Artificial intelligence (AI) contributed to value creation and savings for Equinor and its partners amounting to USD 130 million in 2025. AI is now utilized on offshore platforms and land facilities to solve industrial tasks on a large scale in a safe, efficient, and profitable manner.
To achieve Equinor's ambition for the Norwegian continental shelf by 2035, and to contribute to energy security and continued value creation, AI is crucial.
“AI is a central part of our operations. Moving forward, AI will become even more important for solving industrial tasks safely, faster, more profitably, and at scale. With AI, we can analyse seismic data ten times faster, plan wells and field development in new and better ways and operate our facilities more efficiently. Industrial processes generate vast amounts of data, and we can use AI to 'produce' knowledge from this data. This has already been transformative and profitable, even though we are still early in the AI revolution,” says Hege Skryseth, executive vice president for Technology, Digital, and Innovation in Equinor.
Equinor currently has a range of AI solutions in use, and over a hundred new use cases have been identified.
Here are three valuable contributors that have been implemented:
“Since 2020, we have realized values of over 330 million USD with artificial intelligence in industrial processes, of which 130 million USD came in 2025. We primarily use 'traditional' machine learning on our operational data. Our employees can use AI tools like copilots, chatbots and agentic AI to solve tasks and work in new ways,” says Skryseth.
Equinor aims to maintain production on the Norwegian continental shelf at 2020 levels through 2035, which means around 1.2 million barrels of oil equivalents per day.
“We use AI to interpret more seismic data, plan and drill more wells, and operate our facilities safely and profitably, while also using the technology to optimize energy consumption and reduce CO2 emissions,” explains Skryseth.