Russian Exports DA
Russian Exports DA
Russian Exports DA
1NC
Gas prices high- Ukraine
Gloystein and Chestney 7-22(Henning Gloystein and Nina Chestney,
Reuters, July 22 2014, da: July 31 2014,
UK autumn gas prices to rise due to maintenance, Ukraine risk,
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/07/22/britain-gas-marketsidUSL6N0PW2XZ20140722,PS)
British natural gas prices for delivery in late summer and autumn are set to rise
in
coming weeks as large-scale North Sea maintenance makes it more difficult for utilities to stock up on
reserves ahead of peak demand in winter.
the Ukraine crisis, which many analysts fear will result in a disruption in the supply of Russian
gas destined for western Europe and flowing through Ukraine. "We do expect prices to
rally in the coming weeks based on maintenance and profit-taking on recent
price declines (closure of short positions)," Hans van Cleef, senior energy economist at ABN Amro, told
Reuters. British natural gas prices for delivery a month ahead have almost halved this year as healthy
supplies have combined with low demand due to mild weather, improving energy efficiency, increasing
supplies of renewables and low population growth. Yet analysts say North Sea maintenance is likely to
reverse that trend, at least in the short term. Maintenance is planned from Aug. 1-14 on the Forties
pipeline system and the Central Area Transmission System (CATS)Riser Platform, both in the North Sea.
The riser platform, operated by BP, feeds gas into the CATS pipeline, which carries more than 48 million
cubic metres of gas a day (mcm/d) from the North Sea to Teesside in northeast England. The Forties
pipeline system, also operated by BP, receives oil and gas liquids from more than 50 offshore fields and
delivers gas into the St Fergus terminal in Scotland. Data from Thomson Reuters Commodities Research
and Forecasts show total British North Sea gas production is expected to drop by an overall 18 mcm/d
during the first two weeks of August. "The outage will constrain supply and should therefore lead to
withdrawals from storage and push up prices, and it may cut back on exports to continental Europe," said
"I wouldn't be
surprised if day-ahead prices in August pushed towards 40 pence
per therm during the peak maintenance period, especially as there is a
Oliver Sanderson, a senior gas analyst at the Thomson Reuters' forecasting group.
scheduled outage for Norwegian deliveries to Britain for the second half of August," he added. Current
day-ahead prices and contracts for delivery in August were trading at 37.00 to 37.25 pence per therm on
Tuesday. North Sea production changes often have a strong market impact, as seen in recent outages
impacting the St Fergus terminal or at ConocoPhillips' J Block field.
at Bard College, April 25 2012, da: July 24 2014, North American Shale Gas
Gives Russia Serious Headache, http://www.the-americaninterest.com/blog/2012/04/25/north-american-shale-gas-gives-russia-seriousheadache/)
North Americas shale gas boom is chipping away at the market for
gas producers like Russia. Whats more, if the United States becomes a gas
exporter, Russias customers (especially in Europe) could decide to cancel
expensive contracts with Gazprom in favor of cheaper American
natural gas. Heres the story from the FT: If the US starts exporting LNG to Europe
and Asia, it gives [customers there] an argument to renegotiate their
prices with Gazprom and Qatar, and they will do it, says Jean Abiteboul, head of Cheniere supply & marketing. Gazprom supplied 27
percent of Europes natural gas in 2011. While American gas is trading below $2 per MMBTU (million British thermal units), Gazproms prices are tied to crude oil markets,
and its long-term contracts charge customers roughly $13 per MMBTU, says the FT. European customers would love to reduce their dependence on Gazprom and start to
import American gas. Already Gazprom has had to make concessions to its three biggest customers, and others are increasingly dissatisfied with their contracts. Worse,
from Russias point of view: evidence that western and central Europe contain substantial shale gas reserves of their own. Fracking is unpopular in thickly populated, eco-
Nuclear war
Filger 09(Sheldon Filger, founder of GlobalEconomicCrisis.com, May 10
2009, da: July 24 2014, Russian Economy Faces Disastrous Free Fall
Contraction, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/sheldon-filger/russian-economyfaces-dis_b_201147.html)
In Russia, historically, economic health and political stability are
intertwined to a degree that is rarely encountered in other major industrialized economies. It was
the economic stagnation of the former Soviet Union that led to its political downfall. Similarly, Medvedev
and Putin, both intimately acquainted with their nation's history, are unquestionably alarmed at the
prospect that
stability, achieved at great cost after years of chaos following the demise of the Soviet Union. Already,
strikes and protests are occurring among rank and file workers facing unemployment or non-payment of
their salaries. Recent polling demonstrates that the once supreme popularity ratings of Putin and
Medvedev are eroding rapidly. Beyond the political elites are the financial oligarchs, who have been forced
to deleverage, even unloading their yachts and executive jets in a desperate attempt to raise cash.
