Why
ExxonMobil's Partnerships With Russia's Rosneft Challenge the
Narrative of U.S. Exports As Energy Weapon
17
March, 2014
In
a long-awaited moment in a hotly
contested zone currently occupied by the Russian military, Ukraine's
citizens living in the peninsula of Crimea voted
overwhelmingly to become part of Russia.
Responding
to the referendum, President Barack Obama and numerous U.S.
officials rejected
the results out of hand and
the Obama
Administration has confirmed he will authorize economic sanctions
against high-ranking Russian officials.
"As
I told President Putin yesterday, the referendum in Crimea was a
clear violation of Ukrainian constitutions and international law and
it will not be recognized by the international community," Obama
said in a press briefing.
"Today I am announcing a series of measures that will continue
to increase the cost on Russia and those responsible for what is
happening in Ukraine."
But
even before the vote and issuing of sanctions, numerous
key U.S. officials hyped the need
to expedite U.S. oil and gas exports to
fend off Europe's reliance on importing Russia's gas bounty. In
short, gas obtained via hydraulic
fracturing ("fracking") is increasingly
seen as a "geopolitical tool" for U.S. power-brokers,
as The New York Times explained.
Perhaps
responding to the repeated calls to use
gas as a "diplomatic tool," the
U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) recently announced it will sell
5 million barrels of oil from the seldom-tapped Strategic Petroleum
Reserve.
Both theWhite
House and DOE deny the decision had anything to do with the situation
in Ukraine.
Yet
even as some say we are witnessing the beginning of a "new
cold war,"
few have discussed the ties binding major U.S. oil and gas companies
with Russian state oil and gas companies.
The
ties that bind, as well as other
real logistical and economic issues complicate
the narrative of
exports as an "energy
weapon."
The
situation in Ukraine is a simple one at face value, at least from an
energy perspective.
"Control
of resources and dependence on other countries is a central theme
connecting the longstanding tension between Russia and Ukraine and
potential actions taken by the rest of the world as the crisis
escalates," ThinkProgress
explained in a recent article.
"Ukraine is overwhelmingly dependent on Russia for natural gas,
relying on its neighbor for 60 to 70 percent of its natural gas
needs."
At
the same time, Europe also largely depends on Ukraine as a key
thoroughfare for imports of Russian gas via pipelines.
"The
country is crossed by a network of Soviet-era pipelines that carry
Russian natural gas to many European Union member states and beyond;
more than a quarter of the EU's total gas needs
were met by Russian gas, and some 80% of it came via Ukrainian
pipelines," explained The
Guardian.
Given
the circumstances, weaning EU countries off Russian gas seems a
no-brainer at face value. Which is why it's important to use the
brain and look beneath the surface.
ExxonMobil and Rosneft
The
U.S. and Russian oil and gas industries can best be described as
"frenemies." Case in point: the tight-knit relationship
between U.S. multinational petrochemical giant ExxonMobil and Russian
state-owned multinational petrochemical giant Rosneft.
ExxonMobil
CEO Rex Tillerson sung praises about his company's relationship with
Rosneft during a June 2012 meeting with Vladimir Putin.
Rex Tillerson (L), Vladimir Putin, unknown and Igor Sechin, Rosneft President and Management Board Chairman (R). Photo Credit:Russian Presidential Press and Information Office
"I’m
pleased that you were here to be part of the signing today, and very
much appreciate the strong support and encouragement you have
provided to our partnership," said
Tillerson.
"[N]othing strengthens relationships between countries better
than business enterprise."
A
year later, in June 2013, Putin
awarded ExxonMobil an Order of Friendship.
But what does the friendship entail?
Putin and Tillerson. Photo Credit: Russian Presidential Press and Information Office
In
2012, ExxonMobil
and Rosneft signed an agreement "to
share technology and expertise" with one another. Some of the
details:
-Rosneft
acquiring
a 30 percent stake in 20 ExxonMobil-owned offshore oil and gas
blocks in
the Gulf of Mexico.
