Lundin Petroleum published the results from Johan Sverdrup field

Sweden’s Lundin Petroleum raised output estimates for the first phase of the giant Johan Sverdrup field on Wednesday as it beat first-quarter core earnings expectations helped by a strong production and a forex exchange gain.
Lundin raised its daily output estimate for the first phase of the Sverdrup field in the North Sea, the largest oil find in Norway in 30 years.
The operator of Sverdrup is Statoil, while other partners include state-owned Petoro, Det norske and Denmark’s Maersk Oil. Lundin swung to a net profit of $114 million from a loss of $231 million a year earlier.
First-quarter production rose to 62,400 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boepd) from 25,800 boepd a year earlier buoyed by output from the Edvard Grieg field which came onstream at the end of 2015.