Showing posts with label Russian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Russian. Show all posts

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Hess Agrees to Sell Russian Unit Samara-Nafta for $2.05 Billion

Hess Agrees to Sell Russian Unit Samara-Nafta for $2.05 Billion

Hess Corp. said Monday it will sell its stake in a Russian subsidiary to OAO Lukoil for $1.8 billion, the latest asset sale by the oil and gas producer as it shores up its balance sheet.

Hess has been shedding assets to raise funds as it struggles with lackluster profits and a shareholder revolt. The New York oil and gas producer has already sold its holdings in the U.K. North Sea, South Texas and Azerbaijan. The sale of its Samara-Nafta business in Russia would bring total proceeds to $3.4 billion, the company said.

"We are making excellent progress in executing our asset sales program," said Hess Chief Executive John B. Hess, adding such moves are "a central component" in plans to turn the company into "a more focused, higher growth, lower-risk, pure-play exploration and production company."

Hess owns 90% of the Samara-Nafta business that it will sell to Lukoil. Hess' partners in Samara-Nafta, chairman of Russia's Yukos Oil Co. Simon Kukes, will also sell his 10% stake to Lukoil, Hess said. Total after-tax proceeds for the entire company will be $2 billion, Hess said.

Hess will use the proceeds to reduce debt and strengthen its balance sheet, the company said.

Samara-Nafta is currently producing 50,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day in the Volga-Urals region of Russia.

Hess has been battling criticism from dissident investor Elliott Management Corp., which has aimed to elect five board members and directly pay them bonuses based on how Hess shares perform. Mr. Elliott, a hedge-fund manager that controls 4.4% of Hess's shares, wants to split Hess into two companies in a bid to boost the stock.

Mr. Elliott has pressed the company to create shareholder value by spinning off its assets in the oil-rich Bakken shale region and other U.S. unconventional formations from less prolific international assets and its vast network of gasoline stations.

Hess has said while it turns itself into a exploration and production company, it is exploring options for its refining and retail gasoline business and pruning its Asian portfolio.

Lukoil for its part is attempting to increase production after years of dwindling output at its main fields.

The deal will be closed once state antitrust authorities approve it, Lukoil said.

"We have acquired a quality asset with long-term potential growth in a new region for us," Lukoil Chief Executive Vagit Alekperov said in a statement.

Hess shares rose 2% to $73.05 in recent trading. The stock has risen 38% in the past three months.

Saabira Chaudhuri and James Marson contributed to this article.

Copyright (c) 2012 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

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Sunday, May 5, 2013

Russian Tycoons Sound Out Ex-BP Chiefs about Oil Deals

Representatives of the Alfa Group, set to earn billions of dollars from the sale of Anglo-Russian oil venture TNK-BP, have sounded out former BP CEOs John Browne and Tony Hayward about investing jointly in international oil projects, Reuters reported on its website Wednesday.

German Khan, one of four Russian businessmen who shared control of TNK-BP with BP PLC for a decade, met Mr. Browne and Mr. Hayward and other potential deal partners in London last month, Reuters cited sources familiar with the discussions as saying.

Mr. Khan effectively heads TNK-BP and is Mikhail Fridman's partner in the Alfa Group consortium.

The Alfa-Access-Renova consortium will receive cash of $28 billion for selling their one-half stake in TNK-BP to Russian state-owned oil company OAO Rosneft.

Alfa will get half of that and wants to reinvest much of the money in oil and gas, as well as in telecoms, the sources said in the report.

The other two partners in AAR, mining tycoon Viktor Vekselberg of the Renova Group and Len Blavatnik of Access Industries, are likely to bow out and focus on other ventures and charity work, sources close to TNK-BP and AAR said.

Copyright (c) 2012 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

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Saturday, May 4, 2013

Russian Tycoons Sound Out Ex-BP Chiefs about Oil Deals

Representatives of the Alfa Group, set to earn billions of dollars from the sale of Anglo-Russian oil venture TNK-BP, have sounded out former BP CEOs John Browne and Tony Hayward about investing jointly in international oil projects, Reuters reported on its website Wednesday.

German Khan, one of four Russian businessmen who shared control of TNK-BP with BP PLC for a decade, met Mr. Browne and Mr. Hayward and other potential deal partners in London last month, Reuters cited sources familiar with the discussions as saying.

Mr. Khan effectively heads TNK-BP and is Mikhail Fridman's partner in the Alfa Group consortium.