"The
20 blocks have a total area of approximately 111,600 acres (450
square kilometers) in water depths ranging between 2,100 and 6,800
feet (640 and 2,070 meters)," explained
a Rosneft press release.
Map Credit: Rosneft
-Rosneft
obtained a 30
percent stake in ExxonMobil’s share in
the La Escalera Ranch project in the Permian
Basin Shale in
West Texas. It also gained a 30
percent stake in
a portion of ExxonMobil's stake in Alberta’s Cardium
Shale formation.
In
2013, ExxonMobil and Rosneft announced
a partnership to conquer the Arctic for oil and gas,
creating the Arctic
Research and Design Center for Continental Shelf Development.
ExxonMobil
put down the first $200 million for the initial research and
development work, while Rosneft threw down $250 million later.
Officially, Rosneft owns 66.67 percent of the venture and ExxonMobil
owns 33.33 percent.
"[S]taff
will be located with the Rosneft and ExxonMobil joint venture teams
in Moscow to promote resource efficiency and interaction between
technical and management staffs," explained
a press release.
"The [Arctic Research Center] initially will be staffed with
experts from ExxonMobil and Rosneft."
Also
part of the 2013 deal, ExxonMobil
gave Rosneft a 25 percent stake inAlaska's
Point Thomson natural gas field.
Further, the
two companies signed a Memorandum of Understanding to
study the possibility of jointly building a LNG
(liquefied natural gas) facility in the Russia's far east.
Then
at the end of 2013, ExxonMobil
and Rosneft inked a deal to start a pilot project for tight oil
reserves development in Western Siberia's shale basins.
Rosneft owns a 51 percent stake, ExxonMobil a 49 percent stake.
Despite
the myriad ties to Russia, the DOE announced Exxon
was one of the Strategic Petroleum Reserve buyers of
500,000 barrels of
the five million barrels of oil the DOE offered up for sale.
Tillerson
recently said the ongoing events in Crimea and Ukraine at-large will
have no expected impact on his company's partnerships with Rosneft.
"There
has been no impact on any of our plans or activities at this point,
nor would I expect there to be any, barring governments taking steps
that are beyond our control," he
said at the company's recent annual meeting,
as reported by The Wall Street Journal. "We don't see any new
challenges out of the current situation."
"Not
a U.S. Company"
In Steve
Coll's
book "Private
Empire: ExxonMobil and American Power,"
he documents that Lee Raymond — former CEO of ExxonMobil from
1993-2005 — was asked if his company would build more U.S.
refineries to fend off gasoline shortages.
Raymond's
reply:
"I’m not a U.S. company and I don’t make decisions based on
what’s good for the U.S."
Lee Raymond with former U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX); Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons
So
what does this all mean when looked at in aggregate?
As
The Washington Monthly put it,
"The clout, reach, and mission of ExxonMobil mean that it runs
what amounts to its own foreign policy, raising the question of how
that policy relates to the foreign policy of the United States."
And
ExxonMobil is not alone in
this. ConocoPhillips, Chevron and Shell also
have their own unique deals with Russia. BP operated in Russia for
years untilselling
off its stake to Rosneft in 2012.
Climate Trump Card
Exciting
as the energy geopolitics stand-off is to follow from afar, the
climate disruption implications of it serve as the ultimate trump
card.
"Sadly,
few seem to care about diminishing the threat posed by climate
change, since it has become increasingly clear that LNG would make
things worse," wrote ClimateProgress Editor Joe
Romm in
a March
12 article.
"First,
natural gas is mostly methane, (CH4), a super-potent greenhouse gas,
which traps 86 times as much heat as CO2 over a 20-year period. So
even small leaks in the natural gas production and delivery system
can have a large climate impact."
It
appears the U.S. push to export LNG has trumped climate change
concerns, with export facilities in Freeport,
Texas; Elba
Island, Georgia;
and Lusby,
Maryland all
barreling ahead through the permitting process.
So
even if the U.S. (and/or ExxonMobil) comes out ahead in this
energy-centric geopolitical brouhaha, we still all end up losing in
the end.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.