Equinor’s announcement comes less than three weeks after Norway’s government said the country’s sovereign-wealth fund, the world’s largest, would sell off holdings in oil-and-gas exploration and production companies. Norway’s finance minister, Siv Jensen, said the Government Pension Fund Global, which manages about $1 trillion in assets, would take the step to shield Norway’s treasury from risk from oil-price declines.
Norway’s move won’t require the pension fund to divest from such firms as BP and Shell, both because they refine oil in addition to producing it and because they have renewable-energy operations. And Jensen said Norway’s government doesn’t plan to sell its shares in Equinor. Equinor, moreover, is ramping up its renewables operations, and it began negotiating with Volta long before the government’s announcement. Still, the repudiation of investment in oil-and-gas exploration-and-production companies by the sovereign-wealth fund of Norway, a country whose treasury is based largely on oil-and-gas revenue, underscores the massive change roiling the energy industry.
