Jump to content

Yuganskneftegaz

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Yuganskneftegaz
Юганскнефтегаз
Company typePrivate, subsidiary of Rosneft
IndustryOil and gas industry
Founded1964 (1964)
Headquarters,
Russia
Key people
Hasan Kurisheivich Tatriev
ProductsPetroleum
ParentRosneft

Yuganskneftegaz (Russian: Юганскнефтегаз) is a wholly integrated subsidiary of Rosneft that owns and operates the second largest oil production complex in Russia.[1][2] It was formerly the most important production subsidiary of Yukos, but was expropriated by the Russian government and given to Rosneft, a state-owned company.

Background

[edit]

Yuganskneftegaz began operations in 1964, and saw significant upgrades in the 1990s that are responsible for bringing its production to their current levels. Yuganskneftegaz was formerly owned by Yukos, which was broken up and its principal assets sold off to satisfy tax debts allegedly totaling $28 billion. On 19 December 2004, Yuganskneftegaz was sold at a state-run auction, ostensibly to satisfy tax debts. The winning, and sole, bidder, was a little-known Russian oil company called Baikal Finance Group, who paid $9.7 billion. It was later revealed that the previously unheard-of Baikal Finance Group is a group of Kremlin insiders headed by Igor Sechin, Deputy Head of the Presidential Administration and a close associate of President Vladimir Putin. On 22 December 2004, Baikalfinansgrup was purchased by Rosneft, a wholly state-owned Russian oil company. Sechin has been Chairman of Rosneft's Board of Directors since July 2004. The de facto nationalization of Yuganskneftegaz was denounced by Andrei Illarionov,[3] then a senior Putin economic advisor, as "the scam of the year."[4]

Complex

[edit]

Yuganskneftegaz is located in the Khanty–Mansi Autonomous Okrug of Western Siberia. With 11.63 billion barrels (1.849 billion cubic metres) of proven oil reserves, Yuganskneftegaz was the largest Yukos production complex. Yuganskneftegaz produces about 1 million barrels (160,000 m3) of crude oil a day, about 60% of Yukos total, and about 1.6% of the world total. Its main oil fields are Priobskoye, Prirazlomnoye, Mamontovskoye, Malo-Balykskoye, and Salymskoye. According to the annual audit by DeGolyer and MacNaughton, as of 31 December 2006, Yuganskneftegaz' two largest fields, Priobskoye and Prirazlomnoye, contained 33% and 10.7% of Rosneft’s total proved reserves, respectively.[citation needed]

In 2005, Yuganskneftegaz built and began operating the Booster Pipeline Pumping Station (BPPS) at the Ust-Balykskoye field, six preliminary water removal units (PWRU) and two group pumping stations. In addition, it installed two electric substations and two overhead electric transmission lines stretching a total of 24 kilometres (15 mi). In 2006, Yuganskneftegaz began operating eight group pumping stations, an oil pumping station at the Prirazlomnoye field, another preliminary water removal unit, an external oil pipeline and six additional power generating stations. At the Priobskoye field, another oil production plant was set up and is now operating.[5]

Selected fields

[edit]
Field Geological Basin Annual Production 2004 Reserves Discovery Operator(s)
Priobskoye field W. Siberia 437,481 1982
Prirazlomnoye field NA NA
Mamontovskoye field NA NA
Malo-Balykskoye field NA
Salymskoye field NA NA

Notes:

1. USGS 2002 (Bbbl = "billion barrels of oil"). 2. LOF = large oil fields (>100 million barrels of oil equivalent): GOF = giant oil fields (>500 million barrels of oil equivalent).

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Robson, Doug (2023-11-03). "RN-Yuganskneftegaz Carried out a Record Number of Hydraulic Fracturing Operations in a Month". ROGTEC. Retrieved 2024-08-05.
  2. ^ "Russia's Complex Oil Reality | Council on Foreign Relations". www.cfr.org. Retrieved 2024-08-05.
  3. ^ "Putin's Advisor Calls Yuganskneftegaz Sale "Fraud of the Year" - MONEY - MOSNEWS.COM". www.mosnews.com. Archived from the original on 29 December 2004. Retrieved 3 February 2022.
  4. ^ S. Goldman (2006) p.5
  5. ^ "Asset Report Yuganskneftegaz". Wood Mackenzie. 2024-02-29.

References

[edit]
[edit]