The Alfa-Access-Renova consortium will receive cash of $28 billion for selling their one-half stake in TNK-BP to Russian state-owned oil company OAO Rosneft.

Alfa will get half of that and wants to reinvest much of the money in oil and gas, as well as in telecoms, the sources said in the report.

The other two partners in AAR, mining tycoon Viktor Vekselberg of the Renova Group and Len Blavatnik of Access Industries, are likely to bow out and focus on other ventures and charity work, sources close to TNK-BP and AAR said.

Copyright (c) 2012 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

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Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Japan to 'Help' With Russian LNG Projects

TOKYO - Liquefied natural gas was on the agenda when the energy ministers of Russia and Japan met on Tuesday, a senior official at Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry said.

Japan can help with LNG projects at Vladivostok and Yamal, Russia's Alexander Novak said without elaborating according to METI's Oil and Natural Gas Director Ryo Minami who was present.

Competitive pricing will raise interest from Japanese buyers, Japan's Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Toshimitsu Motegi said according to Mr. Minami. LNG demand in Japan is increasing after the country shifted away from nuclear power.

Russia is looking to sell to new markets because prices in Europe are relatively low. Two Russian companies in February announced plans to export LNG to Asia.

Copyright (c) 2012 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

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Sunday, April 28, 2013

Japan to 'Help' With Russian LNG Projects

TOKYO - Liquefied natural gas was on the agenda when the energy ministers of Russia and Japan met on Tuesday, a senior official at Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry said.

Japan can help with LNG projects at Vladivostok and Yamal, Russia's Alexander Novak said without elaborating according to METI's Oil and Natural Gas Director Ryo Minami who was present.

Competitive pricing will raise interest from Japanese buyers, Japan's Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Toshimitsu Motegi said according to Mr. Minami. LNG demand in Japan is increasing after the country shifted away from nuclear power.

Russia is looking to sell to new markets because prices in Europe are relatively low. Two Russian companies in February announced plans to export LNG to Asia.

Copyright (c) 2012 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

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Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Russian Arctic Set to Become the New Frontier

Russian Arctic Set to Become the New Frontier

Investing in the Arctic is a high-risk venture. The harsh climatic conditions of the "last energy frontier" coupled with limited availability of infrastructure translate into high capital and operating costs. Given these challenges, the Arctic still remains very attractive to the industry.

The region above the Arctic Circle accounts for about six percent of the Earth's surface, but it potentially holds around 22 percent of the world's undiscovered conventional oil and natural gas resources.

Arctic drilling is not new, and the existence of hydrocarbon resources in the Arctic has been known for decades, but only recently has the opening to full-scale development become technically and economically feasible given the current and expected prices of oil. Eight nations have Arctic territory - Canada, Denmark (including Greenland and the Faroe Islands), Finland, Iceland, Norway, Russia, Sweden and the United States.

Within this territory, about 61 large oil and natural gas fields have been discovered, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Fifteen of these 61 fields have not come online; 11 are in Canada's Northwest Territories, two are in Russia and two are in Alaska.

Additionally, two of these participating nations hold the most resources. The West Siberian Basin reportedly holds around 133 billion barrels of total oil resources and the Arctic Alaska holds roughly 72 billion barrels of total oil resources, according to the U. S. Geological Survey (USGS). Furthermore, around 41 percent of the Arctic oil resources and 70 percent of gas resources are in Russia.

Considering the amount of resources Russia holds, the country has intensified the development of the vast hydrocarbon resources of its continental shelf. Gazprom and Russia are currently the only companies allowed to receive new licenses to explore Russia's continental shelf, according to Ernst & Young's "Arctic Oil and Gas" report. These two companies hold the majority of licenses – 29 for Rosneft and 16 for OAO Gazprom – with the licenses mainly located in the Okhotsk, Kara and Barents Seas.

Licenses to exploit subsurface resources in the Arctic and Far East seas will be split between these two companies in 2020, with about 41 licenses belonging to Rosneft and 32 to Gazprom, according to Ernst & Young estimates. The main targets for Rosneft are projected to be the Barents shelf and Okhotsk seas, while Gazprom is expected to concentrate on Kara sea projects.

Gazprom, holding the world's largest natural gas reserves, has been pursuing a large project in Russia's Barents Sea – the Shtokman gas field. Discovered in 1988, the gas and condensate field is located in the central part of the Russian sector of the Barents Sea shelf in a water depth of around 1,050 and 1,115. The field holds about 3.8 trillion cubic meters of gas and 53.4 million tons of gas condensate.