After all, the most recent national intelligence estimates put out by the U.S. intelligence community have
already concluded that the Global Economic Crisis represents the greatest national security threat to the
United States, due to its facilitating political instability in the world. During the years Boris Yeltsin ruled
Russia, security forces responsible for guarding the nation's nuclear arsenal went without pay for months
at a time, leading to fears that desperate personnel would illicitly sell nuclear weapons to terrorist
It may be that the financial impact of the Global Economic Crisis is its least dangerous consequence.
UQ
Gas prices will increase- none of your ev assume shifting
trends
Lloyd 7-30(Claira Lloyd, Energy Global, July 30 2014, da: July 31 2014,
Global gas market outlook,
http://www.energyglobal.com/news/processing/articles/Atradius-global-gasoutlook.aspx#.U9pbFagVlD0,PS)
The Atradius Gas Market Outlook has said that after decades of little of interest happening in the
global natural gas market, it has been showing unprecedented dynamism over the
past decade. This has reportedly lead to a divergent gas prices between world regions. However, Atradius
the past 10 years. Gas prices in the US have been dropping, which is a reflection of the rapidly growing
production of gas from shale beds. Gas prices in Asia however have practically tripled over the same time
frame and are far the highest in the world. Atradius has said that this is because Asian gas prices are
linked to the price of oil which has surged and gas consumption has grown rapidly as a result of economic
development. Europes gas prices are partially linked to the price of oil, and this explains why they have
doubled. However, these trends are expected to change. Winds of change Atradius expects change to
firstly occur as, in the report, it says that the US will quickly become self sufficient in gas and prices will
gradually clime. This is expected to be a result of the very recent shale revolution which has led to a
production surge. Imports to the US have halved, despite the power sector having substituted gas for coal.
These developments are, according to Atradius, likely to last and the US will start exporting LNG to Asia
and Europe. Gas exports are triggered by the price difference between the regions. Secondly, Atradius
expects prices to remain at current levels in Asia assuming Chinese production rises, US exports develop
and the LNG cost can be contained. Demand is growing fast and has triggered a boom of LNG imports as
local supplies are unable to keep up with the rise in demand. Atradius have said that the surge in demand
and the high gas prices have triggered a flurry of investments in LNG facilities, particularly in Australia.
Finally, Atradius expects the gas prices in Europe to eventually rise. Focus
on environmental issues has led to an EU wide trading system of carbon emissions and a renewable
energy policy in Germany. Perversely, the measures have reduced gas consumption in the power sector
and encouraged the use of coal: a much more polluting energy source. Whereas gas production is
priced in unseasonably mild temperatures in the eastern half of the U.S. and bet that hotter temperatures
natural gas
futures for delivery in August traded at $3.796 per million British thermal
will return and hike demand for air conditioning. On the New York Mercantile Exchange,
units during U.S. trading, up 0.64%. The commodity hit a session high of $3.817 and a low of $3.756. The
August contract settled down 2.00% on Tuesday to end at $3.772 per million British thermal units. Natural
gas futures were likely to find support at $3.741 per million British thermal units, the low from Nov. 26,
2013, and resistance at $3.893, Monday's high. Natural gas prices dove in recent sessions after weatherforecasting services predicted a summertime cool snap to make its way across parts of the heavilypopulated Midwest and northeastern U.S. over the coming days. In its daily weather forecast,
Natgasweather.com reported that the current cool snap hasn't been significantly impressive, "but it will
open the door for additional weather systems to impact the northern U.S. late this weekend and all of next
This weekly's supply data was expected to show that natural gas storage in the U.S. rose by 95 billion
cubic feet in the week ended July 18. Total U.S. natural gas storage stood at 2.129 trillion cubic feet as of
last week, narrowing the deficit to the five-year average to 25.5%, down from a record 54.7% at the end of
futures for delivery in September were up 0.49% at $102.89 a barrel, while heating oil for August delivery
were up 0.40% at $2.8656 per gallon.
