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European Energy Markets
18MAY

Hammerfest runs two live outages at once

3 min read
11:11UTC

Equinor stacked a fresh 13-16 June maintenance window on top of the unresolved compressor fault that has kept Hammerfest LNG dark since 22 April, putting two live outages on one plant at once.

EconomicDeveloping

Equinor began a fresh planned maintenance window at Hammerfest LNG (4.3 mtpa), rescheduled from 8-11 to 13-16 June, layered on top of the unresolved compressor fault that has kept the Arctic plant dark since 22 April 1. Hammerfest is Norway's only seaborne LNG export terminal, on Melkoya island; Equinor is the state-majority operator and Europe's dominant gas supplier. For the first time the plant carries two distinct, simultaneously active stoppages rather than one prolonged outage.

Norwegian seaborne send-out into north-west Europe is therefore suppressed across the entire pre-ban window. Equinor's Troll A compressor fault of the same class ran 24 days past its first restart date , and a parallel Troll outage layered cuts the same way in late May , so a fault stacked under planned maintenance carries a real overrun risk rather than a clean 16 June return.

Equinor's doubly offline export terminal removes Norwegian volume outright, the kind of supply loss that would normally bid the front, yet the benchmark fell anyway through the same window. Where the LNG arb diverts flexible cargoes by spread, Hammerfest subtracts firm Norwegian molecules by fault, and neither lifted the price. That is the clearest evidence in the briefing that demand destruction, not supply, is setting the prompt into the binding date.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Hammerfest is Norway's only LNG export terminal, sitting inside the Arctic Circle on an island called Melkoya. It liquefies natural gas from the Snohvit gas field in the Barents Sea, cooling it to -161 degrees Celsius so it can be loaded onto tankers and shipped to Europe. In mid-June 2026, the terminal was dealing with two separate problems at the same time for the first time. An older compressor fault that had been running since late April was still unresolved. Equinor, the Norwegian company that operates it, then stacked a fresh planned maintenance window on top of that, running 13-16 June. Two live stoppages simultaneously means the terminal was producing no LNG at all through the run-up to the EU pipeline ban deadline on 17 June, removing Norwegian seaborne supply from north-west European markets at the worst possible time for storage filling.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Hammerfest's documented history of maintenance overruns on the same compressor class means the 10 July 2026 return target carries non-trivial extension risk into late July or August, extending the Norwegian LNG supply gap through the peak injection window.

  • Consequence

    Two concurrent Hammerfest stoppages coinciding with the JKM arb pulling Atlantic cargoes east creates the worst-case combination for EU summer injection: the one Norwegian LNG supply source offline at precisely the moment flexible Atlantic cargoes are redirected away from Europe.

First Reported In

Update #18 · TTF breaks the floor into the import ban

LNG Prime· 15 Jun 2026
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Different Perspectives
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EU carbon and storage regulators
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Equinor
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