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Russia's Energy Sector Hides Weaknesses Behind Powerful Facade

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  • Russia's Energy Sector Hides Weaknesses Behind Powerful Facade

    RUSSIA'S ENERGY SECTOR HIDES WEAKNESSES BEHIND POWERFUL FACADE
    Stephen Blank

    EurasiaNet, NY
    May 16 2006

    A EurasiaNet Commentary

    In late April, representatives of Russia's Kremlin-controlled gas
    conglomerate, Gazprom, threatened to reduce exports to Europe after
    the EU blocked the company's attempts to obtain several European
    energy entities. EU officials dismissed the threat, believing that
    the Russian energy industry could not survive without generating a
    hefty European cash flow. They were right. Behind its mighty facade,
    Russia's energy sector, which the Kremlin has used in recent months to
    bully its neighbors and expand its geopolitical reach, suffers from
    a decaying infrastructure and a dependence on Western technology and
    cheap Central Asian energy.

    Russian exporters are able to ship large quantities of energy to Europe
    and Asia today only because of its unique relationship to Central
    Asian oil and gas producers. And the future of this relationship is
    crucial to understanding the global energy game.

    The Kremlin has significantly enhanced its control over Central Asian
    energy in recent years, book-ended by a 25-year natural gas supply
    deal with Turkmenistan in 2003 and a massive oil supply agreement
    with Kazakhstan last month. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
    archive]. To many outside observers, the Russian energy sector
    has assumed an aura of a juggernaut. Statistics seem to support
    this impression: Russia has been responsible for fully half of the
    increase in global crude oil supplies over the past five years. The
    image has also been fueled by the Kremlin's use of conglomerates as
    instruments of geopolitical policy. [For background see the Eurasia
    Insight archive].

    Appearances can be deceptive, however, at least when it comes to
    Russia's energy sector. There are numerous signs that Russia is in
    danger of overextending itself, while dawdling on investing in its
    energy infrastructure. The overextension problem is most noticeable in
    Moscow's dealings with Asia. Russia has made an array of commitments to
    China and Japan to meet those countries' voracious energy appetite. For
    example, President Vladimir Putin in March indicated that Russia
    by 2011 would be in position to deliver upwards of 80 billion cubic
    meters of gas annually to China via two pipelines. Meeting that goal
    will be difficult, however, as the pipeline linking China and western
    Siberia has yet to be built. In general, questions continue to hover
    over virtually all of Russia's oil & gas-related deals with China
    and Japan. And even if the energy flows eastward as anticipated,
    Asian officials are already expressing doubts about whether the
    amounts pledged by Russia are sufficient to meet projected needs.

    Beyond the question of Russia trying to export more than it can
    pump, the country will have to contend in the coming years with
    growing domestic demand, along with the need to repair existing
    infrastructure and tap into new energy fields. Both of these latter
    tasks are enormously expensive, given the difficulties of working in
    Siberia's uninviting terrain and weather conditions. Experts say that
    the significant increase in Russia's energy production in recent years
    would not have been possible without the use of Western technology
    and techniques, including hydrofracturing, a process in which steam
    is forced into a well to ease the pumping of oil.

    Likewise, Western equipment and know-how will be needed to develop
    new energy sources in the Arctic, as well as off the country's
    Pacific coast.

    Despite the need for outside investment, Russian policies seem
    calculated to prop up closed domestic monopolies, and thus repel
    foreign capital and technology. In addition, foreign investors
    continue to face enormous risks when doing business in Russia:
    although foreigners can buy minority stakes in Russian energy firms,
    the concept of shareholder rights remains poorly developed, leaving
    outsiders vulnerable to the whims of a non-transparent and notoriously
    corrupt system.

    For now, Central Asian energy is helping Russia mask both current
    energy problems and future dilemmas. Until recently every export
    pipeline for oil and gas produced in Central Asia was routed through
    Russia, enabling the Kremlin to import energy at exceedingly low
    cost. Putin sought to maximize Moscow's leverage by creating a gas
    cartel led by Russia. Kremlin control over Central Asian energy reached
    the point that in late 2005, Russia felt secure in imposing dramatic
    price increases on its CIS neighbors, including Ukraine, Georgia
    and Armenia. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. A
    subsequent pricing dispute with Ukraine prompted Russia to temporarily
    halt the energy flow in early 2006. [For background see the Eurasia
    Insight archive].

    Central Asian governments are not content with existing arrangements,
    however, and are turning to China in order to break Russia's
    pipeline monopoly. A 1,000-kilometer-pipeline linking Kazakhstan
    to China, opened last December, became Central Asia's first export
    route not to cross Russian territory. Now the authoritarian-minded
    leaders of Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan, along with Kazakhstan, are
    exploring the feasibility of building more pipelines that parallel the
    Kazakhstani-Chinese route. The possible construction of a trans-Caspian
    pipeline, which would enable Central Asian energy to hook up with
    Azerbaijani-Turkish routes, could further weaken Russia's grip on
    regional exports.

    Much of Russia's neo-imperial designs in Central Asia are connected
    with the fact that the Kremlin's global economic strategy is dependent
    on Moscow's continued access to cheap Central Asian energy.

    Central Asian energy is far cheaper to extract than Russia's, thus the
    Kremlin uses it for Russian domestic consumption, which is heavily
    subsidized, while shipping Siberian production abroad. The ensuing
    price manipulation is the source of enormous revenues that helps
    sustain the government and overall Russian economy.

    It is easy to see how the loss of control over Central Asian energy
    exports and production would severely damage Russia's political and
    economic interests. If Central Asian states start pumping oil to China
    and Azerbaijan, Russia would likely have to use its own production
    to meet domestic needs. This, in turn, would dash Moscow's export
    plans for Europe and Asia. At the very least, the availability of
    other export options would force Moscow to pay considerably higher
    prices for Central Asian oil and gas - a development that could have
    ruinous consequences for the Russian economy. Two analysts, Vladimir
    Paramonov and Aleksey Strogov wrote in 2004; "should energy prices in
    the domestic market reach the world level, it will spell the end for
    virtually all Russian enterprises. Even if world fuel prices remain
    high, fuel production will become uneconomic in Russia."

    Asian and European governments are becoming increasingly aware of
    Central Asia's importance in the global energy security calculus.

    Meanwhile, Washington is exerting pressure on Kazakhstan to make a firm
    commitment to a trans-Caspian pipeline. Should Central Asia achieve
    energy independence with outside help, Russia would quickly come under
    pressure to reform its domestic economy, especially the energy sector,
    so that it could better compete in a free trade environment. It follows
    that economic liberalization would undermine, if not reverse Putin's
    attempts to re-centralize political power in Russia.

    Of course, there is one factor that makes the Central Asian energy
    game extremely unpredictable - the brittle nature of the regimes in
    Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. Both countries are ruled by despots -
    Saparmurat Niyazov in Turkmenistan and Islam Karimov in Uzbekistan
    - reliant on the widespread use of repression to maintain their
    authority. Many political observers believe Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan
    remain vulnerable to social explosions. In addition, the lack of a
    political succession mechanism in both states could spark upheaval
    in the event of Niyazov's and Karimov's deaths. Disorder in either
    country -- especially in Uzbekistan, Central Asia's most populous
    state - could engulf the entire region. If such a scenario occurs,
    Central Asia's export ability could be impaired and the major energy
    players - the United States, EU, Russia and China - would all stand
    to be big losers.

    Editor's Note: Stephen Blank is a professor at the US Army War
    College. The views expressed this article do not in any way represent
    the views of the US Army, Defense Department or the US Government.
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