Posted by: Steve LeVine on July 27
The stewards of Big Oil have to be watching the latest brawl in Russia with a sense of dread. For their brother, BP, is fighting not merely to save its assets in Russia; it’s fighting for its life.
BP itself is rapidly becoming vulnerable as an acquisition target. And for the handful of companies of Big Oil, that’s a picture of their own possible future.
For months now, we’ve been treated to a spectacle of three or four Russian oligarchs making BP miserable. These fellows — the billionaire oligarchs and BP — are 50-50 partners in a highly lucrative oil concern that they call TNK-BP. The company accounts for a full quarter of BP’s entire global production, and a fifth of its reserves.
The oligarchs want something from the Brits, and the result has been the usual Russian treatment: visits from countless inspectors, summonses to the prosecutor’s office, visa trouble.
Yet the TNK-BP dustup no longer has the ring of expropriation as usual.
In the latest development, the concern's BP-appointed CEO, Robert Dudley, fled Russia in secret and is now hiding out in some undisclosed place, prepared, according to BP, to continue running TNK-BP from a distance. I asked a BP adviser why Dudley is behaving so mysteriously. Couldn't he have set up shop like a normal CEO in London? Perhaps this is part of the antagonists' PR war? "I do not know anything about the location except that he is operating as CEO for both [the Russians and BP], and London might not be the most appropriate location," he emailed me in response.
After some three decades of petro-nationalism in the Middle East and elsewhere, Big Oil is accustomed to the puffed-out chest, the boot, and picking up the pieces. It has found a modus vivendi in most cases.
Recall previous bouts of trouble in Russia: In December 2006, Shell responded to a similar onslaught at Sakhalin II -- at the time the world's largest combined oil and natural gas project -- by going to the Kremlin and crying uncle. The response was some advice -- sell half your shares at below-market rates to Gazprom. The result is that Shell, now with 27% of Sakhalin II instead of 55%, is still in business in Russia. And just six months later, BP was forced to sell out entirely from Kovytka, a supergiant natural gas field. BP sold its expulsion publicly as a fair deal, considering that in exchange it was embarking on a worldwide partnership with Gazprom. This partnership was crucial, because BP and the rest of Big Oil is finding it almost impossible to acquire new reserves to replenish what they pump each year; combinations with national energy companies like Gazprom are one way of maintaining one's bulk.
But not so fast. That BP-Gazprom partnership has yet to materialize. Indeed, BP's hopes for this partnership seem not just wishful, but hubristic. Because part of its calculus appeared to be ceding control of TNK-BP to Gazprom, which ostensibly would buy out the oligarchs while leaving BP with a sizeable remaining chunk.
TNK-BP was never a stable grouping, and seems always to have been bound for divorce court. But BP's talks with Gazprom appear to have accelerated the estrangement. The oligarchs seem to have believed that BP planned to sell them out in exchange for a global lifeline from Gazprom.
And, as Yulia Latynina, the respected Russian commentator puts it, the oligarchs responded "in the most brutal manner. They effectively said ..., 'We're the big guys around here.' [What followed] was a shoot-out. The other side shot better."
Here is where the gunfight appears to diverge from Big Oil's prior confrontations in Russia. Previously, the Kremlin has halted the hostilities once a targeted Big Oil company surrenders. But not in this case: BP has made clear that it's prepared to surrender control to one of the state-owned Russian companies, yet that's not been enough.
One is led to the conclusion that control in fact isn't good enough. It looks like Russia may want all of TNK-BP. And it also may not mind Big Oil understanding that, even if the state stands aside in a turf battle, the BPs of the world aren't tough enough to hold their own in Russia's brutal business environment. It may be a warning to all foreigners doing business there.
Richard Gordon, an experienced observer of Russian oil, sees it slightly differently. He told me last week that the Russians want BP to reduce its share considerably -- to 25% or less. At that point, Gordon said, it's up to BP to decide whether it has faith that TNK-BP would be run well enough, and, "if they don't have faith in the company, why remain a partner?"
