(Rewrites throughout, updates share price.)

 
   DOW JONES NEWSWIRES 
 

Norwegian oil giant Statoil ASA (STL.OS) will spend $32 billion on exploration and production over the next two years as it aims to ramp up production to above 2.5 million barrels of oil equivalents a day over the next 10 years.

In addition to continued focus on production from operations on the Norwegian Continental Shelf, Statoil said the increased output will come through strengthened positions in the Gulf of Mexico, Brazil, Angola, the Caspian region and Arctic Sea, while also stepping up production of shale gas and liquids.

"The Norwegian Continental Shelf remains a very attractive and globally competitive province for future oil and gas activities," Statoil Chief Executive Helge Lund said in a statement accompanying the company's capital markets day in New York.

Like many oil companies, Statoil has benefitted from the rising price of crude oil which has enabled maturing fields to remain profitable despite dwindling reserves. Statoil has also been able to leverage its experience and expertise of working in some of the world's most inhospitable places, tapping hard-to-reach fields in very deep water and extreme temperatures of the Arctic and Barents Sea.

Production from Statoil's core Norwegian Continental Shelf operations is expected to be more than 1.4 million BOE a day in 2020, while its international portfolio is expected to produce more than 1.1 million BOE a day, Statoil said. Investment for 2011 will be $16 billion and it expects the investments in 2012 to be at the same level.

"Towards 2020 our ambition is to establish material positions in three to five offshore business clusters outside the NCS and step up our shale gas and liquids production," Lund said.

An Oslo-based analyst said the 2020 output target was slightly above expectations. "But there are a number of risks...We have to find out on what assumptions they base this on," the analyst said.

As well as conventional oil and gas operations, Statoil is developing the Eagle Ford shale field in southwestern Texas through a joint venture with Canada's Talisman Energy Inc. (TLM) and the Marcellus shale region together with Chesapeake Energy Corp. (CHK), which includes northern West Virginia across Pennsylvania and parts of New York.

Statoil said the positive outlook for natural gas will mean an increased focus on Marcellus and Eagle Ford, which together are expected to deliver more than bewteen 3 billion and 3.5 billion barrels of oil equivalent.

At 1152 GMT shares traded 0.2% higher at NOK131.60, while its European peers traded lower.

Company Web site: http://www.statoil.com

-By Charles Duxbury, Ian Edmondson and Katarina Gustafsson, Dow Jones Newswires; +46-8-5451-3092; charles.duxbury@dowjones.com

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