But the company shelved the project in the second half of 2012 due to rising costs and the expected market for much of the LNG dwindling considering the North American shale boom. Statoil, once a partner in the project, has withdrawn from the Shtokman project, writing off $336 million of investment after failing to reach agreement on the investment terms by a June 2012 decision.

The decision to rethink the project underscores the huge challenges faced by energy companies trying to access the oil and gas reserves in the region.

"All parties have come to the conclusion that financing is too high to be able to do it for the time being," Vsevolod Cherepanov, head of Gazprom's production department, told Reuters at an oil conference in Norway.

The decision could be reviewed "only when conditions on the market change: either prices should rise, or costs should go down," said Gazprom's spokesman Sergei Kupriyanov, according to the Financial Times.

But the Russian Arctic still remains attractive to the industry. The recent agreement between Rosneft and ExxonMobil Corp. will seek to develop three fields in the Arctic with recoverable hydrocarbon reserves estimated at 85 billion barrels in oil-equivalent terms for a total investment of around $500 billion. Rosneft would control a 67 percent stake in the joint venture, while ExxonMobil would control the remaining stake.

The partnership between the two companies strengthened when another Arctic deal was signed in February 2013. The agreement provides Rosneft, or its affiliates, an opportunity to acquire a 25 percent interest in the Point Thomson Unit, which covers development of a remote natural gas and condensate field on Alaska's North Slope, the companies said in a joint statement.

"The agreement is significant for the industry, it's kind of a win-win situation," Foster Mellen, senior strategic analyst in Ernst Young's oil and gas practice told Rigzone. "It opens up to the industry the last potential resources, but at the same time it provides Rosneft the expertise and technology from a well-established company while ExxonMobil has access to a region that Western companies aren't privy to."

As part of the deal, ExxonMobil will add seven more licenses to develop hydrocarbon resources on Russia's Arctic shelf to the three it acquired from Rosneft in 2011.

"The agreements signed today take the unprecedented Rosneft and ExxonMobil partnership to a completely new level," said Rosneft President Igor Sechin in a April 2012 statement. "The acreage in the Russian Arctic subject to geological exploration and subsequent development increased nearly six-fold."

With 85 percent of the discovered resources and 74 percent of the exploration potential as gas, a joint Wood Mackenzie –Fugro Roberston study in 2006 concluded that the Arctic is a gas province. Investment in natural gas is more capital intensive than in the case of oil. While crude oil is relatively east to transport by pipeline, tanker or even trucks, the physical nature of gas makes its transport significantly more expensive.

Considering North America's shale boom, many in the industry are wondering if now's the time to explore the region.

"Currently, we would describe the gas business as a very intense, gas-on-gas competition," Mellen said. "That's going to make things preferable for the lowest cost gas producers and those are unlikely to be in the Arctic. If conditions stay where they are now - able to produce at a fairly reasonable cost - Arctic gas in general is going to be challenged. These resources are going to be very difficult to extract, very costly, and complex," said Mellen.

Russia's Energy Ministry took heed of this and outlined a new tax policy designed to attract $500 billion in investment in offshore Arctic energy projects over the next 30 years. The proposed regime would set tax terms for each project depending on their location in Russia's Arctic offshore zones, reported Reuters, where operational conditions vary widely.

Royalties and profit tax would be set after an assessment of costs two years into each project. The government has also granted a series of tax holidays to encourage exploration in new regions such as Eastern Siberia, reported Reuters, but these tax breaks were often granted on an ad hoc basis and then amended or scrapped.

"We managed to come to the agreement with the Ministry of Energy and with the Ministry of Economic Development. We settled all the differences and agreed how the new legislation will work," Deputy Minister of Finance Sergey Shatalov said in a December statement.

Under the new legislation, operators of shelf projects will be granted tax relief from 5 to 15 years, including tax breaks on export duties as well as import duty and VAT for purchased equipment. The Ministry of Energy proposed to classify shelf projects in four levels from basic to Arctic so as to implement proper tax breaks. The same tax policy will be applied to oil projects, launched from 2016.

However, at least 70 percent of offshore projects are to remain under Russian ownership.

With more than 10 years of journalism experience, Robin Dupre specializes in the offshore sector of the oil and gas industry. Email Robin at rdupre@rigzone.com.

