Digging Themselves in Deeper
By Keith Johnson
Foreign Policy
April 23 2014

Russia may have become an international outcast in the wake of its annexation 
of Crimea and continued destabilization of eastern Ukraine. But for one group 
of powerful multinationals, Russia these days is less pariah than promised land.

Big Western oil companies from BP to Shell have not just stayed the course in 
Russia in recent months -- many have essentially doubled down on oil and gas 
investments there and built even closer ties with Russian energy firms. Taken 
together, the deals could send billions of dollars flowing into the Russian 
economy just when Barack Obama's administration is trying to hammer it hard 
enough to persuade Russian President Vladimir Putin to reverse his annexation 
of Crimea and stop menacing eastern Ukraine.

"We've made clear that we'd be prepared to target certain sectors of the 
Russian economy if we see a significant escalation, including direct Russian 
military intervention in eastern Ukraine," White House spokesperson Laura Lucas 
Magnuson has said.

It's unclear how successful the American efforts will be if giant multinational 
energy firms continue investing in Russia. The deals are a boon to Putin and a 
blow to President Obama for reasons that go beyond mere dollars and cents. The 
Western companies that sign the agreements also bring much-needed technical 
know-how, which is critical to Russian efforts to tap oil and gas in an array 
of inhospitable sites.

"Basically, they are torpedoing whatever the United States and the EU are 
trying to do, which is rattle Putin's cage," said Fadel Gheit, an oil analyst 
with Oppenheimer & Co. in New York. "I'm very surprised the oil companies are 
going out of their way to assure Russia and Putin that they are going to do 
business as usual."

Indeed, international oil firms are flocking to do more business in Moscow 
despite international outrage at the annexation of the Crimean peninsula, fears 
about Russia's use of natural gas exports to blackmail Europe, and growing 
signs that Russia is trying to stir up tensions in eastern Ukraine as a prelude 
to a potential military incursion there.

The continued Western investment in Russia reflects the simple fact that the 
country's energy potential is simply massive, with still-untapped deposits of 
oil and gas in Siberia and the Arctic and a huge Asian market for energy 
exports just next door. The prospect of getting in on the ground floor of the 
opening of Russia's liquefied natural gas export market is especially 
attractive to many firms, which see demand for gas in China, Japan, South 
Korea, and India as a guaranteed market for years to come.

As a result, a parade of Western CEOs have made clear that they have no plans 
to end, or even delay, their joint projects with Russia. Shell Chief Executive 
Ben van Beurden, for instance, met with Putin at the latter's residence outside 
Moscow on April 18. According to Bloomberg, van Beurden told Putin that his 
company is "very keen to grow our position in the Russian Federation," 
including through fresh investments to increase the capacity of the Sakhalin 
offshore gas field and export terminal in Russia's Far East. Kelly op de Weegh, 
a spokesperson for Shell, told Foreign Policy that the company's commitment to 
Russia hasn't been diminished by recent events.

"Our strategy for working in Russia, in partnership with Russian companies, has 
not changed," op de Weegh said. "Russia is a country of great importance for 
Shell; it is a major hydrocarbons resource holder and a growing consumer 
market."

She added that the expansion of the Sakhalin liquefied natural gas terminal, 
which liquefies natural gas taken from offshore fields in sub-Arctic 
conditions, has been in discussions for years due to its importance as a supply 
point for the big and growing Asia-Pacific market.

BP head Bob Dudley, meanwhile, said on April 15 that "it's business as usual" 
in Russia, despite some angst among shareholders, and suggested that BP could 
serve as a bridge between Russia and the West. BP holds a 20 percent stake in 
Rosneft, Russia's state-dominated oil giant, which is worth about $13.6 billion.

Norway's Statoil also reaffirmed its desire to stay active in the Russian 
market and ink joint ventures with Russian oil firms, despite the crisis and 
the looming threat of further sanctions on Russia. Meanwhile, Exxon Mobil is 
quietly pressing ahead with plans to look for oil in the Arctic alongside 
Rosneft; it is also reportedly in talks tojoin Rosneft for oil deals in 
northern Iraq.

France's Total, for its part, recently underscored its commitment to the 
Russian market. That includes a sizable shareholding in Russian gas firm 
Novatek -- controlled by billionaire oligarch Gennady Timchenko, who was put on 
the U.S. Treasury Department's sanctions list after Russia's intervention in 
Crimea -- and a joint venture with Russian oil company Lukoil.

"When deciding to invest in Russia, we assessed the risk of doing so, including 
a degree of political risk," a spokesperson for Total told FP. "Despite the 
short-term context, we still consider it acceptable with a long-term vision, 
and we continue to do business in Russia alongside other Western companies."

Many Western oil firms note that, in the absence of tougher economic sanctions 
on Russia's energy sector, the Ukraine crisis by itself provides little 
disincentive to doing business with Moscow.

"We are following the situation in Ukraine closely, but our activities in 
Russia are not affected by the situation or the sanctions today. We will 
monitor the situation closely to ensure compliance with sanctions," said a 
spokesman for Statoil.

Magnuson, the White House spokesperson, said the administration expects "those 
companies to make their own assessments of the political, financial, and legal 
risks associated with exposure to Russia" due to the current crisis.

"But given the large capital flight we have seen out of Russia this past 
quarter, it's clear many companies are thinking twice about investing in 
Russia," she said.

In a way, Big Oil's rush to keep doing business in Moscow mirrors the 
continuing appeal of Russian nuclear energy despite all the fallout from the 
Ukraine crisis. Several European countries are looking to seal 
multibillion-dollar deals with Russia to build nuclear power plants, and so far 
the politics of the Ukraine crisis have not affected Russia's nuclear business.

Oil and gas exploration and production, like nuclear power, is a very long-term 
game: Most companies sign production agreements lasting 25 years or more. That 
helps insulate, to a certain extent, oil and gas production deals from 
short-term ups and downs in the geopolitical situation.

What's more, despite the latest political uncertainty, Russia's appeal to the 
oil and gas industry is especially bright compared with that of many other 
oil-rich regions of the world, the United States apart.

Latin American energy resources usually come with excessive political strings 
attached; legal and security issues still dog Iraq's oil renaissance, despite a 
recent surge in oil output; and a lack of infrastructure, prevalent corruption, 
and a sketchy security environment make many in the industry cautious about 
Africa's energy future.

Russia, in contrast, has seen steady Western investment in oil and gas for the 
last 20 years and the painstaking creation of long-standing business 
relationships between Russian energy giants and their Western peers.

"It would be very hard for me to see major foreign oil players, who have 
probably the best understanding of these geopolitical risks, backing away from 
any of those investments. If anything it would just open the door for someone 
else to come in," said Robert Abad, an emerging-markets portfolio manager at 
Western Asset Management.

Indeed, stock markets have not yet punished big oil companies for their Russian 
exposure. On the contrary, after a small dip in early February due to fears 
that the West would sanction Russia's energy sector, the energy giants' share 
prices have kept rising. Stock prices in Shell, Exxon, Statoil, BP, and Total 
are all flirting with 52-week highs, a reflection that most investors aren't 
pressing those firms to retreat from Moscow. That means big business may be 
shoring up Putin just as Washington is trying to knock him down a peg.

"The international oil companies are sending very, very bad signals to Putin 
and their own governments," said Oppenheimer's Gheit. "Basically they are 
taking Putin's side."

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2014/04/22/digging_themselves_in_deeper_big_oil_putin_russia
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to