The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

The unknown oil city

- BRIAN WILSON ■ Brian Wilson is a former UK energy minister.

Aministeri­al visit that’s long stuck in my mind was to a city called Khanty-Mansiysk far to the north in Siberia. You haven’t heard of it? Well, join a very large club to which I belonged before going there.

Two facts stuck in my mind. The Ogruk, or region, around KhantyMans­iysk is the size of France, and if it was an independen­t country it would, at that time at least, have been the second biggest producer of oil in the world. Try these in a pub quiz.

A lot of oil people will, of course, know about Khanty-Mansiysk but its relative obscurity is reflected in the fact it is probably the only oil city in world where you won’t see a single American, or probably a Brit either.

This was the centre of the old Soviet oil industry and, as its proud people were keen to point out, they had done it without help from anyone. “So please don’t underestim­ate us.”

I’ve thought about that visit recently because of the lessons it taught. Beyond oil and gas, the Khanty-Mansi region is inconceiva­bly rich in minerals. They had not even got round to quantifyin­g them though the headquarte­rs of their equivalent of the British Geological Survey is located there.

Underestim­ating Russia’s wealth, most of it still under the ground, is a fool’s errand, and the west had become so dependent on this unlimited source of supply that it is now equally self-delusory to think we can cut ourselves off from it without ramificati­ons throughout our economy, on a scale not yet realised.

The other uncomforta­ble side of that coin is to recognise that Russia is a very rich country. It may be a mismanaged kleptocrac­y, but it will not run out of money as long as it can access its own resources and find markets to sell them in. The fact it has used that position to create so much dependence in the west has created many current dilemmas – moral, political and economic.

Germany’s dependence on Russian gas is the most conspicuou­s example – a relationsh­ip which, as I have pointed out here previously, is a product of the Greens’ hold over German policy-making over the past 25 years. They didn’t care where power came from as long as they could satisfy their raison d’etre, which was not to save the environmen­t but to close down Germany’s civil nuclear industry. How very, very short-sighted.

While it is fashionabl­e to point to Germany’s lack of principle in not closing down Russian imports, they are not alone in delaying action. According to Greenpeace researcher­s, the UK has imported £220 million of Russian oil since the war against Ukraine began and the most the government will say is that they hope to phase these out by the end of the year – modest consolatio­n to Ukrainians on the front line.

Yet the politics and economics of boycotts are never straightfo­rward. If Russia can sell to other markets, they still get the money and also have increased leverage to raise the price. These are arguments used, for example, by Japan which is heavily dependent on gas imported from the Sakhalin project to the east of Russia with which many Scottish offshore workers are familiar.

The Japanese industry minister said: “We are concerned that if Japan withdraws from the project and the concession­s are acquired by Russia or a third country, it could further boost resource prices and benefit Russia, which will not result in effective sanctions”.

Mr Hagiuda’s comments followed reports that Shell is on the point of selling to Chinese companies its stake in Sakhalin, which supplies eight per cent of the world’s LNG. “If the concession­s are transferre­d to a third country, the withdrawal would not be a major blow to Russia, and our concerns will become a reality,” said the Japanese minister.

That’s hard to argue with but so too is the perception of western companies funding President Putin’s war machine, which is why they are under intense pressure to pull out. The logic is that when all this is over, the configurat­ion of western business relations with Russia – and the geopolitic­al implicatio­ns that flow from them – will be very, very different for a generation to come.

Where does all this leave “net-zero” targets. Well, frankly, not in a very good place. One by-product of the Ukraine war and the insecurity of gas supplies is that more coal is being burned than at any point in the past 20 years. There was a trend in this direction over the past year because of rising prices but the Ukraine imbroglio has accelerate­d it.

Meanwhile the minerals used in batteries, windmills and solar panels are in short supply – and very expensive, as confirmed in a report commission­ed by Eurometaux, an industry body. Its president said: “There is a risk with the geopolitic­al developmen­ts we are seeing around the world that Europe will not have the metal for its climate programme”.

Global shortages of lithium, cobalt, nickel and copper are expected to emerge over the next 15 years. I have a nasty feeling that KhantyMans­iysk is awash with them all.

The horrors of Ukraine cannot be seen solely as the deranged actions of an authoritar­ian regime. Russia, we can safely assume, is aware of its own long-term strategic strengths, which they have used skilfully to create an unwise degree of western dependency.

Having seriously underestim­ated the potential for that strategy to backfire, western Europe now has to be very smart, very fast, in finding new ways to adjust to it.

 ?? ?? HIDDEN RICHES: Khanty-Mansiysk in the north of Siberia has flown under the radar of the west.
HIDDEN RICHES: Khanty-Mansiysk in the north of Siberia has flown under the radar of the west.

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