Ocnus.Net
Can Russia Sustain Its Oil Production?
By Sergei Blagov, Eurasia 10/5/08
May 10, 2008 - 10:30:03 AM
Earlier this year, the Russian government announced plans to raise the
country's crude oil production. In March, Russia's Economic Development and
Trade Ministry announced a program to develop the country's energy sector. The
blueprint called for raising Russia's crude oil production from 9.87 million
barrels per day (bpd) in 2007 to 11.23 million bpd by 2015, 11.94 million bpd
by 2020, and 12.04 million bpd by 2030.
Yet despite optimistic official plans, since last fall Russia's crude output
has been declining for the first time after a decade of production growth. On
May 4 the Russian Industry and Energy Ministry said that April production was
down to 9.72 million bpd, from 9.76 million bpd in March and more than 2
percent lower than the post-Soviet high of 9.93 million bpd in October 2007 (
Moscow
Times, May 5). In the first quarter of this year Russia's crude output was
1 percent lower than in the same quarter of 2007, according to the governmental
data.
Some industry leaders voiced doubts about whether the governmental plans are
feasible. Last month Leonid Fedun, deputy CEO of Russia’s LUKoil, warned that
the country's crude production could go down. He said that sustaining levels of
8.5 to 9 million bpd over the next 20 years would require investing billions of
rubles to develop new deposits.
In contrast, on April 30 Russia's state-run GazpromNeft CEO Alexander Dyukov
claimed that Russian oil output would continue to go up till 2030-2040. Any
significant production decline should not be expected before 2050-2060, he said
(Interfax, RIA-Novosti, April 30).
Subsequently, both LUKoil and GazpromNeft lobbied for tax cuts. Oil companies
cited high taxes and rising costs as major reasons for the decline in
production. Russia's oil executives have suggested various tax relief schemes,
including lower taxes for new deposits.
Nonetheless, last month the Russian government announced plans to raise oil
export duties on June 1 to an unprecedented $398 per ton (RIA Novosti, April
24). The government reviews export duties on crude on a bimonthly basis,
reflecting changes in the Urals price.
Russian crude exports reached 4.52 million bpd in April, up from 4.23 million
in March and 3.99 million in February (Interfax, May 4;
Moscow Times,
May 5). Russian oil companies were understood to be rushing to export more oil
ahead of the hike in oil export duties in June.
In its plans to raise the country's crude oil production, the Russian
government apparently relies on state-controlled companies. The state's share
of Russia's oil production has risen to more than 40 percent, from just 6
percent in 2000, following controversial acquisition of the Yukos and Sibneft
oil companies by government-controlled entities.
Russia's state-run Rosneft, which took over the bulk of former Yukos, has
pledged to pump 3.21 million bpd of crude oil in 2015 and 3.41 million bpd in
2020, up from and estimated 2.23 to 2.25 million bpd this year.
In March GazpromNeft disclosed ambitious plans to hike its oil production up to
0.98 million bpd this year. Acquisition of new assets would allow GazpromNeft
to pump up to 1.81 million bpd per year and raise reserves from 10.03 million
bpd up to 44.13 million bpd by 2020.
Controlled by the state-run gas monopoly Gazprom, GazpromNeft has been built
around the nexus of the former Sibneft oil company. In 2007 GazpromNeft
produced 0.66 million bpd of oil, and it now plans to nearly triple crude oil
output by 2020, apparently planning on acquiring new assets. In April, however,
GazpromNeft oil production was more than 6 percent below the level in the same
month last year.
There have been also warnings that Russia's oil infrastructure has remained
under funded due to high taxes, as the companies have failed to invest in
developing new deposits. In March the Russian government approved a blueprint
on geological research, which stipulates doubling the government funding of all
geological research projects by up to $1.69 billion per year from 2011 to 2020,
or up from about $848 million in 2007.
On May 6 a board meeting of Russia's pipeline monopoly Transneft approved a
second-stage investment program for the East Siberia Pacific Oil Pipeline
(ESPO) but proved unable to decide on whether to build the Baltic Pipeline
System-2, also known as BTS-2 (Interfax, May 6).
The BTS-2 project to link Unecha and Primorsk first surfaced in early 2007,
following an oil transit dispute between Russia and Belarus. The new pipeline
would make it possible to raise the capacity of the port of Primorsk from 1.51
million bpd a year up to 3.01 million bps at an estimated cost of $2 billion.
Earlier this month, then Prime Minister Viktor Zubkov held a meeting with
Industry and Energy Minister Viktor Khristenko and Transneft head Nikolai
Tokarev to discuss the BTS-2. Khristenko reportedly suggested postponing
construction of the BTS-2, because Russia would not have enough oil to fill
both the ESPO and the BTS. However, the meeting apparently made no final
decision on the issue (Interfax, May 4). Therefore, even the Russian government
appeared to have second thoughts about its own plans to raise the country's
crude oil production.
Source: Ocnus.net 2008