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Possible future of Russian and CIS oil production Vladimir Milov President, Institute of Energy Policy (http://www.energypolicy.ru) Paris, OECD, June 23rd, 2006
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Possible future of Russian and CIS oil productionEast Siberian pipeline: no help to Western Siberian exports • Taishet-Nakhodka pipeline project can hardly help the additional export

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  • Possible future of Russian and CIS oil production

    Vladimir MilovPresident, Institute of Energy Policy (http://www.energypolicy.ru)Paris, OECD, June 23rd, 2006

  • Oil output in Russia: where we are and where we could have been

    Source: Oil & Capital, Institute of Energy Policy estimate

    7

    8

    9

    10

    Dec.2

    002

    Feb.2

    003

    Apr.2

    003

    Jun.2

    003

    Aug.2

    003

    Oct.2

    003

    Dec.2

    003

    Feb.2

    004

    Apr.2

    004

    Jun.2

    004

    Aug.2

    004

    Oct.2

    004

    Dec.2

    004

    Feb.2

    005

    Apr.2

    005

    Jun.2

    005

    Aug.2

    005

    Oct.2

    005

    Dec.2

    005

    Feb.2

    006

    Possible (IEP estimate)

    Actual

    Average daily crude oil production in Russia, million barrels a day

  • If not the political interference,Russian crude oil output could have reached 10 million barrels a day already.

  • Shift in investments in 2003-2004:from domestic production development to foreign countries

    4,6

    6,45 6,3

    8

    9

    0,1

    4,9 4,7

    8

    10,3

    0

    2

    4

    6

    8

    10

    12

    2000 2001 2002 2003 2004

    billi

    on U

    SD

    , mon

    ey o

    f the

    day

    Capex in Russian oil productionsector

    Foreign investments of Russian oilproducing companies

    Source: RosStat

    Capital investments of the Russian oil producing companies in 2000-2004

  • What’s the reason behind slowdown of crude oil production growth?

    • Hostile ownership changes

    • Increase of oil export taxes in 2004

    • Ban over private oil pipeline Western Siberia-Murmansk and remaining oil export pipeline bottleneck

    • Speculation on ‘barbaric production practices’

    • The Yukos case

  • SurgutNG

    YuganskNG

    Tomskneft SamaraNG

    TNK-BP

    Sibneft

    Tatneft

    Slavneft

    Bashneft

    60%

    70%

    80%

    90%

    100%

    110%

    120%

    Sep.0

    4Oc

    t.04

    Nov.0

    4De

    c.04

    Jan.0

    4Fe

    b.05

    Mar.0

    5Ap

    r.05

    May.0

    5Ju

    n.05

    Jul.0

    5Au

    g.05

    Sep.0

    5Oc

    t.05

    Nov.0

    5De

    c.05

    Jan.0

    6Fe

    b.06

    Lukoil

    Rosneft (without YNG and

    Severnaya Neft)

    Average dailyoil production by companies,% to September 2004

    Production profiles of the Russian oil producing companies

    Source: Oil & Capital

  • How may the Russian crude oil output behave in the short term future?

    • Lukoil, SurgutNG, TNK-BP will probably continue moderate climbing

    • SamaraNG, Tomskneft, Sibneft will continue to fall• These two trends will most likely counterweight each other• YuganskNG is luckily keeping good shape due to continuity

    of production enhancement practices started by previous owners

    • Remaining assets of Rosneft (without YuganskNG and Severnaya Neft), Slavneft, Gazprom, Tatneft, Bashneft and Russneft will show no significant growth

    • The resulting picture allows to forecast nearly zero growth in the Russian oil industry in the upcoming 10-12 months

  • Structural changes: share of the state’s control clearly grows. Who’s next?

    State-dominated companies

    12%

    Priv ate companies

    88%

    The structure of Russian crude production2003 End of 2005

    State-dominated companies

    35%

    SurgutNG14%

    Priv ate companies

    51%

    End of 2006 ?

    State-dominated companies

    67%

    Priv ate companies

    33%

    • It’s clear that Gazprom is not demonstrating the ability to efficiently manage Sibneft. In fact, including Sibneft in Gazprom was initially a temporary solution, Gazprom was simply used as a ‘money bag’

    • Sibneft and SurgutNG are managed by the people from the same clan. It is reasonable to expect that they may be prepared for the merger

    • The ‘Big Three’ conglomerate establishment is possible, but Rosneft again appears to resist, like in the case of merger with Gazprom

    • TNK-BP: so far, it seems that the ruling clan is too busy with consolidating and restructuring of already controlled assets...

