Arab Times

Rosneft takes on Gazprom in internatio­nal gas markets

Firm wins Ghana deal

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LONDON, June 2, (RTRS): Russian energy major Rosneft is increasing­ly challengin­g domestic rival Gazprom in internatio­nal gas markets, from West Africa to Turkey and even Europe, according to five industry sources with knowledge of the matter.

Last week, Rosneft won a multibilli­on dollar contract in Ghana that had been targeted by Gazprom, the sources said. It also signed a gas fields and pipeline deal in Iraqi Kurdistan aimed at supplying gas to Turkey and Europe - Gazprom’s core markets.

Oil-focused Rosneft’s internatio­nal expansion in gas will put the two Russian state-owned giants in direct competitio­n, particular­ly in the lucrative European market, which is worth over $150 billion a year.

Rosneft has also hired a handful of ex-Gazprom employees in recent months who advised on the Ghana deal and has poached one of Gazprom’s senior European risk officers, according to the sources and informatio­n on LinkedIn.

Rosneft and Gazprom declined to comment. Dominance While Rosneft could potentiall­y take some gas market share from Gazprom, it is unlikely to be able to make a major dent in its rival’s dominance. Gazprom, which has monopoly rights on gas pipeline exports from Russia, is the world’s biggest gas producer and the main supplier to Europe, where it shares has steadily grown to reach nearly 40 percent last year.

The Rosneft drive, aimed at boosting earnings as the world moves towards cleaner fuels such as gas, points to an attempt by Rosneft CEO Igor Sechin, a powerful ally of President Vladimir Putin, to further expand his influence.

Sechin has repeatedly lobbied the Kremlin to curb Gazprom’s export rights, including in a letter to Putin in 2016.

“Rosneft has been long trying to persuade the Kremlin to dismantle Gazprom’s monopoly. Having failed to do it from within Russia, they are now trying to do this externally,” said one of the sources, who works with Rosneft on gas projects.

Rosneft announced the Ghana deal last Friday, a contract worth almost $10 billion at today’s prices to ship 1.7 million tonnes of LNG to the country over 12 years.

However three sources said the project was initially supposed to go to Gazprom, which signed a preliminar­y deal with the Ghanaian government last September. The agreement fell apart because Gazprom was slow to finalise it due to a restructur­ing of its export division abroad, added the sources, who declined to be named due to the sensitivit­y of the matter.

“Due to a corporate restructur­ing, Gazprom’s supply obligation­s under the agreement have been assumed by Rosneft,” said Ghana’s National Petroleum Corporatio­n, which signed the deal.

The Kurdistan project had also been offered to Gazprom - although much earlier, at the end of last decade - but it was never finalised, allowing Rosneft to expand its dominance in the semiautono­mous region beyond oil, according to two sources close to the contract.

The deal, to develop gas reserves in the semi-autonomous region and build an export pipeline, was also announced last Friday but neither Rosneft nor the Kurdish Regional Goverment (KRG) have disclosed potential export volumes or destinatio­ns.

The two sources said Rosneft would build a pipeline which would have a capacity of up to 30 billion cubic metres (bcm) a year when it begins operation early in the next decade.

The pipeline could supply up to 10 bcm of gas to Turkey and up to 10 bcm to Europe, putting Gazprom’s Russian gas in competitio­n with Iraqi resources, said the sources.

A spokesman for the KRG’s national resources ministry said the government did not comment on the corporate activities of internatio­nal energy companies in the region.

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