Lundin Petroleum said Monday progress at the Brynhild field in Norwegian waters was delayed because of Shell's issues in the British sector.

The Brynhild project is an offshore field linked to the Pierce field, which is operated by Shell in British waters.

Lundin, a Swedish energy company, said progress was moving slower than expected because of issues related to the commissioning of a floating production, storage and offloading vessel by Shell.

"We are disappointed and frustrated that the Haewene Brim FPSO is still not ready to accept Brynhild production," Lundin President Ashley Heppenstall said in a statement Monday.

Developments in Norway, one of Europe's largest oil and gas producers, represent more than 70 percent of the production forecast for Lundin. The company in April said it spent roughly $127 million on exploration programs during the first quarter of the year without much success.

"The delay in first production has clearly impacted our 2014 production guidance but we still retain our production guidance for 2015 of approximately 50,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day," Heppenstall said.

Lundin said Brynhild should still start operations in late 2014 despite the setback.

Oil rallies after encouraging US, China, Japan data
New York (AFP) June 09, 2014 –

Oil prices rallied sharply Monday, with the US benchmark hitting a three-month high, after positive Chinese, Japanese and US economic data raised expectations for more energy demand.

West Texas Intermediate for July delivery leaped $1.75 to close at $104.41 a barrel, the highest close for the benchmark US futures contract since March 3.

The European benchmark, Brent North Sea crude for delivery in July, settled at $109.99 a barrel, a gain of $1.38 from Friday's close, in London.

The market gained support from China, the world's second-largest consumer of crude oil, after official data showed Sunday its trade surplus surged 75 percent in May from a year ago.

Chinese exports increased 7.0 percent and imports declined 1.6 percent, resulting in a trade surplus of $35.92 billion.

"The weekend (Chinese) report comes as a quite unexpected surprise on the upside, underpinning the demand for commodities," said Desmond Chua, an analyst for traders CMC Markets.

"The strong (export) gains overshadowed an unexpected fall in imports that could signal weaker domestic demand," said Phil Flynn of Price Futures Group.

Flynn noted the Chinese data followed the US jobs report Friday showing employment returning to its pre-recession peak, "confirming steady improvement in the world's top economy" and top crude consumer.

Japan meanwhile revised upward its economic growth for the first quarter to the fastest pace in more than two years, at an annual rate of 6.7 percent.

Investors also were focused on Wednesday's meeting of the OPEC oil cartel in Vienna.

The Organization for Petroleum Exporting Countries, whose dozen member nations together supply about one third of the world's crude, is forecast by analysts to maintain its daily output ceiling at 30 million barrels of oil.