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    China Business
     Oct 16, 2009
Sechin's energy enigma
By John Helmer

MOSCOW - The announcement on Tuesday of Russia's agreement in principle to supply up to 70 billion cubic meters per annum of natural gas by pipeline to China is a bit like pornography - it provides a low-cost alternative to the real thing, not to mention the chance to fantasize immediately about a future pleasure that isn't likely to materialize or to be affordable if it does.

Deputy Prime Minister Igor Sechin, in Beijing this week with Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, needs to show in the present that his command of Russia's energy concessions is capable of delivering, at some time in the future, cash into the counting-house.

This week's announcement in Beijing is also a pointer to the state of Sechin's rivalry over the future of Gazprom, the Russian gas monopoly, with the former chairman of the Gazprom board, now President Dmitry Medvedev, and those close to him. If Sechin had

  

returned to Moscow without the appearance of a deal for Gazprom to sell gas to China, Medvedev and his allies were bound to have taken advantage.

But appearances can be deceiving, especially on the morning after, so it's worth asking - what deal has Sechin struck with the Chinese? Or to put the matter the right way round - if the Chinese haven’t agreed on a price for the gas, is there a real deal to sell it?
Consider, for example, how long it took for the Russians and Chinese to consummate their deal to build a pipeline delivering crude oil between Angarsk and Daqing. The initial proposals came off the drawing-boards and into negotiations by Transneft, the state pipeline company, and Mikhail Khodorkovsky's Yukos Oil Company in the late 1990s. Between 2001 and 2003, talks between Yukos and the Chinese culminated in a memorandum of understanding between Yukos and the China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) in May 2003.

The final deal, including oil volumes, pipeline financing and the crude oil pricing formula, was not finalized by Sechin until February this year. That makes six years to a decade of talking without finishing.

On October 13, this is what Gazprom announced officially.
Alexey Miller, Chairman of the Gazprom Management Committee and Jiang Jiemin, President of China National Petroleum Corporation, have signed today in Beijing a Framework Agreement on major terms and conditions for natural gas supply from Russia to China on the basis of the previously signed agreements. The parties reiterated that a high pace of the Eastern Gas Program execution by Gazprom created favorable conditions for further cooperation deepening in the gas sector and for subsequent signing of a long-term contract for gas supply from Russia to China.
In Gazprom lingo, the Eastern Gas Program means the buildup of new gas deposits and new gas pipelines throughout Russia's far-eastern region, including the offshore island of Sakhalin, and an offshore zone around the Kamchatka Peninsula.

Without the additional deposits, the company has made clear that it lacks the volumes required to justify the infrastructure cost and to fill the pipelines that must be constructed. And without big-enough production volumes, Gazprom accepts, albeit silently, that it will be struggling to offer natural gas to China at a cost-plus-profit formula that can compete with alternative Chinese sources, such as the natural gas pipeline being built across Central Asia, with 30 billion cubic meters (bcm) capacity; or shipments of liquefied natural gas (LNG) from the new West Australian Gorgon project.

The latest Gazprom release refers to the signing by the same parties of "the Agreement of Strategic Cooperation on October 14, 2004, in Beijing within the official visit of the Russian Federation President Vladimir Putin to China. The Agreement covers a wide spectrum of joint businesses including scrupulous discussion of the issues related to the organization of Russian natural gas deliveries to China by Gazprom. The possible ways of implementing joint gas processing and gas chemical projects in eastern Russia and in third parties are being studied."

In press statements, Miller said the deal contemplates gas shipments to China of up to 68 bcm of gas per year, and more in two pipelines that have yet to be built. Sechin said Gazprom and CNPC might set a price in the course of further talks and sign a contract in early 2010. In that event, supplies would likely start in 2014 or 2015, he said. Note the conditional verb.

For this week, all that has been agreed, apparently, is volume and timing. Still, both fall into the wishful category because the wellhead production capacity doesn't yet exist.

