Business Day

Russia braces for fall in oil revenues amid fears peak has passed

- Anya Andrianova and Evgenia Pismennaya

The finance ministry of the world ’ s biggest energy exporter has started preparing for the possibilit­y of lower budget revenues in case global oil demand declines sooner than expected.

“The peak of consumptio­n may have already passed,” Russia’s deputy finance minister Vladimir Kolychev said. “The risk is rising in the longer term” that hydrocarbo­n revenues could come in below the current outlook, he said.

The comments are a rare admission from a senior Russian official that the best days may be over for the energy revenues that drive the economy. President Vladimir Putin said in October that growing demand from Asia will support Russian energy exports in the coming decades and the economy ministry forecast in March that oil consumptio­n will peak in about 2045.

The finance ministry is weighing scenarios for different levels of demand, said Kolychev, one of the architects of a mechanism that funnels proceeds from energy taxes into a rainy-day fund. Putin has promised for years to reduce Russia’s dependence on energy, but the sector still makes up a third of budget revenues.

A drop in mobility due to the coronaviru­s has coincided with increased efforts to combat climate change in 2020 to completely alter the outlook for fossil fuel demand. BP became the first major oil giant to admit in September that oil consumptio­n may never return to levels seen before the pandemic. Since then China and the US, the world’s two biggest economies, have stepped up commitment­s to transition to clean energy.

Russia, which generates less than 1% of power from renewables, has so far been slow to adapt to the transition and is still investing in new oil exploratio­n projects in the Arctic. Analysts at Moscow ’ s Skolkovo Energy Centre warned in May that economic growth may be limited to less than 0.8% a year for the next two decades if the country does not adapt.

“Russia’s economy is clearly not ready for a hydrocarbo­n shift,” said Natalia Orlova, chief economist at Alfa-Bank in Moscow. “The government and business don’t have a clear understand­ing of what direction Russia should go if it moves away from oil.”

 ?? Bloomberg ?? Slowing demand:
Workers walk towards refining towers at the Naftna Industrija Srbija deep oil processing and refining complex in Pancevo, Serbia in November.
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Bloomberg Slowing demand: Workers walk towards refining towers at the Naftna Industrija Srbija deep oil processing and refining complex in Pancevo, Serbia in November. /

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