Melkøya

Melkøya (Northern Sami: Muolkkut) is an island in Hammerfest Municipality in Troms og Finnmark county, Norway. The 0.69-square-kilometre (170-acre) island is connected to the town of Hammerfest (on the neighboring island of Kvaløya to the west) by the Melkøysund Tunnel which was completed in 2003.[1]

Melkøya
Native name:
Muolkkut
Melkøya
Location of the island
Melkøya
Melkøya (Norway)
Geography
LocationTroms og Finnmark, Norway
Coordinates70.6900°N 23.5990°E / 70.6900; 23.5990
Area0.69 km2 (0.27 sq mi)
Length1.6 km (0.99 mi)
Width810 m (2,660 ft)
Highest elevation71 m (233 ft)
Administration
Norway
CountyTroms og Finnmark
MunicipalityHammerfest Municipality

The industrial island is the endpoint of the undersea pipeline that transports natural gas from the Snøhvit natural gas fields in the Barents Sea. The gas goes through the 168-kilometre (104 mi) long pipeline to the processing station on Melkøya where it is converted into liquefied natural gas. The plant opened in 2007 and it is operated by Equinor.[1] Liquefied natural gas is then exported from Melkøya to world markets by a LNG gas carrier or tanker.

History

In 2001 and 2002, major archaeological investigations on Melkøya were undertaken before Statoil's development of the island began. The development of the island has changed Melkøya completely. On 21 August 2007, the gas from the Snøhvit field began flowing to Melkøya.

gollark: My device *is* rooted, which was really not a very pleasant process. But the entire Android architecture appears like a horrible locked-down mess.
gollark: I mean, Android is "Linux". Yet it's horrible and you basically can't do anything.
gollark: it is "Linux", but many of them come with locked down configurations, and I don't think you can access Linuxy features meaningfully.
gollark: Oh, the other thing.
gollark: I'm sorry, but Chromebooks *do* actually exist and many schools use them.

See also

References

  1. Store norske leksikon. "Melkøya" (in Norwegian). Retrieved 2013-01-31.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.