Industry analysts in Moscow report that pricing is still the sticking point with CNPC, and that it has been since at least 2006. While Gazprom doesn't speak on the record, it is generally understood that the Russian proposal is parity with the price Gazprom sells to Europe. That in turn remains tied, for the time being at least, to the crude oil marker. The Chinese counter proposal is for a significantly lower price, based on the currently low spot prices for gas in the depressed demand circumstances of the European market; the projected delivery prices for natural gas from Turkmenistan and LNG from Gorgon; and the huge volume CNPC is offering to take.

Miller indicated that the framework agreement of this week allows for a final contract that "will include a price formula and principles of setting the price which will be based on Gazprom's experience in gas exports and principles of international trade". If that sounds one-sided and wishful, it is - 70 bcm for China represents roughly half of Gazprom's current export volume to Europe, so the proposed magnitude committed to China represents a colossal shift in strategic orientation for Gazprom.

Putin, in a briefing on October 14, claimed that late on the night before, the two sides had reached an agreement on a concrete pricing formula for the delivery of Russian gas to China. He didn't say what the formula was, however, and thus it remains uncertain whether Gazprom has shifted ground towards giving the CNPC a discount on the European price formula. Some market observers are optimistic that there is a breakthrough.

It is also hugely speculative to project China's capacity to absorb gas. At present, gas supplies amount to just 5% of China's energy balance. As a report by Alfa Bank research head, Ronald Smith, suggests, "Putting a value on Chinese sales is fraught with difficulty. The reserves, while enormous, are undeveloped and located in remote parts of East Siberia. When produced, they will be sold into a country that currently uses little gas (undermining our certainty of its ability to absorb the volumes) at an undetermined price and demanding uncertain amounts of capital."
Smith says he believes Putin's latest claim, "while not resolving the question of the actual level of pricing, indicates that the major stumbling block of the negotiations [the actual pricing formula] has been surmounted, and the likelihood of the deal being cemented, and gas flows beginning in 2015, looks to have just increased materially. That being said, there is some room for misunderstanding here, and we would like confirmation that the actual formula - and not just the price link to oil products - has been agreed to."

And what valuation should China putt on the Russian proposal?

The Alfa Bank report suggests "a back-of-the-envelope valuation based on reserve and production multiples". Skipping the small print, and basing the calculation on the value of the gas reserves required, the volume on offer is worth at the moment $5.9 billion, or about 4% of Gazprom's current market capitalization in the share market. A second calculation, based on the market value of current production by Gazprom, suggests the proposed contract is worth $6.2 billion, or roughly the same 4% of market cap.

These numbers, Alfa concedes, look on the cheap - make that the Chinese - side. According to Smith, "The Chinese will likely prove reluctant to agree to full European pricing in the near future. Therefore, we see the summer 2010 deadline [for the final deal] as anything but certain, and we will have to restrain our optimism, and final analysis, until those pricing details are finally hammered out and committed to paper."

Artem Konchin of Unicredit Securities, the brokerage arm of the European banking group, sees commercial value, ahead of politics, in promoting the deal now, because of the current reluctance of European customers to accept as much Gazprom gas as they had contracted for last year; or to pay the contract penalties for not taking the minimum volumes that were committed.

"We see Gazprom's move to the east as a strong potential hedge against European efforts to move away from the take-or-pay principle. Although we do not see 70 bcm of annual supplies as achievable by 2015, the figure implies a hedge of over 40% of expected 2015 sales to Europe, which would be a strong argument for Gazprom when negotiating future European sales contracts."

So, Tuesday's news from Beijing looks "somewhat encouraging for the company's sales outlook [in Europe]".

John Helmer has been a Moscow-based correspondent since 1989, specializing in the coverage of Russian business.

(Copyright 2009 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing.)


Gazprom seeks far-eastern riches
(Sep 24, '09)

Kremlin rewrites book on resources
(Jul 9, '09)

West and Russia spar, China wins
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