low and falling oil prices has led to a reduction in the State’s revenues. The situation also means that the oil companies are forced to reduce their planned investment activities in exploration, development and operation. This will have consequences for the supply industry and the activity in the Norwegian economy, as well as the possibility to retain and develop competence in the industry. Seeking a faster normalisation of the oil market, and thereby avoiding major fluctuations in activity and investment levels and taking into account the Norwegian economy and the state’s revenues, is clearly considered an important societal consideration that justifies the regulation of production.

The basis for regulating production of oil on the Norwegian continental shelf is a reference production. The Ministry of Petroleum and Energy has established such a reference production based on information from the licensees in their applications for production permits for 2020 and in their reporting to the national budget process in autumn 2019. In cooperation with the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate, the Ministry has adjusted the information with new important information received from the companies during the first quarter of 2020. The Ministry has not been in in contact with the licensees on the Norwegian continental shelf in the process of establishing the reference production. Affected licensees will be consulted before the regulation is implemented through revised production permits for each field.

In the reference production, adjustments have been made for maintenance shut-downs planned for spring 2020 that have been postponed due to infection control measures related to the Covid-19 pandemic. In addition, adjustments have been made following production experience from the start-up phase of the Johan Sverdrup field. These adjustments indicate increased production from the fields in question compared with figures reported autumn 2019.

The reference production does not include fields where the operating company in the national budget process reported expected production start-up in 2020, but where start-up now is postponed until 2021, inter alia as a consequence of infection control measures. This applies to the fields Yme, Martin Linge, Njord, Hyme, Bauge and Tor.

The regulation covers Norwegian oil production. The following fields will therefore be exempt from the regulation:

  • Gas and condensate fields
  • Fields bordering on other countries
  • Some fields, where paricular problems related to resource management apply in a production regulation; including fields in a late tail end production phase

The production regulation will be implemented by the Ministry of Petroleum and Energy granting the fields a revised production permit for the month of June and the period from 1 July 2020 until 31 December 2020.

Read the original press release HERE.

Reuters: Norway plans temporary tax relief for oil firms

OSLO (Reuters) – Norway proposed on Thursday to temporarily ease tax rules for oil firms to try to prevent a collapse in investments due to the coronavirus pandemic and a related collapse in crude prices.

The plan could boost the liquidity of oil companies by as much as 100 billion Norwegian crowns ($9.7 billion) over 2020 and 2021, Prime Minister Erna Solberg said.

The companies will be allowed to write-off investments more quickly, effectively postponing tax payments until later years.

Read entire article HERE.