Denmark Is Selling Off Its Last Oil Company And Spending The Money On Wind Power

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REYKJAVIK, Iceland ― Denmark, the world’s top wind turbine producer, is selling off its last oil company.

Last month, A.P. Moller-Maersk, the country’s famed industrial and shipping conglomerate, agreed to sell its oil and gas division to French giant Total. Pending regulatory approval, the $7.45 billion deal is expected to close by next year, Bloomberg reported.

The move comes three months after Dong Energy, the Danish firm that’s spearheading offshore wind development in the United States and across Europe, sold its oil and gas business to a German buyer for $1.3 billion.

The Nordic nation still needs revenues from its North Sea oil fields to fund its transition to clean energy, and Total promised to do so. But Denmark has pledged to completely wean itself off fossil fuels by 2050.

“By selling to Total, we ensure a continued Danish stronghold in the North Sea based on Maersk Oil’s leading position within technology development and its track record as a lean, efficient and trusted partner,” Claus V. Hemmingsen, Maersk’s vice chief executive, said in a statement. “Importantly, Maersk Oil will remain close to its technology and innovation partners at the Danish technical institutions and in the oil and gas service industry to the benefit of all parties.”

Scandinavian countries are taking aggressive steps to reduce carbon emissions from their electricity sectors, despite some nations’ long reliance on fossil fuel revenues. Sweden produced 57 percent of its power from renewables in 2015, and aims to bring that number to 100 percent by 2040. Norway, whose state-owned Statoil fuels a massive sovereign wealth fund, is investing heavily in offshore wind, including off the coast of New York. Iceland, a volcanic island with plentiful water resources, gets 100 percent of its energy from geothermal and hydropower.

ALISSA SCHELLER / HUFFPOST Offshore wind is soaring in Europe and East Asia, though it has been slow to take off in the United States.

Yet revenues from the North Sea oil help finance around 1 gigawatt of new offshore wind infrastructure each year, according to data from a recent deal in Norway cited by Bloomberg Intelligence. That’s equal to the power used by about 170,000 homes.

Offshore wind is soaring in Europe. The industry will provide 17,575 megawatts worldwide this year, with 14,740 megawatts in Europe and 2,805 in Asia, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance data provided to HuffPost. But it has failed to take off in North America, where a meager 30 megawatts come from a tiny, five-turbine operation off the coast of Block Island.

MemesThief on September 5th, 2017 at 07:20 UTC »

This context is fucked up. Maersk is a danish company who had the rights to get the the oil from the north sea, and lately they threatened to stop drilling if they didn't get more favorable rights. One of them included lowering the tax on profits from oil drilling from 75% to 73,5%. These taxes are a big income worth billions of dkk, so the politicians agreed to the terms. Now Maersk has said fuck it, and has now sold the rights to Total, because they figured it would be more profitable in the future.

Maersk is a private company, so the headline is wrong as shit. Denmark hasn't sold Maersk, but oil drilling fields in the northern sea.

Terkala on September 5th, 2017 at 06:34 UTC »

Country that has fully depleted its oil reserves pledges to stop drilling for oil.

Big shock, I never would have seen this coming.

bjoac on September 5th, 2017 at 06:29 UTC »

Title/article is a tad loaded, Denmark has a pretty clear line between the public and private sectors, and while a Danish company may be selling it's oil business (and the state issued rights to collect oil) to a French company, they mainly did it because the main focus of Maersk isn't oil but shipping.

We may aim to rid ourselves of fosile fuels, but that doesn't mean we're going to stop selling our national resources, and the tax is tax regardless of the nationality of the company that collects he oil from the seabed.

The sale of Dong is actually much more interesting in regards to green energy. Because while the private energy sector in Denmark is almost entirely into green energies, the public sector actually still runs quite a few fosile ones for when the wind isn't blowing - controlled by a state owned non-profit-organization.