Store Norske Gruve 7 coal mine on Svalbard gets reprieve till 2025 to supply Clariant
08 Sep 2022
The board of Store Norske has decided to postpone the
closure of Gruve 7 (Mine 7), which is Norway’s last coal mine on Svalbard.
Originally, the mine was to close when the coal-fired power plant in
Longyearbyen closes in autumn 2023. The reason was that the purpose of the
operation is to supply coal to the energy plant, and that the market was
previously such that there was no potential for profitable operation.
However, the situation is different now,
says Anette Malm Justad, Chairman of Store Norske. Store Norske has reached an
agreement with the German company Clariant to continue supplying coal for
industrial production until the summer of 2025. The company has been buying
coal from Gruve 7 for 40 years. Based on the current market situation for coal,
they want to secure access to coal in the quality they need for their purposes.
Store Norske says this is a good solution
for all parties. “We can extract the available coal reserves in Gruve 7 and are
assured of good profitability with low market risk through this agreement with
a customer with whom we have had a long-term professional collaboration. For
our part, it gives us somewhat longer time for a demanding and necessary
restructuring of the company. Not least, it is gratifying for our employees in
Gruve 7 who get more predictability and can stay at work longer,” says Jan
Morten Ertsaas, CEO of Store Norske.
In addition to mining, Store Norske has
significant activity in real estate, logistics and energy. In 2021, Store
Norske bought both hotels and an property portfolio from Hurtigruten Svalbard.
Store Norske now owns around 40% of the homes in Longyearbyen in addition to a
significant commercial property portfolio. In the next few years, many
industrial workplaces on Svalbard will disappear, so there is an urgent need
for restructuring and development of business life in Longyearbyen.
“We are contributing through increased
investment in logistics, renewable energy and adaptation of the building stock
to the green shift that is coming. We have been an Arctic energy company for
over 1oo years, and our ambition is to continue this role by actively
contributing to the transformation of today’s fossil energy systems in Svalbard
and the Arctic,” says Ertsaas.