Politics
bedevils Russia's march to energy superpower status
AFP

Russia's president Putin in Red Square
By
Sebastian Smith
AFP
MOSCOW
Petroleumworld.com 01 11 06
Russia controls the world's biggest energy reserves and Europe and Asia
have almost insatiable demands. But this week's Belarus oil transit
crisis highlights crucial flaws in what could be a supply-demand match,
analysts said.
Industry experts say the main problem bedevilling Russia -- the number
two oil exporter after Saudi Arabia and unrivalled top natural gas producer
-- is Moscow's prickly relationship with ex-Soviet neighbours controlling
transit routes to the European Union.
"The problem is that Ukraine is the dominant country for gas export
transit and Belarus for transit of oil," MDM bank analyst Andrei
Gromadin said. "What's missing is infrastructure to bypass these
problem states."
That meant that an otherwise minor New Year's trade dispute between
Russia and Belarus rapidly flared into an international crisis, since
the tiny ex-Soviet republic controls the pipeline for a third of Russia's
oil exports, amounting to 12.5 percent of total EU consumption.
Another purely bilateral tussle over gas prices between Russia and Ukraine
one year ago likewise led to shortfalls of natural gas throughout Europe.
About 80 percent of Russia's gas exports to Europe run via Ukraine.
Russian politicians now talk up the need to bypass transit countries,
while alarmed EU leaders are renewing calls to lessen dependency on
Russia, which provides about a quarter of both gas and oil supplies
to the 27-nation bloc.
But UFG bank analyst Stephen O'Sullivan said both sides would learn
to live with current realities.
"Russia has again reminded people in the EU that there is a risk
to their oil and gas supply. But does this matter? No. I'm sceptical
the European Union will respond in any coordinated manner, since they
all have such disparate interests," he said.
Likewise, expensive and geographically complex bypass routes are never
going fully to replace existing pipelines, he said, meaning that Russia
and the European Union are locked in an unbreakable, if uncomfortable
embrace.
"The EU seems to be terribly worried over its dependency, but if
you look at Russia's dependency on the European market -- it's total.
There is no other market like that for Russian oil and gas. So there
is mutual dependency."
And although many in Russia look to Asian markets, particularly China,
as a way of getting away from this dependency on Europe, work has only
just begun on creating the necessary infrastructure in eastern Russia.
Masha Lipman, an analyst at the Mosow Carnegie Centre, said that regardless
of technical issues, economic relations will always be held hostage
to Russia's turbulent internal politics.
Separately to the incidents in Belarus and Ukraine, the Kremlin had
already jangled Western investors' nerves with the controversial dismantlement
of private oil giant Yukos and the more recent takeover of the foreign-run
Sakhalin 2 gas and oil project by Gazprom.
In each of these cases, "the Russian side decided that any fallout,
such as a drop in Western confidence, was worth it," Lipman said.
"This means that internal priorities are currently more important
to the Kremlin and this is going to continue."
MDM's Gromadin noted that Western countries did business with the Soviet
energy industry. Oil and gas can trump ideology. "Whatever kind
of government you have in the Kremlin, they're always going to be a
big energy exporter," he said.
AFP
11 1216 GMT 01 07
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