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  • A cushioned blow: Belarus's gas deal with Russia marks the end of an

    Economist, UK
    Jan 3 2007


    A cushioned blow
    Jan 3rd 2007
    >>From the Economist Intelligence Unit ViewsWire

    Belarus's gas deal with Russia marks the end of an era


    Belarus extracted slightly more favourable terms from Russia on gas
    pricing in 2007 than had been expected, indicating that Moscow would
    prefer to reduce the risk of toppling President Alyaksandr
    Lukashenka's regime. Nevertheless, Russia will acquire a 50% stake in
    an import gas export pipeline and will, by 2011, charge Belarus a
    "European" price for gas. Unless Russia's next president reverses
    course, the days of cheap Russian gas to the former Soviet Union are
    numbered; and Gazprom is getting nearer to controlling the export
    infrastructure in those countries.

    Late on December 31st officials from Gazprom, Russia's
    state-controlled gas monopoly, and Belarus agreed to a package deal
    on gas supplies for 2007. In the absence of a deal, Gazprom had
    threatened to cut supplies from January 1st and the Belarusian side
    had indicated it would disrupt Russian gas supplies via the
    (Russian-controlled) Yamal-Europe pipeline and the Beltransgaz
    network to Poland, Lithuania and northern Germany. Belarus was the
    only former Soviet state that Gazprom spared from a sharp price rise
    in 2006, with the tariff staying at US$47 per 1,000 cu metres.
    However, for 2007 the Russian company sought a radically higher
    price-of US$200 per 1,000 cu metres, or US$140 if Belarus was
    prepared to sell to Gazprom half of Beltransgaz.

    Five-year fix

    A few days before the December 31st agreement, it became clear that
    the deal would involve Beltransgaz, thus providing for gas prices
    that would for several years be well below those in Europe. Gazprom
    had offered a price of US$105 per 1,000 cu metres, US$30 of which
    would be in the form of Beltransgaz equity. In the event, the deal
    provides for a cash price in 2007 of US$100 per 1,000 cu metres,
    while Gazprom will pay US$2.5bn for 50% of Beltransgaz. The deal
    provides for a five-year transition to prices that will be in line
    with those paid by Gazprom's European customers. Over this period,
    transit fees paid by Gazprom to Belarus will double.

    Just as importantly, a compromise on the question of oil duties seems
    within reach. Russia had threatened to impose a duty of around
    US$180/tonne on crude oil exports to Belarus, thus wrecking a
    lucrative arrangement by which Belarusian refineries import Russian
    crude at below-market prices and then sell their processed output on
    to west European markets at world prices. In 2005, this generated
    export revenue for Belarus of nearly US$5bn. According to some press
    reports, Russia has now imposed this duty. According to Belarusian
    officials, however, an agreement on revenue-sharing from this
    business should be signed within a month-at which point, presumably,
    the duty will be lifted.

    A final act of friendship

    It seems that the Gazprom-under the direction of its majority
    shareholder, the Russian state-has made concessions to Belarus that
    might be sufficient to prevent Mr Lukashenka's regime from going
    under. According to a former governor of Belarus's central bank,
    Stanislav Bogdankevich, 60% of Belarusian industry is barely
    profitable or loss-making at present. If gas prices were to nearly
    treble to US$140, as Gazprom had proposed, the Belarusian economy
    would have risked going into meltdown. Mr Lukashenka's budgetary
    calculations-which include subsidies for household gas supplies-would
    also have been thrown into disarray. Both the economy and the budget
    are likely to suffer now that gas prices have doubled, but at this
    level Mr Lukashenka has more chance of keeping his country stable in
    2007. However, as another major price rise next year is on the cards,
    Mr Lukashenka has just a year to change his economic policies in
    order to stave off a potential disaster in 2008.

    Compared with the deals struck by Gazprom with other former Soviet
    states, the Belarusian one seems favourable. Georgia, which enjoys
    testy relations with Russia and has refused to sell its gas pipelines
    to Gazprom, has been moved straight up to a "European" price of
    US$235 per 1,000 cu metres from the start of 2007. So too has
    Azerbaijan. Compared with Ukraine, which has a pro-Western president
    but a prime minister who enjoys a measure of Russian support,
    Belarus's deal also looks good: Ukraine will pay US$130 per 1,000 cu
    metres this year and has no promises of a four-year grace period
    before it pays a price analogous to those in the EU. Pro-Russian
    Armenia's deal also looks less generous than Belarus's: its grace
    period stretches only to 2008. It's also worth noting that the
    concession to Belarus is quite costly for Gazprom, as it is one of
    only two major consumers of Russian gas in the former Soviet Union
    (the other is Ukraine). Belarus consumes almost as much Russian gas
    as Azerbaijan, Armenia, Georgia, Moldova, Lithuania, Latvia and
    Estonia put together.

    To be revisited?

    Two important aspects of the Gazprom-Belarus deal remain uncertain.
    First, there is no clarity on pricing in the years between 2007 and
    2011. A steady rise in prices would see tariffs of around US$140 per
    1,000 cu metres in 2008, US$175 in 2008, US$210 in 2010 and US$250 in
    2011. However, the Belarusian side will have an interest in putting
    off sharp rises for as long as possible-so unless the figures or
    precise formulae are written into the agreement, a great deal of hard
    bargaining lies ahead. This is particularly the case because it is
    not clear what the "European" price for gas will be in 2011. If oil
    prices are considerably lower in 2010 than today, the price paid by
    EU states for Russian gas in 2011 could easily be much lower than the
    US$240-260 per 1,000 cu metres level seen at present.

    Second, as with most agreements between CIS states in the energy
    sphere, it is worth questioning whether the gas deal is final. In
    2002, for example, Gazprom and its Ukrainian counterpart signed an
    agreement that set the terms for the gas trade to 2013, but this was
    ripped up by Gazprom in late 2005. From the Belarusian side, there is
    considerable unhappiness with the new arrangement: Prime Minister
    Sergei Sidorsky said it was signed in a "difficult atmosphere" and on
    "unfavourable terms". It is quite conceivable that in future
    Belarusian leaders will claim they signed under duress. And it is
    highly probable that the Belarusian government will attempt to secure
    more favourable terms from Russia's next president than it has from
    Vladimir Putin.

    The future becomes clearer

    Belarusian efforts to alter the thrust of Russia's gas-pricing policy
    are likely to be in vain. Gazprom's decision to hike prices for the
    former Soviet Union is driven by a looming gap between the gas it can
    produce or buy from Central Asia, and the gas demanded by its
    customers at home and abroad. Two-thirds of its exports go to the
    former Soviet Union, for a price that is less than 40% of that paid
    by EU customers. In this situation, Gazprom needs to raise prices to
    former Soviet customers to force consumption cuts and increase its
    revenue for investment.

    Alongside higher prices for the former Soviet Union, Gazprom is
    steadily gaining control of export infrastructure. Already the
    Russian company has a majority stake in the Yamal-Europe pipeline,
    which delivers two-thirds of Gazprom's exports to Europe via
    Belarusian territory; the remainder goes via Beltransgaz, and 50% of
    that company will soon be under Gazprom's control. In time, Gazprom
    will probably seek a controlling stake. In Armenia, all the gas
    pipelines-including an incomplete one linking to Iran-are now
    majority-controlled by Gazprom. The largest missing piece in
    Gazprom's CIS jigsaw is the Ukrainian pipeline system; it remains to
    be seen whether Ukraine will follow Belarus and agree to joint
    control in return for a phased transition to European prices, rather
    than a sudden one.

    http://www.economist.com/agenda/displaystory .cfm?story_id=8485325

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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