Summary
The Norwegian Water Column Monitoring (WCM) 2024 programme assessed the environmental impact of Snorre A and B oil and gas installations using caged mussels, passive samplers (PSDs), and wild fish. Five stations near Snorre A and two reference sites at Hywind Tampen were monitored for five weeks in spring 2024. Chemical (PAHs, metals) and biological (CI, MN, LMS) markers were measured in mussels; PAHs, alkylphenols, and naphthenic acids in PSDs. A weak gradient in alkylated PAH concentrations was found near Snorre A, with mussels accumulating phenanthrenes and PSDs accumulating naphthalenes. The highest PAH in mussels was low (12 ng/g ww) and was influenced by suboptimal station placement. Metals showed no spatial trends, and biological responses in mussels were weak. Wild fish (ling, tusk, saithe) were collected at Snorre A and B, Hywind Tampen, Oseberg, and a coastal site. PAHs, PFAS, radionuclides, and multiple biomarkers were analysed. PAH liver concentrations were generally low, with highest concentrations in coastal saithe. Only ling from Snorre A showed elevated 1-OH phenanthrene. Biomarker responses (e.g., CYP1A, DNA damage) were minimal across locations. For histology, liver granulomas were significantly elevated in tusk from both Snorre A and B compared to the coastal population. However, this could also be due to bacterial infections. Overall, no clear environmental impacts of Snorre A or B installations were observed, with chemical accumulations and biological responses higher in coastal reference fish.
Maria Thérése Hultman
Tânia Cristina Gomes
Samantha Goncalves Prat
Steven Brooks
Adam Jon Andrews
Ian Allan
Kate Hawley