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BP sells Siberia stake to Gazprom BP sells Siberia stake to Gazprom
(about 1 hour later)
Oil firm BP has sold its stake in a Siberian gas field development to Russian state-controlled firm Gazprom. British oil firm BP has sold its stake in a Siberian gas field development to Russian state-controlled firm Gazprom.
BP's Russian joint venture TNK-BP has agreed to sell Gazprom its 62.89% stake in Rusia Petroleum, the firm with the licence for the Kovykta gas field. BP's Russian joint venture TNK-BP has agreed to sell Gazprom its majority interests in the giant Kovykta field for between $700m-$900m (£350m-£450m).
TNK-BP will also sell its half-share in East Siberian Gas Company, the company constructing the regional gasification project, BP said in a statement. Analysts said this is a fraction of what TNK-BP's stake is worth, and that it is the latest example of the Kremlin forcing out Western energy firms.
Gazprom is expected to pay $700m-$900m (£350m-£450m) for the TNK-BP stakes. Kovykta is said to have enough gas to supply all of Asia for five years.
'Historic agreement''Historic agreement'
BP said it and TNK-BP were also looking to invest in projects with Gazprom "in major long-term energy projects or swap assets around the world". The sale comes after Russian authorities had put increasing pressure on TNK-BP, saying the firm was not producing enough gas from the Kovykta field.
Russian officials claimed that under the terms of its licence, Kovykta should have been producing nine billion cubic metres of gas per year by 2006, rather than the less than 2.5 billion cubic metres actually being processed.
TNK-BP said that it could not produce any more because the local region did not require additional supplies and it had been denied an export licence.
Similar pressure was put on Anglo-Dutch energy group Shell last year, before it sold Gazprom its majority stake in the Sakhalin-2 oil and gas project off Russia's Pacific coast.
Shell sold its interests in Sakhalin-2 after Russian authorities continually refused to grant it the necessary environmental certificates.
Future co-operation
BP said it and TNK-BP were now looking to invest in projects with Gazprom "in major long-term energy projects or swap assets around the world".
The firms will set up a joint team to identify strategic opportunities for investment both overseas and inside Russia.The firms will set up a joint team to identify strategic opportunities for investment both overseas and inside Russia.
"We will initially be looking for projects of at least $3bn, but the potential for further growth could be very significant," said BP chief executive Tony Hayward."We will initially be looking for projects of at least $3bn, but the potential for further growth could be very significant," said BP chief executive Tony Hayward.
"This historic agreement lays the ground for powerful co-operation between BP, TNK-BP and Gazprom.""This historic agreement lays the ground for powerful co-operation between BP, TNK-BP and Gazprom."
Output issues Gazprom is buying TNK-BP's 62.89% stake in Russia Petroleum, the firm with the licence for the Kovykta gas field.
Critics have accused Moscow of strong-arming firms such as Shell and BP to secure Russian influence over key oil and gas projects. TNK-BP is also selling Gazprom its half-share in East Siberian Gas Company, the company constructing the wider regional gasification project, BP said in a statement.
Shell's sold its stake in the Sakhalin-2 project to Gazprom after pressure from Russian regulators.
Shell and its partners granted Gazprom control of the Sakhalin-2 project after authorities refused to grant them the necessary environmental certificates.
And pressure had been put on TNK-BP, with Russian authorities claiming it was not producing enough gas from the Kovykta field.
They claimed that under the terms of the licence, Kovykta should have been producing nine billion cubic metres of gas per year by 2006, rather than the less than 2.5 billion cubic metres actually being processed.
TNK-BP said that it cannot produce any more because the local region does not require additional supplies and it has been denied an export licence.