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Moscow targets BP assets in eastern Siberia

Reading Time: 6 minutesRussian authorities threaten BP assets at Kovykta project

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By Vladimir Socor

Russian authorities threaten BP assets at Kovykta project

Russia’s Natural Environment Inspectorate (RosPrirodNadzor) has recommended that BP’s joint venture in Russia, TNK-BP, be stripped of the giant Kovykta natural gas project in eastern Siberia (Interfax, February 19).

Located in eastern Siberia’s Irkutsk oblast, the Kovykta field holds an estimated 2 trillion cubic meters of gas. RUSIA Petroleum is the license-holding company (technically the “mineral resource user” [nedropolzovatel]) in the Kovykta project. TNK-BP owns a 63 percent stake in it. TNK-BP is a parity joint venture of BP with the Russian TNK (formerly Tyumen Neftegaz company), which is currently controlled by four Russian billionaire tycoons.

The Kremlin seems to be moving rapidly to tighten the noose around TNK-BP’s asset, using the state’s regulatory apparatus to threaten with revocation of the license. In recent weeks, RosPrirodNadzor has stepped up its inspection of the project. It claims to have found “continuing violations” of license terms, with field development “persistently lagging” (Interfax, February 11).

Officially, the decision regarding the license is mainly up to Russia’s Mineral Resources Oversight Service (RosNedra). In practice, there is little doubt that the decision will be a political one, ultimately to be made at the top of the government and in the Kremlin.

The state oil company Rosneft has apparently developed ambitions to enter the natural gas business through a major project. Rosneft’s subsidiary, Rosneftegaz, is expected to bid for a controlling stake in Kovykta (Kommersant, February 12; Interfax, February 15).

On February 4, Gazprom CEO Aleksei Miller announced that the company does not need to include Kovykta’s gas resources in Gazprom’s export programs for China or other countries in the East Asia-Pacific region. On the following day, the natural resources ministry (to which RosPrirodNadzor is a subordinate agency) announced an “extraordinary” round of inspection of the Kovykta project. On February 12, Natural Resources Minister Yuri Trutnov warned that a decision to revoke the license might ensue within several weeks. In that case, the Kovykta field would be transferred into the legal category of “unallocated mineral reserves” (unlicensed fields) (Interfax, February 4, 5; Nezavisimaya Gazeta, February 12).

The dispute dates back to 2006-2007, although it lay dormant since. RUSIA Petroleum was planned to have supplied 9 billion cubic meters (bcm) per year from 2006 onward for the needs of Irkutsk oblast. However, that amount far exceeds the level of demand in Irkutsk oblast; and local distribution infrastructure would have to be created first. Project shareholders had seriously considered exporting the gas to China. However, the idea was thwarted by the lack, or denial of access to Gazprom’s export pipelines.

RosNedra threatened to revoke the license in 2007 on the pretext that field development was lagging behind schedule, and gas production below the levels stipulated in the license and the contract. Under pressure, TNK-BP agreed to sell its Kovykta stake to Gazprom for a sum in the range of $700 million to $900 million, with an option to retain or regain a minority stake, subject to further negotiations. At that stage, Gazprom was trying to pressure BP into ceding a stake in BP’s liquefied natural gas (LNG) project on Trinidad & Tobago. That project supplies the US market, which Gazpom was trying to enter.

The resolution was deferred in 2007-2008 by the Russian stakeholders’ conflict with BP. Thanks to the Russian authorities’ strong-arm measures, the TNK side evicted the joint venture’s CEO, Charles Dudley (an American citizen) from Russia in 2008, and forced changes on the joint venture’s board in favor of the Russian side. Gazprom employee Gerhard Schroeder (formerly the German chancellor) was foisted on TNK-BP’s board as an “independent” member. No sooner was the board coup accomplished than the financial crisis hit, further postponing a resolution of the Kovykta dispute.

At this stage, license revocation threatens not only BP, but also the Russian tycoon owners of TNK: an offer that TNK-BP cannot refuse. Apparently, Russian authorities are about to give all concerned an option to avoid license revocation and investment forfeiture, if they agree to sell the project to Rosneftegaz, or possibly another Russian company. Gazprom may well also be waiting in the wings, its disclaimer notwithstanding.

