Title: Direct and indirect management of petroleum resources
1Direct and indirect management of petroleum
resources
Valery Kryukov and Arild Moe Strategic
Forum Moscow, 23 september 2008
2Main issues
- What have been the main elements in state
policies in the petroleum sector in Russia and
Norway? - How has direct and indirect state management been
balanced?
3Forms of control
- Ownership direct (extreme case USSR)
- Regulatory framework indirect (extreme case
USA) - Norway Flexible combination
- Russia Unclear balance
4Privatisation and de-privatization of the Russian
oil industry
- Principal decision political
- But speed and the way privatization was carried
out determined by narrower goals - Initial goal restructurization and creation of
more efficient industry - Later dominant goal revenues to the state budget
- Deprivatization from 2003 onwards
- Alternative to a resources management system?
- But also other reasons...
5Composition of ownership in the Russian oil
industry 2004 - 2007
6Norways experience
- Starting point Foreign companies
- Establishement of a Norwegian oil industry
- Statoil - 100 state owned
- Hydro - 50 state owned
- Saga Petroleum - private
- Saga sold to Hydro Initial consolidation of
sector - Part privatization of Statoil Increased
efficiency, sharing of risk - Fusion of Statoil and Hydro Consolidation of
sector in light of mature continental shelf
international challenges - StatoilHydro 62.5 state owned
- Creation of Petoro (100) State direct
financial interest in petroleum licenses - Separate from state oil company
7State representation on the boards of directors
- Russia
- From professionals to high level officials
- 2008 A return to professionals?
- Weak stimulus to increased efficiency
- Norway
- State represented by independent people on board
of StatoilHydro - State may be represented in license committes
- Capacity issue
8Development of Russian reserves
- Post-USSR Huge reserve base
- Developed reserves transferred to users
(companies) - No incentive for companies to explore for new
discoveries - Only additional exploration in fields in
production and in their vicinity - Crisis in prepared reserves building up visible
2004-05 - Reasessment of policy
9How to increase exploration?
- Stimulation of private companies and investors
- Finders rights
- More flexible system for transfer of licenses
- Access to information
- Increased state activity
- Increased budgets
- New state exploration organization
- From tenders to auctions
- From annual plans to long-term program
-
10The Russian licensing system - changing
- From flexible annual plans to inflexible program
approach - Results unsatisfactory return to application
- From license (investment) competitions to
auctions - Results unsatisfactory - return to competitions
- From public process on regional and federal level
to closed administrative process on federal level - Offshore resources removed from competition
altogether - Licensing not used strategically, but as a way to
allocate assets.
11Norwegian licensing strategy a flexible
programme approach
- Stated goal
- increase the attractiveness of the Norwegian
continental shelf for established and new players
that can contribute to efficient exploration - Ministry proposes opening of areas for licensing
- Overall consideration of resource potential and
impact on society - Consultation between companies and authorities
- Nomination
- Oil companies suggest blocks for licensing
- Ministry announces blocks available for
application - Companies apply
- Balanced state/company interaction
12License conditions - Russia
- A certain production level within a certain time
after start-up - No room for adjustments according to changing
geological or technical conditions - No clear criteria for revoking of license
- License violation widespread
- Results Uncertainty, unpredictability
13Licensing terms - Norway
- License period
- Work commitments
- Plan for development and operation
- Cooperation agreement (within license group)
- Room for adjustments
14State control of trunk pipelines Stimulus or
hindrance for resource users?
- Main issues for determining profitability for new
entrants to oil production - Access to trunk pipelines in the production
areas, or - The possibility for a company to build and use
its own pipelines - Access to selected markets, especially exports,
but also to lucrative domestic markets in terms
of volumes and price - Outlets for associated gas
15Russian pipelines
- Trunk pipeline transportation monopolized
- Trunk gas pipelines Gazprom 100
- Trunk oil pipelines Transneft 90
- Oil product pipelines Transnefteprodukt 30
- State ownership of trunk pipelines presented as
important for the functioning of the economy - Pipeline companies have their own interests and
priorities - Separate government commission granting access to
oil pipelines abolished 2002 - General impression Regulatory powers transfered
to the operators - But new regulation of independents access to
Gazprom pipelines under consideration
16Norwegian pipelines
- Initially gas pipelines controlled by state oil
company (Statoil). Combined with de-facto gas
exports monopoly (GFU) - Smaller (foreign) companies complained about
access - Gas transportation transferred to new independent
operator Gassco - providing equal access.
Combined with dissolution of export monopoly. - Pipelines owned by partnership of oil companies
- Combination of indirect and direct measures
17Resource data - in whose interest?
- Access to information reduces the investment risk
and facilitates rational development of
resources. - Norwegian system Collection and sharing of data
to give resource users equal opportunities - Russian data management has a different main
purpose control over the fullfillment of license
conditions
18Taxation
- Very powerful instrument in resources management.
- Differentiated taxation can encourage resource
users to enter new areas - Various schemes can be used to reduce the
investment risk
19Taxation systems main characteristics
- Russia Fiscal orientation maximization of
state revenues - Simplicity easy to apply and administer
- Absence of considerations for the specifics of
hydrocarbon exploitation deteriorating
production conditions in existing fields - Adjustments based on selected criteria
- Norway Fiscal objectives, but also encourage
investment - Taxation depending on market developments oil
market, equipment market, service market - But also negotiations about marginal areas
- Negotiation power changes over time
20Preconditions for a more flexible taxation system
- An objective picture of costs
- Consideration of the special characteristics of
each field is impossible without a market
determining costs - a market for equipment, technology and services
- But development of this market is hurt by the
monopolization in the petroleum industry
21The basis technical regulations
- Russia had a detailed standard system (GOST)
- Development plans presupposes use of existing,
sometimes outdated technologies - Complicated to introduce new technology
- Supposedly possible to calculate costs
- 2002 Law introducing a system of technical
regulations covering only safety aspects - Leaving the rest to the market
- 2008 Proposed new Law on standardization
- A return to the Soviet GOST model?
- Norway Safety standards Elsewhere technologies
determined by resource user to achieve stated
goals
22Russia Extended state participation
- The state is governing through regulatory
agencies on one hand and - participating in commercial enterprises on the
other - But also quasi governance through state
controlled companies, by letting them take on
regulatory functions - Neglect of impact on other economic sectors
- Increasing monopolization
- No cost concern alliances with friendly
companies - Non-public character of decisions
23Norway Increased flexibility
- Access to resources
- Access to infrastructure
- Taxation
- Public character of development decisions
- Will increased dominance of one company
(StatoilHydro) on Norwegian shelf be
counterbalanced?
24Direct and indirect management
- Clear delineation of methods depends on clear
determination of goals - Russian policies pursuing several competing
goals, Norwegian goal hierachy simpler - No objective balance direct/indirect
- Depends on circumstances over time
- Different countries different models but
similar challenges similar solutions -
25Thank you for your attention!