In The Guardian today, Oppenheimer's Fadel Gheit, one of Wall Street's most seasoned oil analysts, advised BP to get out. "It's a bit like Manchester United losing Ronaldo," Gheit said. "It would take time to recover -- a blow but not fatal."
What happens next? Wall Street would pummel BP's share price were it to lose or leave TNK-BP, which would make the company a highly attractive target for acquisition. In that case, Gheit thinks that ExxonMobil is the only Big Oil company with deep enough pockets to buy BP.
But both Gordon and Gheit think that BP might act first and seek out its own merger partner because, as Gordon put it, it's better to "do a deal than be done to." Gheit told The Guardian that a logical BP partner would be Shell, "with [BP CEO] Tony Hayward running both companies."
Yet why are the Big Oil companies the only perceived merger partners? As Big Oil seeks access to China and the Middle East, wouldn't their national companies and sovereign wealth funds seek equal treatment?
Harvard Business School will no doubt chronicle the brawl as a case for how the game of energy is changing. But Big Oil is observing more closely, because this is its own future.
Photo: lawkeven
Rights: Creative Commons
To judge a country and it's stock market by its oil business is not reasonable. BP was a state owned company four years ago and now they are trying to own the world. Russia is just not going to roll over for big oil like the US does. Big oil got sweet heart deals in Russia and now that Russia wants fair treatment we cry wolf. You think the US would support a country taking on Oligarchs, but in the US we worship them. So what Russia is fighting with foreign oil oligarchs and super large corporations just like in the US? If you judge every society on its oil business most of the world would be consider communistic by that standard. Of the 30 countries that control nearly all of the world's oil, just three rank as free - the United Kingdom, the United States and Canada. When Russia wants control like many of our allies we judge them harshly. Most oil in the US is on public lands, what hypocrisy. The Wall Street Journal especially and the western media in general is just a mouth piece for the sadistically greedy English oil companies. At least BusinessWeek offers a more balanced account than most. There is more to Russia than just oil!
Putin was on the record recently that when the BP-TNK liason was being negotiated he advised against the 50-50 split, that it would lead to trouble in the future. But they didn't listen.
If this isn't a cautionary tale of the World economy relying too much on a commodity that comes from too few (and invariably politically unstable or unsavory regimes), I don't know what is.
Now that oil's price is starting to reflect it's underlying finite resource limitations and ecological costs, perhaps we can shift our energy to more stable, less damaging sources. It won't be easy and it won't be cheap, but it's our own fault.
All of the natural resources in Russia will end up entirely in Russian (Putin) hands. The sooner the multinationals realize the inevitable, the better off they'll be. They can withhold (or demand huge prices) their technological prowess in extracting these resources as that is ultimately the only "stick" they have. Without western technology, Russia will again become the disaster it once was.
"Without western technology, Russia will again become the disaster it once was."
You do know that the USSR was the world's largest oil producer, without Western technology?
Guess not.
And you do know that Western-managed oil fields, like the North Sea, are in rapid decline despite Western technology?
Guess not.
RKKA-
You are aware that Russian oil production itself was in steep decline until the "Russian Miracle" came along in the late '90s and early 2000s, right? This "Miracle" was essentially basic WESTERN frac technology applied to aging fields. Pretty basic stuff.
And if Russia's technology prowess is so great, why does it HAVE to partner with StatoilHydro and Total to develop the Shtokman field in the Arctic. And why does it rely on Western firms to develop Sakhalin?
Good luck on your own Russia, you're going to need it.
"Good luck on your own Russia...."
They always have been. A few years back they thought concessions would get them some allies. Now they know different.
When we start using electric cars and bioplastics, let's see how well Russia likes it's oil monopoly. Better to get rid of the stuff now while it brings a high price.
Steve LeVine covers foreign affairs for BusinessWeek. He previously was correspondent for Central Asia and the Caucasus for The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times for 11 years. His first book, The Oil and the Glory , a history of the former Soviet Union through the lens of oil, was published in October 2007. Putin’s Labyrinth, his latest book, profiles Russia through the lives and deaths of six Russians.