According to the current reserve classification, it is considered unique.
The field was discovered following exploratory drilling on Vikulovskaya structure at the East-Prinovozemelsky-1 license area.
The wildcat was 1,621 m deep.
Rosneft arranged for exploratory drilling on 2 license areas in the Kara Sea in 2020.
The drilling was part of Rosneft’s comprehensive programme to develop the region’s oil and gas potential.
The project had been commenced by Vladimir Putin in 2014.
The 1st wildcat, Universitetskaya-1, had resulted in the discovery of one of the world’s largest oil and gas fields, the Pobeda field.
Its total recoverable reserves stand at some 130 million tonnes of oil and 422 billion m3 of gas.
The results of Rosneft’s drilling in the Kara Sea showed the high oil and gas potential of said structures, which proves the discovery of a new Kara offshore oil province.
In terms of resources, it could surpass such oil and gas-bearing provinces as the Gulf of Mexico, the Brazilian shelf, the Arctic shelf of Alaska and Canada, and the major provinces of the Middle East.
Specialists from the TomskNIPIneft corporate institute carried out a study of the physical and chemical properties and composition of crude oil obtained from the Universitetskaya-1 well.
This ultra-light crude exceeds Brent as well as Siberian Light and WTI in key indicators (gravity and sulphur content) and is comparable in performance with the Vietnam offshore White Tiger field crude.
At that, the Pobeda crude has less than 0.02% of sulphur content, while Brent has 0.2-1.0% and Urals has 1.2-1.3%.




