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Norway watchdog to inspect BP platform after fire
OSLO (Reuters) - Investigators for the Norwegian oil safety watchdog said they would fly to the BP operated Valhall field on Thursday to probe the causes of a fire that forced a total evacuation of workers and halted output.
A BP spokesman said it was still unclear when production would resume at the field, which produces some 31,000 barrels of oil per day according to the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate
"We are going offshore this afternoon to investigate," Oeyvind Tuntland, director for professional competence at the Petroleum Safety Authority Norway, told Reuters. "A fire at an offshore platform is always serious."
New-York listed Hess is the majority owner in the field with a 64 percent share, while operator BP holds the remaining 36 percent.
The fire occurred on Wednesday in a vent pipe, used to evacuate gasses that could ignite, on the production and compression platform of the Valhall installations, according to a preliminary report BP sent to the watchdog, Tuntland said.
The fire occurred around 4 p.m. BST and was put out about an hour later, he added.
"How it was ignited, we have no idea," he said. "If any place should burn, it was one of the best places for it to happen. It had no big potential to escalate. But a fire is a fire."
BP said the damage on the platform was confined to a small area, which was sealed off while inspections are carried out.
"It is too early to say when production can start again," said company spokesman Jan Erik Geirmo.
He said there was no risk of a spill from the incident.
WORKERS SAFE
BP evacuated personnel and all were reported safe. Some 638 people had been working at the site, which is located about 290 km (180 miles) off southern Norway.
The production platform is one of five in a complex serving the oil field.
Valhall's oil production is piped to the offshore Ekofisk Centre and then on to Teeside, England, according to BP's website. Natural gas from the platform is transported by pipeline to Emden, Germany.
The platform also processes oil and gas from a smaller field known as Hod, located some 7 miles south of Valhall and also owned by Hess (62.5 percent) and BP (37.5 percent).
Valhall has pumped oil since the 1980s and is located in 70 metres of water.
BP said on its website that Valhall's infrastructure was being revamped this year to ensure the field can continue to operate until 2050.
(Editing by Jane Baird)