Stories tagged with poland
The Evolving situation between Russia, Belarus and Azerbaijan
Posted by Heading Out on January 9, 2007 - 12:00pm
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: azerbaijan, belarus, Druzhpa, germany, Oil pipeline, poland, russia [list all tags]
It hardly seems any time at all since we heard that Belarus and Russia had signed an agreement that had set the price per thousand cu meters at $100, Gazprom was going to use part of the money, over time, to purchase a 50% share in the Belarus pipeline company, and another crisis had been averted.
Except that the story dealt only with natural gas, and there is a second fuel, oil, that also makes its way from Russia, through Belarus, to places like Germany and Poland. It carries about 20% of the total supply. (The photo on Robert Amsterdam’s site shows you how large the diameter of the Druzhpa pipe is, large enough, he notes, to carry 1.2 mbd of oil to Germany and Poland. It is thus one of the highest capacity pipelines in the world . And on Monday Russia turned that tap off. For much the same reasons as, last year, they closed the tap on the natural gas pipeline feeding through Ukraine. Large volumes of the fuel headed west were being siphoned off. It is not, in fact, the Russian government that is directly involved in this dispute, at least superficially and at this point, but rather the Russian oil pipeline company Transneft. Their story is that, as with Ukraine, Belarus did not want to pay the new duty on the oil, that Russia was now demanding .
Last month, Russia imposed an export duty of $180 per ton of oil sold to Belarus, a severe blow to the country's reprocessing industry and government revenue. Belarus responded by imposing an import duty of $45 per ton of Russian oil that crossed its territory.
UPDATE: When I said that most countries had reserves that would get them through the crisis I forgot to look at Belarus, and they apparently only have a week's worth. And the second point is that without customers for their oil, Russia might have to cut back production by up to 1 mbd, since it will run out of places to store the oil, and has only a very limited means of alternate shipping (which includes a lot of railcars.)
UPDATE 2 It now appears that Russia refused to meet with the Belarus delegation today.
However, a quick resolution to the dispute seemed distant after the Russian government refused to meet a Belarussian delegation that arrived in Moscow on Tuesday.Andrei Kabyakov, the Belarussian deputy prime minister, flew there for talks with his Russian counterpart but failed to start negotiations.
"The Russian side told us... they are not yet ready for talks," Vladimir Naidunov, Belarus's first deputy economy minister, told reporters in Moscow.
The same source also mentions that President Putin has warned Russian oil companies to consider cutting production.
Confidence in Russian deliveries of energy
Posted by Heading Out on November 8, 2006 - 11:41am
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: belarus, china, georgia, natural gas, poland, russia, shtokman, slovakia [list all tags]
It was just last week that Leanan pointed to the Bloomberg piece which was already noting a slight fall in both oil output and exports, from this country which is, currently, the world's largest crude oil producer.
Average daily oil output during the month was at 9.711 million barrels a day, or 41.07 million tons, down 0.4 percent from 9.751 million barrels a day in September, according to the Energy and Industry Ministry's CDU-TEK unit. Exports dropped 9.4 percent to 4.94 million barrels a day as the government raised export duties to a record. . . . . . Exports to countries outside the Commonwealth of Independent States fell 6.5 percent to 4.2 million barrels a day. Russia raised export duties to oil to a record $237.60 a ton ($32.41 a barrel) from Oct. 1, up 9.8 percent from the previous duty of $216.40 a ton.And yet, today the Russian Deputy Prime Minister said that they would not cut production, but would rather boost production at the same rate as at the beginning of the century. However, there are questions about what is going to happen with the planned export of LNG to Japan and Korea from the Sakhalin 2 development, given the problems that Shell is having with that project. At present most of the production is supposed to be heading to meet those two countries needs.



k Nation (Jim Kunstler)


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