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

View the original article here

Monday, April 22, 2013

Russian Arctic Set to Become the New Frontier

Russian Arctic Set to Become the New Frontier

Investing in the Arctic is a high-risk venture. The harsh climatic conditions of the "last energy frontier" coupled with limited availability of infrastructure translate into high capital and operating costs. Given these challenges, the Arctic still remains very attractive to the industry.

The region above the Arctic Circle accounts for about six percent of the Earth's surface, but it potentially holds around 22 percent of the world's undiscovered conventional oil and natural gas resources.

Arctic drilling is not new, and the existence of hydrocarbon resources in the Arctic has been known for decades, but only recently has the opening to full-scale development become technically and economically feasible given the current and expected prices of oil. Eight nations have Arctic territory - Canada, Denmark (including Greenland and the Faroe Islands), Finland, Iceland, Norway, Russia, Sweden and the United States.

Within this territory, about 61 large oil and natural gas fields have been discovered, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Fifteen of these 61 fields have not come online; 11 are in Canada's Northwest Territories, two are in Russia and two are in Alaska.

Additionally, two of these participating nations hold the most resources. The West Siberian Basin reportedly holds around 133 billion barrels of total oil resources and the Arctic Alaska holds roughly 72 billion barrels of total oil resources, according to the U. S. Geological Survey (USGS). Furthermore, around 41 percent of the Arctic oil resources and 70 percent of gas resources are in Russia.

Considering the amount of resources Russia holds, the country has intensified the development of the vast hydrocarbon resources of its continental shelf. Gazprom and Russia are currently the only companies allowed to receive new licenses to explore Russia's continental shelf, according to Ernst & Young's "Arctic Oil and Gas" report. These two companies hold the majority of licenses – 29 for Rosneft and 16 for OAO Gazprom – with the licenses mainly located in the Okhotsk, Kara and Barents Seas.

Licenses to exploit subsurface resources in the Arctic and Far East seas will be split between these two companies in 2020, with about 41 licenses belonging to Rosneft and 32 to Gazprom, according to Ernst & Young estimates. The main targets for Rosneft are projected to be the Barents shelf and Okhotsk seas, while Gazprom is expected to concentrate on Kara sea projects.

Gazprom, holding the world's largest natural gas reserves, has been pursuing a large project in Russia's Barents Sea – the Shtokman gas field. Discovered in 1988, the gas and condensate field is located in the central part of the Russian sector of the Barents Sea shelf in a water depth of around 1,050 and 1,115. The field holds about 3.8 trillion cubic meters of gas and 53.4 million tons of gas condensate.

But the company shelved the project in the second half of 2012 due to rising costs and the expected market for much of the LNG dwindling considering the North American shale boom. Statoil, once a partner in the project, has withdrawn from the Shtokman project, writing off $336 million of investment after failing to reach agreement on the investment terms by a June 2012 decision.

The decision to rethink the project underscores the huge challenges faced by energy companies trying to access the oil and gas reserves in the region.

"All parties have come to the conclusion that financing is too high to be able to do it for the time being," Vsevolod Cherepanov, head of Gazprom's production department, told Reuters at an oil conference in Norway.

The decision could be reviewed "only when conditions on the market change: either prices should rise, or costs should go down," said Gazprom's spokesman Sergei Kupriyanov, according to the Financial Times.

But the Russian Arctic still remains attractive to the industry. The recent agreement between Rosneft and ExxonMobil Corp. will seek to develop three fields in the Arctic with recoverable hydrocarbon reserves estimated at 85 billion barrels in oil-equivalent terms for a total investment of around $500 billion. Rosneft would control a 67 percent stake in the joint venture, while ExxonMobil would control the remaining stake.

The partnership between the two companies strengthened when another Arctic deal was signed in February 2013. The agreement provides Rosneft, or its affiliates, an opportunity to acquire a 25 percent interest in the Point Thomson Unit, which covers development of a remote natural gas and condensate field on Alaska's North Slope, the companies said in a joint statement.

"The agreement is significant for the industry, it's kind of a win-win situation," Foster Mellen, senior strategic analyst in Ernst Young's oil and gas practice told Rigzone. "It opens up to the industry the last potential resources, but at the same time it provides Rosneft the expertise and technology from a well-established company while ExxonMobil has access to a region that Western companies aren't privy to."

