Putin launches Pacific oil terminal
Russia expanded its foothold on the Asian energy market with the click of a mouse.
Prime Minister Vladimir Putin pressed a button to get Siberian oil flowing into the first tanker for delivery to an
Asian customer, in Hong Kong, from Russia's Pacific coast. In addition to China, supplies will also target Japan and
South Korea.
The ceremony completed four years of work to construct the East Siberia-Pacific Ocean pipeline and the Kozmino port,
worth a combined RUB 420 bn ($ 14 bn) to ease the industry's reliance on the European market.
"It's a strategic project because it allows us to enter the completely new, growing and promising markets of the
Asian-Pacific region," Putin said at the launch. "It's a great present to Russia for the New Year."
The foray into the Asian oil market follows Russia's arrival as a major supplier of liquefied natural gas, or LNG,
for its eastern neighbours earlier this year. The Gazprom-led Sakhalin-II project -- with Shell, Mitsui and
Mitsubishi as partners -- started shipping the gas, chilled to a liquid for loading into tankers, from Russia's
offshore fields in the Pacific in February.
As it expands into new markets, Russia is keeping abreast of the global trend of diversification among both energy
buyers and sellers, which will make the business more competitive worldwide, said Elena Shadrina, a visiting energy
researcher at the Norwegian Institute for Defence Studies.
"No supplier or consumer will have a dominant position," she said.
Europe is trying to offset its dependence on gas imports from Russia by looking to buy more from Africa, while
Turkmenistan began exporting its gas to China earlier this month, ending Russia's role as its only major buyer. Asia,
in turn, has been seeking alternatives to supplies from the Middle East. Russia's progress in eastward expansion has
been spectacular, defying doubts that the country has sufficient oil reserves and investment, Shadrina said.
"As little as five years ago, I heard sceptical attitudes from Japanese officials and analysts," she said. "The tone
has really changed now."
The Kozmino port, near Vladivostok, cost $ 2 bn to build and has the capacity to handle 300,000 barrels of crude per
day (15 mm tpy), with oil quality comparable to that of Middle Eastern blends now dominating the market. Transneft,
the state pipeline monopoly, spent another $ 12 bn to lay the 2,694-km ESPO pipeline through east Siberian wilderness
to connect the area's greenfields, being developed by oil majors Rosneft, TNK-BP and Surgutneftegaz, to the railway
station of Skovorodino. The link has the capacity to carry 30 mm tpy.
Arriving in Skovorodino, the crude is loaded onto trains to travel to the port by rail. Transneft plans to start
building the rest of the pipeline to Kozmino, which requires an estimated investment of $ 10 bn, next year and
complete the work in 2014. The effort will bring the link's total length to 4,794 km, which is more than the distance
from New York to Los Angeles.
When completed, the pipeline will carry eastward an annual 80 mm tons of oil from Siberia, including 15 mm tons to
China through an additional spur. China has loaned $ 25 bn to Russia in exchange for oil deliveries over the next two
decades. Kozmino will increase capacity to 600,000 bpd, or 30 mm tpy.
Seeking the huge investment for the remote east Siberian greenfields that are to feed the pipeline, Russia will
likely ease access to these resources by foreign oil majors, said Shamil Yenikeyeff, a researcher at the Oxford
Institute for Energy Studies. A law enacted last year allows the government to take away a field from a foreign
company if it strikes large oil reserves there during exploration, a restriction that put off potential investors,
such as Royal Dutch Shell.
Yenikeyeff said Russia's emergence this year as an Asian energy power -- while being a wise policy -- displayed the
country's continuing reliance on oil and gas exports for economic prosperity.
"You may call this a new era," he said, referring to the unlocking of new markets. "The question is: Does this mean
that Russia will grow even more affected by the oil curse? If you look at the other industries, nothing is happening
there."
The first tanker's crude that left Kozmino belongs to state-controlled Rosneft and represents a new oil blend named
ESPO, after the pipeline. The low-sulphur, medium-heavy sweet blend ranks higher than Russia's main export blend,
Urals, but its quality is going to be unstable for a while as more producers pump their oil in the pipeline.
The price of the crude is tentatively based on the average monthly price of the Middle Eastern benchmark Dubai blend,
with the option for traders to offer a discount or premium. Rosneft sold the first shipment to the Finnish trader IPP
at a premium of 50 cents.