  • Where are the largest Russian oil reserves located?

    Distribution of Russian proved oil reserves by provinces, bln barrels

    50

    Western Siberia

    5

    Timano-Pechora

    10

    Volga-Urals

    3

    Eastern Siberia

    2

    Far East

    Western Siberia will remain the most important Russian oil producing region for decades.

    Source: Oil & Gas Journal

  • Eastern Siberia: not a very large new province

    0,0

    10,0

    20,0

    30,0

    40,0

    50,0

    60,0

    70,0

    80,0

    90,0

    2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017 2019 2021 2023 2025 2027 2029

    Satellite fields

    Kuyumbinskoye field

    Yurubcheno-Takhomskoye field (Evenkia)

    Verkhnechonskoye field (Irkutsk area)

    Talakan field (Yakutia) Probable reserv es (C3+D1)

    Source: Russian Ministry of Economic Development and Trade

    Forecast for crude production on Eastern Siberian fields, million metric tons a year

  • The general strategic crossroads of the Russian oil policy

    Future of the oil & gassector depends on

    greenfield development

    New era requires new oil sector policies

    Brownfield ageis expiring

  • Are Russian oil policies adequateto the new greenfield era?

    Tax policy

    Restoration ofstate domination

    Closing doors todirect foreigninvestment

    • Green fields obviously require tax incentives• Particularly long-term and capital consuming projects

    require restoration of adequate PSA regime

    • State does not always make the most efficient development decisions

    • Debt burden complicates new investment• Corruption and non-transparency increase costs and

    threaten projects’ efficiency

    • Russian financial system is not ready to provide long-term financing for capital consuming and risky projects as development of the new greenfield areas requires

    • Russian companies do not possess the necessary technologies

    Under present policies, successful development of new greenfield areas is questionable

  • Sakhalin oil & gas field development:typical hostage of out-of-time approaches

    • Abolishment of PSAs in 2003• Current tough taxation regime is not favorable for

    potential investors in Sakhalin, and only minor changes are being considered

    • Reluctance to foreign direct investment and preferences given to ‘national champions’ (Rosneft, Gazprom), that are incapable of investing necessary long-term capital and technologies in Sakhalin projects

    • As a result, only development of Sakhalin-1 and Sakhalin-2 projects, led by private foreign investors, is showing some progress

    • The development of Sakhalin-3-7 projects is delayed for an undetermined period

  • Russian oil export pipeline infrastructure: the bottleneck continues to exist

    Structure of Russian oil exports(including transit), mtoe

    The Baltic:shallow waters,icing, Danish straits’marine trafficlimitations

    Druzhba:a limited continentalmarket withunfavorable pricingenvironment

    The Black Sea:Bosphorustraffic limitations

    Other directionsare simplyunderdeveloped

    Source: Institute of Energy Policy

  • The importance of Murmansk pipeline idea:a chance for Russia to escape the paradigm of being primarily a European oil supplier

    • A perfect chance to establish new massive oil export channel to the U.S. market

    • Shortest route from Western Siberia, which would still remain major Russian oil production region for decades ahead

    • The only deepwater and non-freezing coastal area in European Russia

    • Could have been commenced in 2006 to support Western Siberian production growth

    • But the Russian authorities were reluctant to the idea to allow private capital to build and control a first-class export infrastructure like that

    • Oil pipeline monopoly Transneft also did not want competitors to appear

    • After all, the idea was limited to purely regional Timano-Pechora projects (Varandei, Indiga)

    • Eastern Siberian pipeline does not help to resolve the export pipeline bottleneck problem for Western Siberia at all

  • East Siberian pipeline:no help to Western Siberian exports

    • Taishet-Nakhodka pipeline project can hardly help the additional export of oil from West Siberia: the cost of oil transportation to the Pacific will range from $6.4/bbl (the official rate of TransNeft) to $10/bbl (our estimate)

    • Due to project difficulties, it appears that after building a first line to Skovorodino(0.6 mbd) the project will rely on railroad exports to China and further construction may be suspended

    • This assumption is supported by the fact that there’s obviously not enough oil production potential in Eastern Siberia, the total production hardly exceeds 0.6 mbd by 2015

    • Sources of project’s financing are yet unclear, and neither of the oil producing companies had officially made any commitments to supply the oil through the pipeline

  • New approaches to oil production taxation:[too small] a step in the right direction

    • Key issue influencing the economics of oil exports• The solution is firmly opposed by MinfinChanges in progressive

    export taxation

    • Tax administration is, again, key challenge• The only real change might be the return to excise collection

    from refineries, which is a huge step back for the industryChanges in petroleum products taxes (domestic market excises, etc.)

