LUKoil terminal worries Ventspils, not Mazeikiu

Published: 13 July 2002 y., Saturday
LUKoil officials said they plan to cut all Baltic exports by 2004, when the $235 million refined oil products terminal in Vysotsk is expected to begin operations, thus allowing it to export all its oil products directly from Russian territory. The news could spell trouble for the Latvian oil shipping firm Ventspils Nafta. LUKoil is one of the largest exporters of crude oil through the Ventspils Nafta's port in Ventspils. The Russian oil giant is not, however, a major exporter of other oil products via Latvia.But Ventspils Nafta officials brushed off the news. Last year the Russian oil company comprised 11 percent of all crude reloaded by Ventspils Nafta. Haim Kogan, director of LUKoil's Baltic arm, said earlier this year that the company plans to export 1.2 million to 1.5 million tons of oil and up to 600,000 tons of oil products via Latvia.
Šaltinis: The Baltic Times
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

World Bank voices doubts

Of the 10 new members that joined the European Union in May 2004, the majority of the eight former communist bloc countries plan tight budgets for 2005 more »

Russia 'must spy' on big business

Mikhail Fradkov, Russia’s Prime Minister, has stunned the business community by saying his country's secret service must spy on large corporations to guarantee economic growth more »

Moldova reports increase in industrial production

Moldovan industrial production advanced 6.4 percent in 2004 to USD1.415bn, the Statistics and Sociology Department of the republic announced more »

The Lowest Inflation Rate

Lithuania has the lowest inflation rate among the Baltic States more »

Bulgaria FIBank Launches Eurobond Issue

Bulgaria's First Investment Bank issued EUR 200 M of bonds with a three-year maturity in a sale managed by ABN Amro and Dresdner Kleinword Wasserstein more »

Latvia Vows a Tougher Line on Banks

Latvian Prime Minister Aigars Kalvitis said he will lead a new effort to prosecute and prevent money laundering in the Baltic state to avoid international sanctions against the country's banks more »

Development of Plastic Cards System

Seminar on development of non-cash settlements with use of plastic cards in Uzbekistan more »

Italy-Azerbaijan Investment Conference Due In Rome

A 40-member Azerbaijani business delegation is scheduled to leave for Rome to attend an Italy-Azerbaijan conference on investments due on February 25 more »

Latvia Is Ready to Link Currency to the Euro

Latvia, the European Union's fastest growing economy, is ready to link its currency to the euro in a two-year test period prior to adopting Europe's common currency more »

The Substantial Reforms

Koizumi says Japan's economy recovering, vows to fight deflation more »