<DIV>Financial Times (UK)<BR>April 30, 2004<BR>Russia 'has far more oil than originally estimated'<BR>By Arkady Ostrovsky in Moscow and Carola Hoyos in London<BR><BR>In the spate of bad news that hit the shareholders in Yukos, Russia's <BR>embattled oil company, one important announcement by the group last month <BR>went almost unnoticed.<BR><BR>Following an external audit by DeGoyler & McNaughton, the US auditors, <BR>Yukos reported a significant increase in its proved reserves. Under the <BR>strict standards set by the Securities and Exchange Commission in the US, <BR>Yukos's hydrocarbon reserves increased from 11.2bn barrels of oil <BR>equivalent (boe) at the end of 2002 to 13bn boe at the end of 2003.<BR><BR>At the same time TNK-BP said its current reserves of 6.1bn boe could rise <BR>to 9bn boe in the short term and could go up to 30bn boe in the longer term.<BR><BR>Altogether, analysts' research suggests, Russia's oil reserves could prove <BR>to be three times higher than
previously thought, making it one of the <BR>world's most attractive sources for reserves replacement.<BR><BR>According to the BP Statistical Review, Russia has 60bn barrels of proven <BR>oil reserves and natural gas reserves equivalent to 280bn barrels of oil. <BR>However, auditors and analysts say there is strong upward pressure on these <BR>figures.<BR><BR>Research by Brunswick UBS, the Moscow arm of the Swiss bank, shows that <BR>Russia's proved oil reserves alone could increase from 60bn barrels to <BR>180bn barrels as companies revise their reserves. On current estimates, <BR>this would put Russia into second place in the world in terms of oil <BR>reserves after Saudi Arabia, which is estimated to have 300bn barrels of <BR>oil and oil equivalent.<BR><BR>So far Saudi Arabia has agreed to let international companies explore only <BR>for natural gas. The state oil company, Saudi Aramco, is unlikely to stand <BR>still in the coming years and western companies yearn for a crack at
its <BR>oil, which means it is likely that the kingdom's reserves will also grow.<BR><BR>However, Russia and the Caspian are becoming important counterweights to <BR>the Middle East. European and US leaders are wooing the Kremlin for <BR>strategic supply deals to lessen their dependence on oil from the Middle <BR>East. Companies, including ExxonMobil and ChevronTexaco of the US and Total <BR>of France are lining up to strike deals with their Russian counterparts.<BR><BR>"I believe that by the end of the decade Russia will be proven to have 50 <BR>per cent more hydrocarbon reserves than what Saudi Arabia has today," said <BR>Paul Collison, global emerging markets oil and gas strategist at Brunswick UBS.<BR><BR>Lord Browne, chief executive of BP, agreed that reserves would increase. <BR>"It does seem likely that there will be more reserves. I'm not sure if <BR>anyone really knows what the ultimate recovery will be of new technology <BR>put to use in old fields."<BR><BR>Analysts say
strict rules applied by the US Securities and Exchange <BR>Commission mean Russian companies book fewer barrels than they have <BR>potential for. Martin Wierwiorowski, a general director for Russia and the <BR>former Soviet Union at DeGoyler & McNaughton, said: "We find that both <BR>under SEC and SPE [Society of Petroleum Engineers] rules Russian companies <BR>are able to book a relatively low percentage of their reserves when <BR>compared to their western counterparts."<BR><BR>However, Mr Collison argued that not only were Russian companies starting <BR>to manage their reserves better, they were also doing more drilling and <BR>exploratory work which would allow them legitimately to book higher <BR>reserves with the SEC.<BR><BR>"The trend in Russia is opposite to the one in the western world where a <BR>number of companies have revised their reserves downwards," he said.<BR><BR>Mr Wierwiorowski said Russian companies at the end of 2002 had on average <BR>booked about 18 per
cent of oil in place under the strict SEC rules and 24 <BR>per cent under SPE rules. This is significantly less than the amount <BR>companies generally book in western oilfields. However, anecdotal evidence <BR>from Russian companies says many of them are aiming to recover between 30 <BR>to 40 per cent of oil in place in the short term.<BR><BR>The Russian companies also have to cope with SEC rules preventing them from <BR>booking reserves which are beyond the area that can be captured by a <BR>producing oil well. Given the huge size of Russian oilfields, this means <BR>that companies are restricted from booking oil between wells that are <BR>widely spaced.<BR><BR>SEC rules also do not allow Russian companies to book reserves which are <BR>expected to be produced beyond the expiry date of their current licences. <BR>Most Russian companies incorporated in the middle of 1990s were given <BR>25-year licences, which will expire in the next 14 to 16 years.<BR><BR>When the Russian
government renews these licences, Russian companies will <BR>be able to book more barrels. But Adam Landes, an oil and gas analyst at <BR>Renaissance Capital, a Moscow-based brokerage, says that even now, by <BR>changing the wording of Russian laws to satisfy the SEC that these licences <BR>will be renewed, it will allow Russian companies immediately to book up to <BR>70 per cent more reserves than they do currently.<BR><BR>However, Russian companies will ultimately need better technology and oil <BR>well management and more drilling and exploratory work to utilise their <BR>potential.<BR></DIV><p>
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