
Russia looks East and West for energy fortune
Sergei Blagov
EurasiaNet, May 30, 2002
Flush from its acceptance as a junior partner into the NATO military
alliance, Russia is reviewing long-term energy strategy in order to compete with both
Western and Eastern oil suppliers. Yet the government will be hard-pressed to manage both
the international arena and the slow liberalization of the domestic energy sector at the
same time.
On May 28, the Russian government tentatively approved a strategy
through 2020 to "position itself" as a leader in the world’s energy markets,
information agency RIA Novosti quoted
Energy Minister Igor Yusufov as saying. The blueprint comes one day after Russia’s
provisional welcome into NATO. The energy sector is the country’s economic backbone,
providing roughly 20 percent of gross domestic product and nearly half of all federal
budget and hard currency revenues. Russia is eager to expand its economy in line with its
energy sector, and is approaching the idea of structural reform cautiously. Also on May
28, Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov advocated liberalization of the energy sector, but
insisted on preserving state regulatory control. Yusufov told RIA Novosti that the state
plans to keep subsidizing energy prices to military, educational and healthcare
institutions, which account for about 20 percent of the domestic gas market. Other
consumers will pay unregulated market prices, he said. While that adjustment may bring
Russian energy companies the capital they need for global ventures, it will test the
public’s willingness to enter a free market.
Persistent energy subsidies have impeded Russia’s efforts to win the
"market economy" status that would facilitate its international trade. On the
eve of the Russia-European Union summit in Moscow on May 29, Loyola de Palacio, the
European Commission’s vice president for energy and transport issues, said Russia and
the European Union complement each other in the energy sphere yet she called for further
liberalization of the Russian energy sector. Russia and 40 other countries signed the Energy Charter Treaty, accepting ground
rules for transit, investment and market liberalization, in 1994. However, the Duma has
yet to ratify the treaty. On May 28, Russia’s Economic Development and Trade Minister
German Gref said that Russia’s energy market could be fully private, at the earliest,
between 2012 and 2017.
Pressure on Russia to develop energy markets consistent with
international trade law may intensify now that the West has invested its military capital
with Russia’s. European Commission President Romano Prodi promised on May 29 that the
European Union would recognize Russia as a market economy, raising the prospect that
Russia could compete in European markets under international rules. In this context, the
liberalization of energy prices may lose urgency. The Duma has called for liberalization
plans by October 1. However, actual legislation will probably take much longer to
materialize.
In the meantime, Russian energy companies look set to target customers
to the east. Russia’s hydrocarbon exports are "well represented" in Europe,
Deputy Energy Minister Ivan Matlashov told RIA Novosti on May 28, while "a step
towards the East" has become necessary. Matlashov advocated granting government
support to pipeline and deep-water port projects in Russia’s Far Eastern and Southern
regions. Russia has invoked such projects since the mid-1990s, pursuing the growing East
Asian market. Russia and China are expected to finalize the construction of a
2,400-kilometer oil pipeline in 2003. The countries signed a deal in 2001 to build the
pipeline from South Siberia to northern China; Deputy Prime Minister Viktor Khristenko has
said the line will go into operation by 2005. Meanwhile, Russia’s natural gas giant Gazprom has announced plans to build a system of
Asian gas pipelines, including routes from the Tomsk region to northern China, from the
Irkutsk region through Mongolia to central China, and from Sakhalin to Japan. However,
these plans remain on the drawing board.
In the meantime, Russia faces intensifying competition in the Caspian
Sea. Iran and the three former Soviet republics that border the sea depend on Russian
pipelines for export of their natural resources. Turkmenistan, which is believed to hold
the fourth largest natural gas reserves, has been keen to reduce its reliance on Russia by
considering construction of new gas export pipelines to or through Iran and Afghanistan.
Turkmen President Saparmurat Niyazov was likely to broach the plan at a May 30 meeting
with Afghanistan’s interim leader Hamid Karzai and Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf.
Turkmenistan has invited Moscow-based gas trader Itera to take part in a proposed gas
pipeline, Itera announced on May 28. All three of these countries face real questions
about stability; nonetheless, the pitch of the discussions may concern Russian officials.
A May 26 editorial in RIA Novosti disparaged "terms like ‘our pipeline’ and
‘your pipeline’" in Caspian discussions.
Such calls for cooperation appear vital to Russia’s energy strategy.
At their May 24 summit in Moscow, United States President George W. Bush and Russian
President Vladimir Putin signed a joint declaration
on cooperating in the energy sector. Bush called on American businesses to take the
lead in developing energy resources of Russia and the Caspian. The declaration also
creates a working group that is expected to meet in Texas later this year and establish
procedures for increased sales of Russian oil to the United States. Through measures like
these, Russia is now well positioned to exploit continued instability in the Middle East,
luring western customers even as it ventures eastward. As long as its own citizens absorb
the end of subsidies, Russia may manage to make itself into a force for stability in world
hydrocarbon markets.
EurasiaNet, May 30, 2002
http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/business/articles/eav053002.shtml |