Ocnus.Net
Dudley Warns Fight Tearing TNK-BP Apart
By Anatoly Medetsky, Moscow Times 18/7/08
Jul 20, 2008 - 5:55:30 AM
"We have reached a new low in the tactics being used," Dudley told
reporters at a hurriedly called news conference in a Moscow hotel, a
few hours after the employees, led by a company vice president for
legal affairs, insisted at a rival news conference inside TNK-BP
headquarters on the Arbat that Dudley was not eligible to run the
company.
The renewed pressure on Dudley and other BP-appointed managers at
TNK-BP came one week after BP chief executive Tony Hayward flew to
Moscow for a day of talks with Deputy Prime Minister Igor Sechin, the
chairman of Rosneft's board, and Rosneft CEO Sergei Bogdanchikov.
A source close to BP said Thursday that Hayward's meeting with Sechin
was long and wide-ranging, held over a lengthy lunch.
BP is thought to be angling for a broad cooperation deal with one of
the country's state-run energy giants, Rosneft or Gazprom, as way out
of the current deadlock with its current Russian partners, billionaires
Mikhail Fridman, German Khan, Viktor Vekselberg and Len Blavatnik.
Dudley's position as chief executive is in limbo as he waits for the
Federal Migration Service to rule by Saturday, the expiry date on his
visa. The service is studying his employment contract, which Dudley
insisted Thursday automatically changed to an open-ended one after a
fixed period ended Dec. 31.
The Federal Migration Service said its decision on Dudley's visa hinges
on whether it can regard Dudley's employment contract valid.
BP fears that if Dudley is forced to leave the country, its tenuous
share of control over TNK-BP will be under threat.
BP and its Russian partners have been locked in a battle over the
company's foreign expansion and reliance on BP's employees, a dispute
that broke out into the open in May.
Dudley insisted Thursday that he was entitled to continue working while
his visa status is reviewed, while the Russian shareholders claim he is
not.
The fog of confusion surrounding Dudley's position has grown so thick
that he could not immediately answer a question as to whether he would
be able to walk into his office Monday.
After pausing to consult a colleague sitting nearby, Dudley said: "Yes,
I am planning to come to work on Monday. I can work until they decide."
Dudley's departure, if it happens, will not have an operational effect
on the company, said Alistair Graham, BP's chief liaison with TNK-BP.
"It's not an ideal situation, but he has all the authority necessary to
continue running the company [from abroad]," Graham said at a third
news conference, held at BP's Moscow headquarters on Novy Arbat, a few
minutes' walk from the TNK-BP head office.
Dmitry Peskov, a spokesman for Prime Minister Vladimir Putin,
reiterated the government's stance that it will not interfere in the
dispute. "The Federal Migration Service in this case is guided strictly
by the clauses of the law," he said.
The conflict at the company doesn't so far threaten the government's
goal of reversing a slump in oil production by the end of this year, he
said. At a government meeting dedicated to the oil and gas industry
last week, Khan, TNK-BP's influential executive director, told Putin
that the company was working "absolutely normally," Peskov said.
The Russian managers' lawsuit against Dudley, however, is just the
latest action in a bitter conflict within TNK-BP's head office, where
Dudley and Khan have offices directly opposite each other, and sources
within the company say the atmosphere is brutal.
According to the managers, Dudley is running the company on a void
contract and discriminates against locally hired staff.
At his conference, Dudley rejected the lawsuit, saying that the company
was "blind to passports," his contract was effective and he didn't plan
to step down.
Dudley said the announcement of the lawsuit was a "cynical exercise" to
intensify a shareholder dispute between BP and its billionaire
partners, grouped into a consortium called AAR. Dudley said that he
suspected the billionaire shareholders to be behind the lawsuit.
Out in TNK-BP's oil-producing units, business continues uninterrupted,
a source in one of the company's regional offices said. Visa problems
for TNK-BP's foreign employees mean that it is sometimes quicker to get
approval of plans because they have to go through fewer experts, he
said. "It's even somewhat easier to work," he said.
Foreign managers who stayed and their Russian colleagues cooperate in
making joint decisions when they look at plans to develop existing
projects, the source said, speaking on condition of anonymity because
he was not authorized to speak to the media.
Another TNK-BP source, in Moscow, said: "It's the daily work that's
getting done. It's more about the long-term planning that's more
problematic."
In a surprise, for the first time in its five-year history TNK-BP has
been producing more oil so far this year than it planned, another
source familiar with the situation said.
Despite the difficulties at TNK-BP's management, the firm Wednesday
signed a deal with Rosneft that will see the state-run firm sending 13
million tons of crude annually to TNK-BP refineries.
Source: Ocnus.net 2008