LUKoil, Russia's largest oil producer, started drilling at a $270 million offshore field in the Baltic Sea
Published:
3 March 2004 y., Wednesday
LUKoil, Russia's largest oil producer, started drilling at a $270 million offshore field in the Baltic Sea, a project that has sparked protests from environmentalists and raised concerns in neighboring Lithuania.
Drilling began at a well at the Kravtsovskoye field, also known as D-6, which contains 66.7 million barrels of oil in recoverable reserves, LUKoil said in a statement. The field lies 22 kilometers off the coast of Kaliningrad.
LUKoil is seeking to diversify its production from western Siberia and pump oil in regions from the Baltic to the Middle East, from which it is easier to ship crude to world markets. The company pumps every fifth barrel of crude in Russia, which last month overtook Saudi Arabia as the world's top oil producer.
"The success of this project will strengthen Russia's position in the Baltic," LUKoil CEO Vagit Alekperov said. The company will use "state-of-the-art technologies" at the field.
Moscow-based environmental group Ecodefense in 2002 went to court in Kaliningrad to push LUKoil to provide data on the project's expected effects on the Baltic Sea. Lithuanian Prime Minister Algirdas Brazauskas has called on Russia to work with his government to ensure the Baltic Sea's environment is protected.
The company plans to start production at the field this summer and to bring output to 600,000 tons per year (12,000 barrels per day) by 2007, the company said.
Šaltinis:
Bloomberg
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The Moldovan Government has accomplished negotiations with three Azerbaijan companies - Azpetrol, Azertrans, and Azpetrol - and signed with them, on Wednesday, an agreement on realization of a major investment project in Jurjulesti
more »
Dutch insurer Eureko will purchase a stake of 10% in PZU from Bank Millennium for zł.1.6 billion
more »
The Warsaw Stock Exchange could be privatised at the end of 2005 at the earliest, with Euronext, OMX and the Vienna, London or Frankfurt exchanges among the potentially interested parties
more »
Lithuania shuts down unit one of its Chernobyl-style Ignalina nuclear power plant on New Year’s Eve, as it moves to honour a promise to the EU to close the facility in the coming years
more »
The Czech Republic's foreign debt rose 17 percent year on year to 946.1-billion koruna ($42.4-billion) in the third quarter, 137-billion koruna higher than in the same period last year
more »
Cumulative Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in Lithuania has been consequently growing
more »
Mobile phone text messagers raising millions for Asian tsunami victims
more »
This year Russia may start early debt payments to members of the Paris club of creditor countries assigning up to $10 billion from its stabilization fund for the purpose
more »
The Russian government has given the green light to a major energy project, the building of an oil pipeline to the Pacific
more »
Ryanair is in trouble again over subsidies received from continental airports, with Air Berlin suing Germany's Lübeck airport over payments of up to €10m (£7.1m) made to Ryanair since 2000
more »