World energy power Russia said on Wednesday that its 2012 oil output hit
a post-Soviet record high level while natural gas production declined
amid stalling European sales.
The mixed figures--highlighted by a dip in oil exports outside
ex-Soviet territories--point to lingering problems in a sector that
accounted for 49% of all budget revenues in 2011.
It also remains instrumental to President Vladimir Putin as he
assumes a third term in power having made social promises aimed at
calming the first wave of dissatisfaction with the Kremlin since Soviet
times.
The Russian energy ministry's reporting unit said oil and gas
condensate production grew by a healthy 1.3% last year to reach a new
record of 518.0 million metric tons (10.40 million barrels per day).
Russia had established its previous post-Soviet high in 2011 when output stood at 10.28 million barrels per day.
Its post-Soviet low came in 1994 when daily output slumped to
6.0 million barrels--less than half of the 12.4 million barrels Russia
and 14 other republics produced as part of the Soviet Union in 1988.
Investment helped production in the late 1990s. The government
focused on a still-evasive strategy to diversify the economy and shed
Russia's dependence on the global price of oil.
The current output rate outpaces that of Saudi Arabia and clinches for Russia the title of the world's biggest oil producer.
But Russia lacks the quick ability of Saudi Arabia to boost
output in case of a global economic rebound or more serious turmoil in
the Middle East.
It also appears to be unable to break through any further on
large foreign markets to which it has no direct pipeline and that in
some cases are starting to depend on U.S. shale oil.
Wednesday's figures showed exports outside the former Soviet nations declining by 0.3%.
The state-owned oil firm Rosneft (ROSN.RS) still dominated
with 22.8% of Russia's oil market--its share this year expected to reach
more than 40% following its October acquisition of the Anglo-Russian
venture TNK-BP.
Russia's natural gas production meanwhile shrank by 2.3% to
655.0 billion cubic meters (23.1 trillion cubic feet) as its European
sales shriveled up.
Production of the state natural gas giant OAO Gazprom
(GAZP.RS) was reported at 478.8 billion cubic meters--well off its 2011
figure of 513.1 billion cubic meters cited by the company itself.
The drop reflects the reality that almost all of Gazprom's
foreign sales are focused on European and post-Soviet countries now
experiencing some of the slowest growth rates in the world.
Gazprom
has also been slow to shift its focus to liquefied natural gas, or LNG,
production that could help it reach the growing markets of Asia and
Latin America.
The European Union--importing about 30% of its gas from
Russia--has made a priority of diversifying suppliers in a bid to ease
its political dependence on Moscow.
It last year ordered raids on Gazprom's
European affiliates as part of a price-fixing probe that has already
forced the Russian monopoly to renegotiate some of its long-term
contracts.
Gazprom
is particularly upset about new E.U. rules barring it from both
shipping gas and owning the pipelines along which it is distributed and
transmitted.
The new legislation is particularly painful because Gazprom
has made two massive pipelines--the new Nord and planned South
Steam--the linchpin of its multi-billion-dollar European strategy.
The trouble in Europe has already forced some serious revisions in the company's strategy.
Last year, Gazprom
abandoned immediate plans to develop a massive Barents Sea field called
Shtokman because of questionable future European demand.
The project is now being turned around to produce liquefied natural gas for broader sale.