Equinor ASA (EQNR) just secured some prime real estate on Norway's continental shelf, and it's the kind of land grab that tells you where the company's headed for the next decade.
The Norwegian energy giant announced Tuesday it was awarded 35 new production licenses in the latest Awards in Predefined Areas round. These blocks span three key offshore regions and give Equinor a runway for future exploration and production activity, according to reports.
Breaking Down the Geography
Here's how the licenses shake out: 21 in the North Sea, 10 in the Norwegian Sea, and four in the Barents Sea. Equinor will operate 17 of these areas directly, meaning it's calling the shots on drilling and development plans for those blocks.
The company's already been busy this year. Equinor notched 14 discoveries in 2025, with half of them under its direct operation. Those finds represent about 125 million barrels of potential recoverable oil equivalent, which is the kind of number that matters when you're trying to offset declining production from aging fields.
The new licenses offer an interesting mix. Some sit near established infrastructure, which makes them easier and cheaper to develop. Others open up less explored geological territory, which is riskier but potentially more rewarding.
The Development Roadmap
Equinor plans to drill between 20 and 30 exploration wells annually across its portfolio. Most of that drilling will happen near existing infrastructure where the company already knows what it's working with, but some will test entirely new prospects.
Finding and maturing these resources isn't just about growth—it's essential to Equinor's ambitious goal of advancing six to eight subsea developments each year through 2035. That pace represents a sharp acceleration from current development activity and requires a steady pipeline of discoveries to feed the machine.