As part of the deal, ExxonMobil will add seven more licenses to develop hydrocarbon resources on Russia's Arctic shelf to the three it acquired from Rosneft in 2011.

"The agreements signed today take the unprecedented Rosneft and ExxonMobil partnership to a completely new level," said Rosneft President Igor Sechin in a April 2012 statement. "The acreage in the Russian Arctic subject to geological exploration and subsequent development increased nearly six-fold."

With 85 percent of the discovered resources and 74 percent of the exploration potential as gas, a joint Wood Mackenzie –Fugro Roberston study in 2006 concluded that the Arctic is a gas province. Investment in natural gas is more capital intensive than in the case of oil. While crude oil is relatively east to transport by pipeline, tanker or even trucks, the physical nature of gas makes its transport significantly more expensive.

Considering North America's shale boom, many in the industry are wondering if now's the time to explore the region.

"Currently, we would describe the gas business as a very intense, gas-on-gas competition," Mellen said. "That's going to make things preferable for the lowest cost gas producers and those are unlikely to be in the Arctic. If conditions stay where they are now - able to produce at a fairly reasonable cost - Arctic gas in general is going to be challenged. These resources are going to be very difficult to extract, very costly, and complex," said Mellen.

Russia's Energy Ministry took heed of this and outlined a new tax policy designed to attract $500 billion in investment in offshore Arctic energy projects over the next 30 years. The proposed regime would set tax terms for each project depending on their location in Russia's Arctic offshore zones, reported Reuters, where operational conditions vary widely.

Royalties and profit tax would be set after an assessment of costs two years into each project. The government has also granted a series of tax holidays to encourage exploration in new regions such as Eastern Siberia, reported Reuters, but these tax breaks were often granted on an ad hoc basis and then amended or scrapped.

"We managed to come to the agreement with the Ministry of Energy and with the Ministry of Economic Development. We settled all the differences and agreed how the new legislation will work," Deputy Minister of Finance Sergey Shatalov said in a December statement.

Under the new legislation, operators of shelf projects will be granted tax relief from 5 to 15 years, including tax breaks on export duties as well as import duty and VAT for purchased equipment. The Ministry of Energy proposed to classify shelf projects in four levels from basic to Arctic so as to implement proper tax breaks. The same tax policy will be applied to oil projects, launched from 2016.

However, at least 70 percent of offshore projects are to remain under Russian ownership.

With more than 10 years of journalism experience, Robin Dupre specializes in the offshore sector of the oil and gas industry. Email Robin at rdupre@rigzone.com.

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

View the original article here

Monday, March 4, 2013

JKX Begins Acid Treatment Program on Russian Wells

Eastern Europe-focused JKX Oil & Gas announced Thursday that work has begun on the hydrochloric acid treatment of three wells on its Koshebkhablskoye field in the Republic of Adygea, Russia.

JKX said the objective of the acid treatment program is to enhance well productivity by improving conditions in the near wellbore and the removal of residual drilling solids in the open-hole sections.

The first well in the program, well-25, had a side track completed on it in January and flowed during clean-up at a rate of 13 million cubic feet per day. Improved stable production rates should result from the current acid treatment, said JKX.

JKX Chief Executive Dr. Paul Davies commented in a statement:

"We are pleased to have the hydrochloric acidization program underway and look forward to having all three wells in production by mid-March."

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

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Saturday, January 26, 2013

Russian Court Dismisses $3B Case Against BP

MOSCOW – A Russian court Thursday dismissed a $3 billion damages ruling against BP PLC and closed the case, a court official said, ending months of legal strife for the U.K. company as it finalizes a deal to sell out of its joint venture in the country and take a stake in oil giant OAO Rosneft.

An arbitration court in the Siberian town of Omsk dismissed another court's ruling from last year ordering BP to pay just over 100 billion Russian rubles ($3.1 billion) in damages to its Russian joint venture TNK-BP. That court had ruled in July that BP caused damage to TNK-BP and the interests of its minority shareholders when it sought an alliance last year with Rosneft in the Arctic exploration deal without involving TNK-BP.

The Omsk court, which was hearing BP's appeal, dismissed the case Thursday after the minority investors filed to withdraw the suit.

BP and its partners are selling TNK-BP to Rosneft in deals worth $55 billion after years of disagreements. BP will hold a 19.8% stake in Rosneft as part of its move to sell out of TNK-BP. The deals are expected to close in the first half of 2013.

Copyright (c) 2012 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

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