Equinor signed NOK 17 billion of extended drilling and well-services supplier agreements for the Norwegian Continental Shelf on Monday 4 May, with the company stating the deals "contribute to stable energy supplies to Europe" 1. The announcement followed Q1 2026 safety results published on Thursday 30 April. Neither item issued any guidance on the Hammerfest LNG return date. The 10 July target sits 67 days out with no update from the operator.
Equinor's pattern across prior maintenance cycles has been silence until the unit restarts. That pattern is the relevant context here: the absence of a public update is not new information about the restart timeline, it is the operator behaving as it always behaves. For positioning, the 10 July target carries the same risk profile it did when the planned maintenance began on 22 April. Prior cycles at the same facility have slipped into late July or August without prior signal, and the silence across the supplier-contracts release sits inside that pattern rather than outside it.
The Q1 safety release and the supplier contracts both passed with the same omission. Hammerfest LNG is the single largest EU-bound LNG asset on the Norwegian Continental Shelf, and the Norwegian production trend is now compounding the question: if the Sodir April release lands lower again as the prior trend suggests, an Equinor restart slip into late July would compound a supply curve that has already stepped down. Watch for any Equinor commentary before 15 May; absence past that mid-month window has historically tracked with restart slippage.