This time, however, Kovykta stakeholders might try to avail themselves of the Energy Charter Treaty’s provisions on the protection of foreign investment. In a potentially landmark case in December 2009, the Permanent Arbitration Court in The Hague ruled that Russia is bound by the Energy Charter Treaty’s provisions from the moment of Russia’s signature in 1994. Under the terms of that signature, the treaty took legal effect in Russia through provisional application, ahead of its ratification and irrespective of it. In August 2009, Russia served notice that it would not ratify the Treaty and that it was not bound by it. The court in the Hague, however, ruled the opposite, in a case brought to the court by the shareholders of the expropriated Yukos company. This means that foreign investments made in Russia after 1994 are covered by the treaty’s protection, apparently for the 20-year period stipulated at that time. This in turn opens the way for investors to seek international arbitration of their disputes with the Russian authorities in energy projects.Russian Authorities Threaten BP Assets at Kovykta Project

Russia’s Natural Environment Inspectorate (RosPrirodNadzor) has recommended that BP’s joint venture in Russia, TNK-BP, be stripped of the giant Kovykta natural gas project in eastern Siberia (Interfax, February 19).

Located in eastern Siberia’s Irkutsk oblast, the Kovykta field holds an estimated 2 trillion cubic meters of gas. RUSIA Petroleum is the license-holding company (technically the “mineral resource user” [nedropolzovatel]) in the Kovykta project. TNK-BP owns a 63 percent stake in it. TNK-BP is a parity joint venture of BP with the Russian TNK (formerly Tyumen Neftegaz company), which is currently controlled by four Russian billionaire tycoons.

The Kremlin seems to be moving rapidly to tighten the noose around TNK-BP’s asset, using the state’s regulatory apparatus to threaten with revocation of the license. In recent weeks, RosPrirodNadzor has stepped up its inspection of the project. It claims to have found “continuing violations” of license terms, with field development “persistently lagging” (Interfax, February 11).

Officially, the decision regarding the license is mainly up to Russia’s Mineral Resources Oversight Service (RosNedra). In practice, there is little doubt that the decision will be a political one, ultimately to be made at the top of the government and in the Kremlin.

The state oil company Rosneft has apparently developed ambitions to enter the natural gas business through a major project. Rosneft’s subsidiary, Rosneftegaz, is expected to bid for a controlling stake in Kovykta (Kommersant, February 12; Interfax, February 15).

On February 4, Gazprom CEO Aleksei Miller announced that the company does not need to include Kovykta’s gas resources in Gazprom’s export programs for China or other countries in the East Asia-Pacific region. On the following day, the natural resources ministry (to which RosPrirodNadzor is a subordinate agency) announced an “extraordinary” round of inspection of the Kovykta project. On February 12, Natural Resources Minister Yuri Trutnov warned that a decision to revoke the license might ensue within several weeks. In that case, the Kovykta field would be transferred into the legal category of “unallocated mineral reserves” (unlicensed fields) (Interfax, February 4, 5; Nezavisimaya Gazeta, February 12).

The dispute dates back to 2006-2007, although it lay dormant since. RUSIA Petroleum was planned to have supplied 9 billion cubic meters (bcm) per year from 2006 onward for the needs of Irkutsk oblast. However, that amount far exceeds the level of demand in Irkutsk oblast; and local distribution infrastructure would have to be created first. Project shareholders had seriously considered exporting the gas to China. However, the idea was thwarted by the lack, or denial of access to Gazprom’s export pipelines.

RosNedra threatened to revoke the license in 2007 on the pretext that field development was lagging behind schedule, and gas production below the levels stipulated in the license and the contract. Under pressure, TNK-BP agreed to sell its Kovykta stake to Gazprom for a sum in the range of $700 million to $900 million, with an option to retain or regain a minority stake, subject to further negotiations. At that stage, Gazprom was trying to pressure BP into ceding a stake in BP’s liquefied natural gas (LNG) project on Trinidad & Tobago. That project supplies the US market, which Gazpom was trying to enter.

The resolution was deferred in 2007-2008 by the Russian stakeholders’ conflict with BP. Thanks to the Russian authorities’ strong-arm measures, the TNK side evicted the joint venture’s CEO, Charles Dudley (an American citizen) from Russia in 2008, and forced changes on the joint venture’s board in favor of the Russian side. Gazprom employee Gerhard Schroeder (formerly the German chancellor) was foisted on TNK-BP’s board as an “independent” member. No sooner was the board coup accomplished than the financial crisis hit, further postponing a resolution of the Kovykta dispute.

