Frigg gas field

Frigg gas field is a natural gas field on Norwegian block 25/1 in the North Sea, on the boundary between the United Kingdom and Norway. The field is named after the goddess Frigg. King Olav V of Norway officially opened production on 8 May 1978. Production was closed on 26 October 2004. The field is situated 230 km northwest of Stavanger. Operator for the field was the French oil company Elf Aquitaine, which merged and changed name to Total S.A.

Operations were regulated according to an agreement between the UK and Norwegian governments called the Frigg Treaty.

Infrastructural changes were made in three phases:
 * Phase I - 1977
 * Phase II - 1978
 * Phase III - 1981

Geology
The field was discovered at a depth of 1850 m by the Petronord group (Elf Aquitaine, Total Oil Marine Norsk, and Norsk Hydro) and the Norwegian State in 1971 with Well 25/1-1 using the Semi-submersible Neptune P 81 in 100 m of water. The well was located following interpretation of a 15 by 20 km grid of Reflection seismology lines recorded in 1965. A 5 by 5 km finer grid of seismic lines were recorded in 1969, followed by a 1 by 1 km grid in 1973, combined with four appraisal wells determined the field was 115 km2 in area with a 170 m gas column in Lower Eocene sandstones forming an abyssal fan in the Viking Structural basin. The fan structure appears on seismic sections as a low relief Anticline that includes a Flat spot caused by the Density contrast of the gas.

Development
The Frigg field has been developed through a number of offshore platforms.

The initial production of gas (in 1000 standard cubic metres) was: { "version": 2, "width": 400, "height": 200, "data": [ {			"name": "table", "values": [ {					"x": 1977, "y": 1566 },				{					"x": 1978, "y": 7309 },				{					"x": 1979, "y": 13619 },				{					"x": 1980, "y": 16322 },				{					"x": 1981, "y": 17967 },				{					"x": 1982, "y": 16714 },				{					"x": 1983, "y": 17623 },				{					"x": 1984, "y": 16573 }			]		}	],	"scales": [ {			"name": "x", "type": "ordinal", "range": "width", "zero": false, "domain": { "data": "table", "field": "x" }		},		{			"name": "y", "type": "linear", "range": "height", "nice": true, "domain": { "data": "table", "field": "y" }		}	],	"axes": [ {			"type": "x", "scale": "x" },		{			"type": "y", "scale": "y" }	],	"marks": [ {			"type": "rect", "from": { "data": "table" },			"properties": { "enter": { "x": { "scale": "x", "field": "x" },					"y": { "scale": "y", "field": "y" },					"y2": { "scale": "y", "value": 0 },					"fill": { "value": "steelblue" },					"width": { "scale": "x", "band": "true", "offset": -1 }				}			}		}	] }

Pipelines
Pipelines associated with the Frigg field are as follows:

Pipelines connected to the Frigg field

 * Frigg UK System - natural gas transportation system from the Alwyn North Field in the North Sea via the Frigg field to St. Fergus near Peterhead in Scotland. The Frigg UK System is operated by Total E&P UK Plc.
 * Vesterled - mostly the former Frigg Norwegian Pipeline.
 * Gas production from the Odin gas field was transported to Frigg TCP2 by a 26 km 20-inch pipeline.

Future plans
The Frigg field may be revitalised. A production licence on the Norwegian side of Frigg was allocated to Equinor in 2016. An appraisal well was drilled on Frigg in 2019. Equinor also holds the licence rights on the UK side of the field.