It comes as the UK has moved to block Russian shipping and phase out Russian energy imports in response to the invasion of Ukraine.
ExxonMobil said in emailed comments:
- No ExxonMobil equity crude that is transported via the Caspian pipeline en route to the US or Europe is from Russia
- The Caspian pipeline delivers oil and gas from Kazakhstan and is not subject to sanctions at this time
However, Kazakhstan is not a party to the conflict in Ukraine and major oil & gas companies that have stakes in Kazakh production have continued to ship the crude across southern Russia through the CPC pipeline, which is the Central Asian country's main route to global markets, accounting for nearly 80% of Kazakh oil exports.
Total CPC shipment volumes were over 1.5 million b/d in February, with about 90% coming from Kazakhstan, but the remainder from Russian fields in the north Caspian operated by Lukoil.
Several international oil companies including ExxonMobil hold stakes in the pipeline with Russian partners such as Lukoil and state-owned Rosneft, alongside their investments in Kazakh fields such as Tengiz and Kashagan.
However, on March 8 the US Treasury Department issued guidance confirming Kazakh crude is not subject to sanctions despite its reliance on the route, highlighting systems that «segregate» Russian from Kazakh crude.
The guidance said:
- Distribution systems such as those within the CPC can segregate various sources of crude oil, allowing crude oil that is not of Russian origin to be marketed and loaded separately
- The importation prohibition of Executive Order of March 8, 2022 applies to the import of certain products of Russian... origin to the US and excludes imports that are not of Russian... origin, even if such items transit through or depart from Russia
Tengizchevroil said in an emailed comment:
- The Chevron-led Tengizchevroil consortium that operates Tengiz is monitoring developments, meanwhile production continues uninterrupted and its exports through the CPC pipeline continue as normal
Meanwhile Kazakh energy minister Bolat Akchulakov was quoted as saying March 10 he anticipated production continuing with no need for reductions relating to the Black Sea route.
He said other routes existed and were viewed as «options», including across the Caspian Sea and pipelines through Russia and to China.
However, «for the time being there are no sanctions, so we see no need to redirect any volumes anywhere. We will continue with the agreed regular regime via CPC», Akchulakov was quoted by state news agency Kazinform as saying.
The Moscow-based CPC pipeline operator said its leadership had held a series of meetings with Kazakh officials including Akchulakov and Kazakh bank Khalyk.
Pipeline director general Nikolai Gorban told the minister the consortium was «progressively implementing measures to monitor and minimize all risks that might affect the operations and safe transportation of oil through the pipeline system», with all sub-divisions and facilities «operating normally,» CPC said.
The Tengiz partners are nearing completion of a $45 billion expansion project at Tengiz expected to lift crude output to some 850,000 b/d.