At this stage, license revocation threatens not only BP, but also the Russian tycoon owners of TNK: an offer that TNK-BP cannot refuse. Apparently, Russian authorities are about to give all concerned an option to avoid license revocation and investment forfeiture, if they agree to sell the project to Rosneftegaz, or possibly another Russian company. Gazprom may well also be waiting in the wings, its disclaimer notwithstanding.

This time, however, Kovykta stakeholders might try to avail themselves of the Energy Charter Treaty’s provisions on the protection of foreign investment. In a potentially landmark case in December 2009, the Permanent Arbitration Court in The Hague ruled that Russia is bound by the Energy Charter Treaty’s provisions from the moment of Russia’s signature in 1994. Under the terms of that signature, the treaty took legal effect in Russia through provisional application, ahead of its ratification and irrespective of it. In August 2009, Russia served notice that it would not ratify the Treaty and that it was not bound by it. The court in the Hague, however, ruled the opposite, in a case brought to the court by the shareholders of the expropriated Yukos company. This means that foreign investments made in Russia after 1994 are covered by the treaty’s protection, apparently for the 20-year period stipulated at that time. This in turn opens the way for investors to seek international arbitration of their disputes with the Russian authorities in energy projects.

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Moldova will receive a disbursement of 36 million euros as part of the the Economic Recovery Plan

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This week, the European Commission approved the disbursement of 36 million euros in grant money for the Republic of Moldova. The announcement was made by Deputy Director-General for Neighbourhood Policy and Enlargement Negotiations at the European Commission, Katarina Mathernova, who paid an official visit to the Republic of Moldova between September 13-15, together with Managing Director for Russia, Eastern Partnership, Central Asia, Regional cooperation and OSCE, at the European External Action Service, Michael Siebert.

The EU officials had meetings with President Maia Sandu, Minister of Foreign Affairs and European Integration, Nicu Popescu, Speaker of Parliament, Igor Grosu, Prime Minister of the country, Natalia Gavrilita, as well as key representatives of Government, international financial institutions and the civil society, according to a press release issued by the Delegation of the European Union to the Republic of Moldova.

Beside such topics as the EU-Moldova relations and prospects, the priorities of the reform agenda of the new Moldovan Government, preparations for the Eastern Partnership Summit at the end of the year and the Transnistrian conflict settlement, the officials also discussed the EU assistance in support of reforms and the Economic Recovery Plan for Moldova, which was announced in June with a total EU support of 600 million euros over the next 3 years.

“The first measures under the Economic Recovery Plan will shortly materialize, with the expected disbursement of 36 million euros in grant money under budget support programmes to support the authorities’ efforts to fight against the consequences of the pandemic. Moldova can count on EU’s assistance on its path to reforms and to recovery, bringing tangible results to citizens,” Katarina Mathernova stated.

The plan is based on assistance provided by the European Union through various bilateral and regional instruments, aiming to mobilize the funds in the form of grants, loans, guarantees and macro-financial assistance.

“The Economic Recovery Plan for the Republic of Moldova involves much more, not just this financial support provided immediately. It must help digital transformation, strengthen infrastructure, energy efficiency, education and support small and medium-sized enterprises,” the EU official also said.

As Prime Minister Natalia Gavrilita informed, “The Economic Recovery Plan and the 5 flagship initiatives for Moldova in the Eastern Partnership will directly contribute to the reform and consolidation of institutions, stimulate long-term socio-economic development, bring direct benefits to citizens, and unleash new economic opportunities through promoting the green agenda and digitization. Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) have been hit hard by the crisis. Promoting and diversifying access to finance and reducing collateral requirements will be essential in supporting economic operators. We are grateful to the EU partners who will launch two programs to support 50 000 independent Moldovan SMEs to adapt to the new conditions.”

President of the Republic of Moldova, Maia Sandu, welcomed the decision of the European Union to disburse about 745 million lei in grant money, as the official page of the President’s Office announced. “EU support comes after a long period of freezing of European assistance, caused by former governments. We managed to relaunch the political dialogue with the European Union and resume financial assistance. The Republic of Moldova is gradually regaining the trust of its strategic partners. This European support is also a signal of encouragement for the new Government team in its commitment to clean up the institutions, fight corruption and launch development programs in the country,” said Maia Sandu.

