USD 93.4409

-0.65

EUR 99.5797

-0.95

Brent 87.38

+0.14

Natural gas 1.76

-0

1055

Rosneft goes at it alone in Far East LNG plant

Rosneft could build its own liquefied natural gas plant in the Far East.

Rosneft goes at it alone in Far East LNG plant


Russian oil major Rosneft could build its own LNG plant in the Far East, apart from its planned facility in partnership with ExxonMobil, said on June 29, 2017, Rosneft´s Vice President Vlada Rusakova.

The executive added on Thursday that the most economic model for monetizing Russian natural gas remained doing so within the Exxon joint venture plan.

The suggestion from the upper echelons of the state-run company comes just as it confirms the sale of a 20 % stake of subsidiary Verkhnechyonskneftegaz to Beijing Gas.

Vladimir Putin is currently strengthening relations with China, as it continues a geopolitical struggle against the US stemming from allegations against Moscow of meddling in the 2016 presidential elections.

Rosneft CEO Igor Sechin has said he plans to make his company the third largest producer of natural gas in the world.

Country-wise, Qatar and Australia occupy the top 2 spots on the world’s largest LNG exporter list.

The U.S. is vying to take 3rd place by next year if all goes according to the EIA’s plan.

Russia’s other major state gas player, Gazprom, is in talks with major operators to supply additional volumes of natural gas to the UK, the firm’s deputy chief executive Alexander Medvedev told Bloomberg in an interview.

The UK aims to shut coal-fired plants by 2025, while its biggest supplier of energy to residents, Centrica, has just decided to close the country’s largest gas storage facility.

«We see an appetite from major players in the U.K. for additional volume of contracted gas,» Medvedev told Bloomberg, but did not go into details on the talks.

Commenting on Gazprom’s pitch to sell more natural gas to the UK, Nick Campbell, an energy risk manager at Inspired Energy Plc in Preston, England, told Bloomberg:

«Russian pipeline gas would offer greater flexibility than LNG delivery with gas field production being able to flex to meet demand quicker than sending a tanker from the U.S. East Coast and/or Qatar



Author: Zainab Calcuttawala


Follow us on Facebook
Advertising at neftegaz.ru

Subscribe to our newsletter

of the best materials Neftegaz.RU

* Incorrect E-Mail Address

By clicking the "Subscribe" button I accept the "Agreement on the processing of personal data"


Advertising at neftegaz.ru