Sunday, January 26, 2014

Russia to double oil, gas flows to Asia by 2035

MOSCOW: Russia plans to at least double its oil and gas flows to Asia over the next 20 years, a draft of its energy strategy showed on Friday, part of a pivot away from export routes to Europe.

Russia's energy sector is undergoing a dramatic transformation, with oil flows being redirected to Asia via the East Siberia-Pacific Ocean pipeline and the gas sector boosted by a partial end of Gazprom's export monopoly.

In a document published on its website, the Energy Ministry said one of Russia's goals was to diversify its exports, with the share of oil and oil products sent to Asia doubling to 23 per cent by 2035.

By then, Russia aims to ship a total 32 per cent of its oil to Asia, the Energy Ministry said, with gas rising to 31 per cent from 6 per cent. Europe is now Russia's main gas export market.

Russia sent around 16 per cent of its total oil exports to Asia last year and is exporting gas to Asia only from the Sakhalin-2 LNG plant, which has total annual capacity of 10 million tonnes.

"Energy markets in Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States (a collection of 11 former Soviet republics) will remain major export markets for Russian energy goods but export volumes after 2015 will decline to stay at 95 percent of 2010 levels by then (2035)," the document said.

A ministry spokeswoman said on Friday the document was a draft and a final version was expected to be published and approved later this year.

State owned energy company Rosneft, which became the world's top listed oil producer by output last year, is leading the shift eastwards, preparing to triple oil exports to China in coming years to over 1 million barrels per day (bpd).

Along with Novatek, both are eyeing fast-growing Asian markets to ship super-cooled gas close to the end of this decade, after the government limited state-owned Gazprom's control over gas exports to those sent via pipelines.

Russia is now pumping oil near capacity of around 10.5 million bpd and a rapid increase is unlikely until the production of tight oil starts.

The process will need at least five years, officials and analysts say. Officials have said that increased exports to Asia will not hurt European clients because of new fields will come onstream in coming years.

Russian oil exports declined by 2.5 per cent to 228.5 million tonnes in 2013, according to Energy Ministry data, falling further to 225 million tonnes (4.5 million bpd) this year due to refineries upgrades.

The document also showed that Russia plans to cut heavy oil export to 20 million tonnes in 2035 from 57 million tonnes in 2010 and increase shipments of  motor fuels to 58 million tonnes from 44 million tonnes.

indiatimes.com


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