See also: An Economic Recovery Plan for Moldova: 600 million euros for a sustainable recovery from the COVID-19 crisis

Photo: unknown

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Economy

Romania and Moldova signed a partnership memorandum pledging to cooperate in promoting their wines

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The Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Romania (CCIR) and the National Office for Vine and Wine (NOVW) of the Republic of Moldova signed, last week, a memorandum of cooperation on organizing joint promotional activities in the markets of common interest, as the CCIR announced.

China, Japan or the USA are just some of the markets targeted by the Romanian and Moldovan institutions. The memorandum also involves advertising activities for wines from common indigenous varieties, promoting the oeno-tourist region, developing a tourist route in the two states, exchange of experience, study visits, and mutual support in identifying new export opportunities. “We are very confident that this collaboration between our organizations will lead to sustainable economic growth and a higher degree of well-being among Moldovans and Romanians,” claimed Deputy Secretary-General of CCIR, Bogdan Visan.

On the other hand, Director of the NOVW, Cristina Frolov, declared that no open competition with Romania is aimed at the governmental level of the Republic of Moldova. “This request for collaboration is a consequence of the partnership principle. Romania imports 10-12% of the wine it consumes, and we want to take more from this import quota. Every year, the Romanian market grows by approximately 2.8%, as it happened in 2020, and we are interested in taking a maximum share of this percentage of imported wines without entering into direct competition with the Romanian producer,” the Moldovan official said. She also mentioned that Moldova aims at increasing the market share of wine production by at least 50% compared to 2020, and the number of producers present on the Romanian market – by at least 40%.

Source: ccir.ro

**

According to the data of the Romanian National Trade Register Office, the total value of Romania-Moldova trade was 1.7 billion euros at the end of last year and over 805 million euros at the end of May 2021. In July 2021, there were 6 522 companies from the Republic of Moldova in Romania, with a total capital value of 45.9 million euros.

The data of Moldova’s National Office of Vine and Wine showed that, in the first 7 months of 2021, the total quantity of bottled wine was about 27 million litres (registering an increase of 10% as compared to the same period last year), with a value of more than one billion lei, which is 32% more than the same period last year. Moldovan wines were awarded 956 medals at 32 international competitions in 2020.

Photo: ccir.ro

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Moldova’s hope to be a top walnut exporter and its main difficulties

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The Republic of Moldova has perfect weather conditions for growing walnut trees, that creating a great potential of walnut production and trade, especially on international markets, where the demand is way higher than the product’s supply. National and international experts believe that the country’s walnut production industry is on the verge of important transformations, which could lead to increased yields, quality and competitiveness worldwide.

According to authorities, Moldova exports 34-35 thousand tons of walnuts in shell, which is about 7% of the total export of fruit and 5% of the total export of horticultural products. The export value is assessed as being $120 million, that being 57-60% of the total fruit export value and about 50% of horticultural export value. Most of walnut crops are exported to the EU countries, such as France, Germany, the Netherlands, Romania and Austria. The country’s exports were among the world’s top 10 when it comes to the highest dollar value of the product during 2020.

Viorel Gherciu, Minister of Agriculture and Food Industry, pointed out that the production in the domestic walnut industry has increased by 55% in the last five years, which ranks Moldova among the main producers in the world.

“The biggest opportunity for this industry is that we are in the geographical proximity of the largest walnut import area in the world, which is the European Union, with almost 40% of total imports in the world. We are on the EU border, with privileged relations, with an Association Agreement. We already enjoy a good relationship in working with European importers, they trust our processors. A very close collaboration has been created and this is, in fact, the guarantee for those who invest in the area,” claimed the president of the Walnut Producers Association, Oleg Tirsina.

The data provided by the National Bureau of Statistics show that there are 34.7 thousand hectares of walnut plantations in the country. 20.90 hectares are represented by orchards. 75% of planted orchards are formed of old varieties trees. 30-35% of the exported production comes from orchards, the rest comes from individual farmers and plantations along the roads. This means that the quality of walnut production is not at its maximum potential. Developing commercial plantations through orchards modernization and extension of walnut varieties would provide double yield and better quality, experts say.

Governmental support in the form of subsidizing solutions, foreign investments and credit options are indispensable for the industry development. One of the financing options is the credit line of the European Investment Bank Project. Since 2016, 15 producers and processors of nuts, almonds and hazelnuts have benefited from these loans with the total amount of investments worth 8.7 million euros. A further extension of the project would provide another 60 million euros for the modernization of the horticultural sector in general and for harvesting organic walnuts in particular.

Photo: heymoldova.com

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