Steve LeVine covers foreign affairs for BusinessWeek. He previously was correspondent for Central Asia and the Caucasus for The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times for 11 years. His first book, The Oil and the Glory, a history of the former Soviet Union through the lens of oil, was published in October 2007. Putin’s Labyrinth, his new book, profiles Russia through the lives and deaths of six Russians. It was released this week.

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A Blog on Russia, Central Asia and
the Caucasus

Thursday, December 27, 2007

Earth to Exxon: Your World is Not Enough

Exxon Mobil has received a fresh message from Russia: We are in charge. Get used to it.

No doubt the oil giant -- which is in battle on two fronts in the former Soviet Union, not to mention in Venezuela -- will ignore the warning and crash-land blithely into the dinosaur pit.

I mean that only slightly tongue in cheek. Around the world, Big Oil is having to cut deals with petroleum-rich states that want to control their own resources. I've recently come around a bit to Exxon's view that resource nationalism will moderate -- petro-states like Russia will need high technology to arrest their declining production and develop difficult new fields -- but only a bit.

The direction of global oil is clear, and it's toward the demise of the Big Oil companies as we know them. In general, the petro-states that control more than 80% of global oil reserves can get what they need from technology-rich oil services companies, and will largely do without the Exxons, Chevrons and BPs of the world.

Yet Exxon seems to think that the old rules hold, those of prior decades in which Big Oil called the shots.

Forbes reports on the latest news on the Russian front. It's a salvo from a Gazprom deputy chairman named Alexander Ananenkov. In a news conference yesterday, he called Exxon's control of the giant Sakhalin-I natural gas field an "infringement of Russia's national interests." He added that Exxon's wish to sell its Sakhalin-I gas to China had made Russians "poor relations who see their gas siphoned off."

The fact is that, according to Exxon's contract, it can sell the Sakhalin production wherever it wants, and China is willing to pay a higher price than Russia.

But that ignores political reality. Russia wants the Sakhalin gas for the domestic market. Why? So it can keep selling its own gas for enormous profits to Europe. And, in case it must curtail its exposure to Europe because of growing alarm there over Russian market dominance, Gazprom itself wants to be able to sell to China.

Exxon would be wise to find a middle ground now rather than wait -- as Shell, BP and Total did to their chagrin over the last two years -- for Russia to build into a lather.

Exxon is also the lead rebel in a several-month-long dispute with Kazakhstan over the supergiant Kashagan oilfield. The Kazakhs are in a fit over a minimum five-year delay in first production at the Caspian Sea field, plus a huge budget over-run. The Kazakhs want more money, and they want it faster than they are contractually guaranteed.

The word is that the other foreign partners developing Kashagan -- Total, Shell and Italy's Eni -- are amenable to Kazakhstan's terms. But Exxon is holding out for an extension in the length of the forty-year contract.

The reason for Exxon's stubbornness is mainly its instinctual bloody-mindedness. But it's also highly concerned about what a concession on Kashagan will mean for its other former Soviet holdings -- 25% of Tengiz, a supergiant sister field to Kashagan; and of course Sakhalin-I. I personally think that the other companies sympathize with Exxon and are hiding behind its willing to play bully. But that's besides the point. Exxon is the lightning rod.

And Exxon doesn't want to look like a pushover as it stands firm, its back right at the edge of the dinosaur pit.

Photo: Kim Scarborough
Rights: Creative Commons

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