http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/20795/story.htm

Western Siberia opens up as oil's promised land

RUSSIA: May 15, 2003

NEFTEYUGANSK, Russia - Western Siberia, a vast, inhospitable 
wilderness, is waking up to the hunger of foreign investors who can 
help it reap its potential riches as an oil producer.

Opening up lucrative oil production contracts to Russian and outside 
investment is expected to help drive Russia's developing economy for 
years to come.

Russia, the world's second biggest oil exporter after Saudi Arabia, 
currently produces 8.2 million barrels of oil per day (bpd).

Oil has been coaxed from beneath western Siberia since the 1960s.

Today the Khanty-Mansiysk Autonomous District, which covers an area 
about the size of France but has a population of just 1.5 million, 
boasts annual trade of $16 billion.

Since the collapse of Soviet communism, foreign companies have 
arrived in the region attracted by the huge oil reserves. As the 
market opens up, more are expected, bringing more investment.

Russia also has huge but untapped oil reserves in eastern Siberia and 
needs international investment to explore them.

Khanty-Mansiysk last year produced 210 million tonnes of crude oil - 
around six percent of total world output and about half of Russia's 
annual production.

Part of that total came from the Zapadno-Malobalyk field where oil is 
extracted jointly by Russia's second largest oil producer YUKOS in a 
unique joint venture with Hungary's biggest revenue earner, oil and 
gas group MOL.

The project is YUKOS's first with a "western" partner and a straight 
50:50 partnership.

YUKOS, Hungary's main oil supplier, will soon merge with rival 
Sibneft to form Russia's largest oil firm and the world's fourth 
biggest oil producer, YukosSibneft.

NEW-FOUND WEALTH

The YUKOS-MOL venture sets a precedent which local officials hope 
will lead to more international money coming into a region beginning 
to enjoy its new-found oil wealth.

In a landmark deal in February BP agreed to buy 50 percent of 
Russia's third largest oil firm Tyumen Oil, which produces 1.2 
million bpd, mainly in the Khanty-Mansiysk region.

Taxes from oil make up 80 percent of the district's annual budget, 
though two-thirds of this has to be paid to the federal state budget 
in Moscow.

The oil income has transformed the local community, bringing in the 
latest technology, boosting construction and creating wealth.

The average gross monthly wage in the oil industry, at about 20,000 
roubles ($650), is well above the national average, said 
Khanty-Mansiysk Governor Alexander Filipenko.

Some 200 km (124 miles) south of Nefteyugansk, YUKOS and MOL plan to 
produce almost three million tonnes of crude oil a year by 2005, 
requiring an investment of $300-350 million.

Daily production on the field has already hit 19,000 barrels and set 
to almost treble over the next three years.

For MOL, producing oil in Siberia will allow it to double its crude 
production at lower cost.

"Why is it good for us? The production cost at about $2 a barrel is 
relatively low, and we will be able to reach quite a high output with 
significantly fewer wells," said Laszlo Gerecs, managing director of 
MOL CIS, a wholly-owned offshore subsidiary which holds MOL's stake 
in the venture.

This production cost is about half that in Hungary and below the 
Siberian average, he added.

HARSH CLIMATE

Drilling for oil in Siberia's uncompromising climate is tough.

Just building some kind of access road to oil facilities requires 
massive logistics - chopping down pine and birch trees to clear a 
path and lay a foundation which is covered in sand to prevent the 
upper asphalt cover from sinking.

A 14 km (8.7 mile) stretch of road to YUKOS-MOL drilling and 
production sites needed about 200,000 truckloads of sand. All 
production facilities stand on huge concrete pillars.

"The building of the infrastructure and the weather pose the biggest 
difficulty and, without the experience of YUKOS, it would have been 
very hard to do this project," Gerecs said.

The proven reserves of the Zapadno-Malobalyk field, which covers 
around 200 sq km (77 square miles), are estimated at about 20 million 
tonnes or 145 million barrels of oil.

This is twice as much as MOL's domestic reserve base.

Hungary's annual oil consumption is 6.5 million to seven million tonnes.

By 2005, MOL plans to operate some 240 wells on the field, producing 
Ural blend quality oil, the type of crude used in its refineries.

MOL and YUKOS will treat the oil at an on-site processing station 
before transporting it via pipeline monopoly Transneft's network to 
be sold at the best possible market price.

Story by Krisztina Than

REUTERS NEWS SERVICE

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