Equinor signed a five-year natural gas supply agreement with Eneco on Tuesday 19 May covering 2.2 TWh/year, approximately 0.2 bcm, delivered to Eneco's German retail subsidiary LichtBlick from April 2026 through end-2030 1. The volume carries a 9% lower CO2 intensity than LichtBlick's alternative supply, the contract anchors retail offtake at post-EUR-50 levels, and the structural signal is that Norwegian supply posture has stopped chasing industrial baseload and started pricing the German residential switching stack as the cleanest commercial offtake left.
The 0.2 bcm volume sits modest against German consumption near 90 bcm; the contract term and the retail channel carry the read. Equinor and Aker BP announced a Norwegian Continental Shelf partnership on Thursday 21 May with no volume specifics, sitting alongside Equinor's NOK 17bn drilling contracts on 4 May and Eirin field start on 5 May as ongoing NCS activity at the operating-spend layer. Sodir posted April 2026 Norwegian gas sales at 10.2 bcm (339.2 mcm/day) on 1 May, down 0.6 bcm month-on-month from the 10.8 bcm March figure 2.
Hammerfest LNG was offline for only nine of April's 30 days, so the April number is not yet the clean Hammerfest hole. At 6.5 bcm/year nameplate the 79-day outage strips around 1.4 bcm from Norwegian volumes across the maintenance window, and that is the figure that prices into Q3 supply balances. May Sodir in mid-June is the first full-month read; Equinor's pattern across prior cycles has been silence until restart, with the 10 July nominal return having overrun into late July and August in 2020-22. For desks pricing summer-winter strip risk on Norwegian flexibility, the LichtBlick deal trades duration above Hammerfest signal noise.
