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Entries in Gazprom (2)

Tuesday
Jun302009

Russian Economic Gambles

Russia’s main problems remain economic. There are some very real fears that the situation could get out of control. A surge of bad loans is expected yet Putin has asked that the banks boost lending by up to $16bn. This is a story that will unfold in the coming weeks.

Meanwhile, Russia is preparing for the time when the global economy has recovered and its natural resources become the necessary basis for the next global boom.

Three stories in the last two days give us a flavour of Russian priorities: to attract Western investment  on Russian terms to develop its resources; to exert as much oligopolistic control of the supply of gas into Europe as possible; and to get the Europeans to underwrite that supply with hard cash.

The Russians are now welcoming back Western oil majors – first Total, with which it signed a gas exploration deal, and now Royal Dutch Shell, which has been told by Putin himself that it can participate in new offshore oil and gas projects.

Shell has also been told that it can help Russia build LNG tankers to help globalise its gas trade. Old conflicts between Shell and Gazprom have been laid to one side and Shell has been encouraged to believe that it is needed to explore the remote deep water Sakhalin 3 and 4 blocks in Russia’s Far East.

The attempt to manage European demand for gas has many facets - the creation of a quasi-cartel of producers, moves into Nigeria, a relationship with Italy and Libya, Russia's 'great game' in the Caucasus, the cat-and-mouse over the Ukraine and resource agreements with the Chinese.

The latest move is small - a deal with Baku to import relatively small volumes of gas from Azerbaijan that the Europeans also would like to have had.

The Azeris will not allow Gazprom to take large volumes because of the implication that the country could fall under excessive Russian influence but this story tells us that the Russians want to be seen as alternate customers to Europe in every relevant market that they can find.

And then there is finding a way to help the Ukraine pay for Russian gas supplies for collection and eventual onward transmission to Europe in a tough winter. The talks are intense and involve the IMF and World Bank but serious funds are only possible if the Ukraine commits to reforming its gas sector.

If Russia does not implode from its own 'internal contradictions' as a massive under-populated empire and the State can retain control of its assets, measures being put in place now could ensure that it can dictate equality with the West in Eurasia - but it remains a complex gamble on events.

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Friday
Jun262009

Russian Adjustments

We should note the continued strains within the Russian economy. The Russians are now moving towards a major bank bailout. The World Bank expects the Russian economy to shrink by 7.9% this year and that its unemployment rate will rise to 13% by the end of the year.

Others predict a marginally less dramatic fall of 6.3% in the economy in 2009 but this decline is still significant. Investors will be recalling the $40bn debt default in 1998.

The real social damage will take place in the single factory towns where the impact of unemployment will be much worsened by wage arrears. Industrial production fell a record 17.1% in May and capital investment fell 23.1%.

Whichever way the numbers add up, this is the worst annual contraction for Russia in fifteen years and much of it relates toa collapse in demand for its commodity exports. Russia is still the world’s largest energy exporter so, on fundamentals, it should recover well on global recovery.

The coming Russian bank bailout is likely to be massive, targeting only banks with £1bn minimum assets, much larger than the equivalent US rescue. It will place the Government in pole position to administer the banking system in a partial re-socialisation of the economy.

Current plans seem to suggest that the Government will take board seats and gain veto rights although it has to be said that the relative immaturity of Russian banking suggests that this is a pragmatic move rather than some neo-communist coup.

Russian Military Reform

Quite separately, the Russians are undertaking (much like the US and other smaller powers) significant military reforms that will fundamentally transform Russian military power.

The Russians are also sending strong signals that they are prepared to make substantial cuts in nuclear stockpiles if the US meets its concerns over the missile defense system. The NATO-Russia Council will meet in Corfu on June 27th.

In essence, Russia is unwinding its longstanding model where massive intercontinental nuclear weaponry deterred extra-continental rivals while equally massive numbers of boots on the ground both challenged any prospect of land invasion and offered its own deterrent threat to the West.

The probable outcome of the latest round of reforms (the first of this scale since the Crimean War) is a force of around 1m men with a proportionately smaller but better trained officer corps and the ending of conscription as fundamentally inefficient.

Russia has an armed complement of some 1.4m (down from 3.4m at the end of the Soviet era) but its new wars are largely about border settlement and against disorder within its sphere of influence.

The calculation must be that Russia only needs sufficient deterrence to stop other powers from interfering in its attempts to consolidate its Eurasian core or from making opportunistic incursions on to its territory.

Continued Global Energy Influence

In any case, a global stranglehold over energy provision should keep Europe wary of undertaking any ‘adventurism’. Typical of Russia’s drive towards global energy influence is the announcement yesterday of Gazprom’s $2.5bn deal with Nigeria to explore and develop its gas reserves.

Traditionally, West Africa is European territory, certainly part of the Atlantic system, yet both the Russians (energy) and Chinese (oil) appear to be moving into the region in force.

Given Russian influence in Libya and noting Atlantic irritation with Berlusconi’s pally act with Putin, the African gas lines up through to Southern Europe are definitely drifting into Russian hands. The question is really who will bring the cash to the table.

Every time the Russians appear on the scene, their implied large-scale funding (regardless of the actual state of their economy) raises the price for the Western powers who can ill-afford, at this time, to direct scarce capital into full control of such apparent necessities as the Nabucco and trans-Saharan pipelines.

The Russians are simply staking their claim to influence but it should not be assumed that supply as such is threatened, only the terms of that supply.

On the ‘Chinese’ front, state-owned Sinopec agreed this week, in principle, a £4.4bn takeover of the Swiss-based oil company Addax (listed in London and Toronto) which has significant interests in Africa and in Iraqi Kurdistan.

This would be China’s largest outbound investment in the oil and gas sector. There continues to be much speculation about the value of concessions in Kurdistan but the holdings in Nigeria, Gabon and Cameroon are significant.

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