    • Amendments may die away in several years (when they actually would have to start to apply)

    Tax exemptions for greenfield provinces

    • Discounts are too small• Tax administration mechanism is unclear• Discounts for greenfields do not apply to Timano Pechora and

    the offshore fields in the final version of the draft law submitted to the Duma

    Tax discounts for depleted fields

    Decided by Government

    Still no decision

  • 0.00

    5.00

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    25.00

    30.00

    35.00

    40.00

    45.00

    50.00

    55.00

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    65.00

    Apr2004

    May2004

    Jun2004

    July2004

    Aug2004

    Sep2004

    Oct2004

    Nov2004

    Dec2004

    Jan2005

    Feb2005

    Mar2005

    Apr2005

    May2005

    Jun2005

    Jul2005

    Aug2005

    Sep2005

    Oct2005

    Nov2005

    Dec2005

    Jan2006

    Feb2006

    Export duty, USD/bbl

    Mineral resource tax, USD/bbl

    Oil price net of taxes

    Trend of oil price net of taxes

    Source: Federal Taxation Service of Russia, Russian Government resolutions

    Share of the extraction tax and export duties in the export price of oil, 2004-2006, $/bbl

    USD 22,7/bbl USD 23,0/bbl

    Progressive oil exporrt taxation: high oil prices are not visible for companies

  • Central Asian and Caspian oil exports: temporarily locked in ‘pipeline trap’

    Source: EIA

    • 90% of Kazakh and 30% of Azeri oil exports are currently running through Russian territory

    • Russian use of transit monopoly as a tool in competition imposes severe political constraints on the expansion of the Central Asian and Caspian oil exports:

    • resistance to the expansion of the Caspian Pipeline Consortium

    • last year’s withdrawal of Transneft from the contract with KazMunaiGaz related to supply of Kazakh oil to Mazeikiu Nafta

    • Boshphorus bottleneck adds up more infrastructure constraints for the Central Asian and Caspian oil exporters in terms of further increase of exports

    • New pipelines (BTC, Atasu-Alashankou) start to get commenced, but broader diversification will take time

  • The Caspian division dispute: no end in sight

    • Iran had been consistently reluctant to finding the compromise solution

    • This is unlikely to change unless a more responsible government will come to power in Iran

    • Bilateral agreement approach chosen by Russia almost excludes the possibility of a successful return to the five-nation treaty format

    • This will seriously complicate both further exploration and development of oil reserves in the Azeri and Turkmen areas of the Caspian sea, as well as construction of trans-Caspian pipelines

  • Brief conclusions

    • Oil production growth era in Russia is over. This is not due to the ‘plateau’ yet, but is driven by economic policy constraints

    • Constraints remain, so the production will be more or less flat in the upcoming months

    • Asset redistribution will, in the upcoming period, concentrate around regrouping of companies already linked to the state

    • New taxation ideas are positive but rather ‘symbolic’• Eastern Siberia’s input to the industry’s development is probably

    overestimated – this is not an oil region• Like the rest of Russia, oil sector is switching from

    investment and development model to a rent-seeking model and cyclical redistribution of control

    • Development of Central Asian and Caspian oil resources may be delayed due to infrastructure and political constraints

    Possible future of Russian and CIS oil productionOil output in Russia: where we are and where we could have beenIf not the political interference,�Russian crude oil output could have reached 10 million barrels a day already.Shift in investments in 2003-2004:�from domestic production development to foreign countriesWhat’s the reason behind slowdown of crude oil production growth?Production profiles of the Russian oil producing companiesHow may the Russian crude oil output behave in the short term future?Structural changes: share of the state’s control clearly grows. Who’s next?Where are the largest Russian oil reserves located?Eastern Siberia: not a very large new provinceAre Russian oil policies adequate�to the new greenfield era?Sakhalin oil & gas field development:�typical hostage of out-of-time approachesThe importance of Murmansk pipeline idea:�a chance for Russia to escape the paradigm of being primarily a European oil supplieEast Siberian pipeline:�no help to Western Siberian exportsNew approaches to oil production taxation:�[too small] a step in the right directionProgressive oil exporrt taxation: high oil prices are not visible for companiesCentral Asian and Caspian oil exports: temporarily locked in ‘pipeline trap’The Caspian division dispute: no end in sightBrief conclusions