| 
World
Bolivia
Venezuela
Trinidad
&
Caribbean










|
|
Russia
hits back at US in plan to redirect gas to Europe
By Conor Humphries
AFP
MOSCOW
Petroleumworld.com
09 26 06
A Russian plan to re-route a significant amount of natural gas from
a huge new field originally intended for the US market to Europe is
a political move linked to deteriorating US-Russian relations, analysts
said Monday.
Experts linked the apparent change of thinking on the Shtokman gas field
to recent bilateral spats such as US sanctions on Russian state arms
exporter
Rosoboronexport and aircraft maker Sukhoi and troubled bilateral talks
on Russia's entry into the World Trade Organization (WTO).
"There are not many people who don't think that the WTO is a factor,"
said Stephen O'Sullivan, co-head of research at Deutsche UFG. "Politics
is obviously involved."
Speaking at a press conference after talks Saturday with French President
Jacques Chirac and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Russian President
Vladimir Putin said Russia may ship some of the gas from the Barents
Sea field to Europe rather than the United States.
"At present, Gazprom is reviewing this possibility," Putin
said, referring to Russia's state-run gas monopoly.
"Such a decision might be made in the very near future," he
said.
Business daily Vedomosti quoted a Kremlin source as saying that half
of Shtokman's gas would likely be sent to Europe.
If the decision were confirmed, it would be a dramatic shift in plans
for the Shtokman field, one of the most coveted energy sources in the
world with estimated reserves of around 3.2 trillion cubic meters of
gas.
Gazprom is in the process of picking partners to develop the field,
which is expected to begin exporting in 2010.
Aside from WTO negotiations, another factor appears to be the US sanctions
again Rosoboronexport and Sukhoi in August, said Andrei Gromadin, an
oil and gas analyst with Russian financial group MDM.
The United States alleged that the two Russian firms had been involved
in the sale to Iran of equipment that could be used to make weapons
of mass destruction.
While the political logic may call for an increase in Europe's share
of Shtokman gas, the economics appear to point in the opposite direction,
analysts said.
"The US market would make economical sense as the US economy has
a strategy to increase imports of LNG in the long term," said Gromadin.
"Gazprom has also said that its strategy is to diversify. It does
not want to be overdependent on its European customers."
On September 6, Gazprom informed the five foreign companies it has shortlisted
to help develop the Shtokman field that their proposals were still under
consideration.
The firms shortlisted are France's Total, Statoil and Hydro of Norway,
and US majors ConocoPhillips and ChevronTexaco.
The choice of companies is likely to follow a higher level decision
about where the exports will be sent, said UFG's O'Sullivan.
The possible freezing out of US companies from the project is a worry
but is unlikely to be at the top of Washington's energy agenda due to
the long-term nature of the project and its questionable economics,
said Julia Nanay, a senior director at Washington-based Petroleum Finance.
"The highest concern at this point is Sakhalin," she said,
referring to recent pressure from Russian officials on foreign companies
who hold production sharing agreements with the state, such as the Sakhalin-1
project led by US firm ExxonMobil.
At the same time, a shift in Shtokman export plans away from the United
States would clearly send a signal, Nanay said.
"It would be the last piece in the puzzle of deteriorating energy
relations," she said.
AFP
25 1607 GMT 09 06
Copyright
©2006 AFP.
All Rights Reserved.
Send
this story to a friend
Your
feedback is important to us!
We invite all our readers to share with us
their views and comments about this article.
Write
to editor@petroleumworld.com
Any
question or suggestions, please write to:
editor@petroleumworld.com
Best
Viewed with IE
5.01+
Windows
NT 4.0, '95, '98 and ME +/ 800x600 pixels
|