Mmmm. You need to go back and read Heading Out's post to understand the history. We broke the projects down into groups according to the years CERA had them coming on board. I'm dealing with one of those groups at a time (for the sake of not doing something unmanageably large in one piece). So my list is correct in context. However, I'll definitely grab your list to make sure they get taken care of in some group at some point.
With the possible caveat that we don't really know what CERA meant by "Primorsk".
Primorsk is a oil terminal located on the Gulf of Finland. Since Soviet union collapsed Russia lost some of its pipelines and part of its ability to export crude. Pipelines in Russia are operating at full capasity and they are for example exporting crude to China via train gargo. If they had more capacity they could export more. Russia has plans to increase pipeline capasity and terminal capacity to increase exports. So maybe Primorsk expanding project is what CERA sees as increased production. In quick search I couldnt find much info on expanding plans, heres few links tho:
http://www.transneft.ru/Projects/Default.asp?LANG=EN&ID=227
http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/choke.html
http://www.intertanko.com/tankernews/artikkel.asp?id=8362

   During my trip to Russia in summer we drove from st. Petersburg to Vyborg via costline and stopped in Primorsk just to have a look at the terminal (which was of course my idea , others didnt care so much of the terminal which exports most of our crude oil we use in Finland). Well we didnt see so much just the facility and many tankers.  Here in Finland increasing tanker traffic is in the news quite often. There is fear of possible tanker accident and what it might cause to ocean which is already one of the most polluted in the world. In winter time when gulf is frozen , tankers need occasionally icebraker to make the trip, sometimes they get stuck on the ice for weeks.  Finland is trying to pressure Russia to require double-hulled tankers for oil transports.

You're probably right, although it doesn't seem quite methodologically sound to count this as new fields, rather than some old fields increasing their production -- as much of Russia has been doing as they rework things with horizontal wells and frac jobs. This Sibneft page was pretty enlightening. Especially the way that Sibneft's production almost exactly tracks the curve of overall Russian production. It seems to confirm the hypothesis that this is going to end up like the North Sea - big rise in production for a while followed by a crash with very high decline rates.
On Russian oil, I can only recommend this article:

http://www.cdi.org/russia/johnson/8236-12.cfm by Leslie Dienes.

Gotcha. Just did't understand the initial methodology. I'm wraped up today but I can post a more copmprehensive list Sunday. I'll be using the Offshore Engineer survey from a few months back
Thanks!