prices rose as
investors turned their attention from current mercury readings to
weather forecasts, which called for a return of typical summertime temperatures across the
U.S. Investors also reshuffled positions ahead of Thursday's closelywatched supply report to gauge the strength of cooling demand.
prices dipping on concerns demand for air conditioning will fall. By Wednesday,
Prices high now and will stay that will due to structural
issues
Melvin and Barber 7-22(Jasmin Melvin and Jeff Barber, Platts McGraw
Hill Financial, July 22 2014, da: July 23 2014, Some US consumers may see
high power prices for next several winters: report,
http://www.platts.com/latest-news/electric-power/washington/some-usconsumers-may-see-high-power-prices-for-21952761,PS)
Electricity consumers in the US Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions could see higherthan-average prices for the next several winters if last winter's bitter cold is
repeated until additional natural pipeline capacity into the region is brought into service, competitive
energy retail supplier ConEdison Solutions said in a new report. ConEdison Solution, a unit of New Yorkbased utility Consolidated Edison, said the polar vortexes that blasted the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic with
sustained periods of brutal cold during the 2013-2014 winter led to a spike in the price generators paid for
Transmission city-gates in New England hit a high of $75.48/MMBtu on January 22, compared with the 12month average of $8.60/MMBtu. "Any
so
consumers exposed to energy markets over the next few winters should expect higher-than-average prices
during those months," the white paper said. "Whether prices will be higher or lower than this winter will
depend on a number of factors, including the severity and duration of cold weather."
Europes biggest market, advanced as much as 7.2 percent, the biggest gain in a month, on the ICE
Futures Europe exchange in London. A Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 jet carrying 295 people was shot down
by pro-Russian rebels near Donetsk, Ukraines Interior Ministry adviser Anton Geraschenko said on his
driller, gas producer OAO Novatek and OAO Gazprombank, the nations third-largest lender. The U.S. and
the EU acted after travel bans and asset freezes aimed at President Vladimir Putins inner circle failed to
Russia meets
about 30 percent of Europes gas needs, half of which goes through
pipelines crossing Ukraine. Disputes between the two former Soviet nations disrupted
force Russia to meet an ultimatum to end support for separatists in Ukraines east.
supplies to the EU in 2006 and 2009 amid freezing weather. There is potentially some additional risk
premium on the back of the recent sanctions being built into prices over fears of any impact this may have
on Russian supplies into western Europe, which are currently reported as normal, Wingas U.K. Ltd., a
wholesaler, said in a report e-mailed today. Front-month U.K. gas climbed as high as 39.72 pence a therm
($6.79 per million British thermal units) on ICE. The contract was at 39.63 pence at 4:58 p.m. in London.
Dutch gas for August on the Title Transfer Facility hub rose as much as 5.9 percent to 17.10 euros ($23.13)
a megawatt-hour, the highest since July 1, broker data compiled by Bloomberg showed. Meeting Delayed
Putin denounced the sanctions as a reflection of an aggressive U.S. foreign policy. At a news conference
in Brazil, he warned they are liable to boomerang and hurt U.S. business interests. Putin has denied
fomenting the rebellion even as Russian troops have begun massing anew on Ukraines border. OAO
Gazprom, Russias state-run pipeline gas monopoly, wasnt included in the sanctions. A meeting with the
EUs Energy Commission was delayed to next week, Russias Energy Ministry said today. These latest
U.S. sanctions will potentially be the first since the crisis started to have a direct impact on the energy
sector, Trevor Sikorski, head of gas, coal and carbon at consultants Energy Aspects Ltd. in London, said by
e-mail today. As neither Rosneft or Novatek can directly export gas, this will have little impact on gas
supply into Europe. Normal Flows Gas supplies to the European Union have been flowing normally since
Russia cut supplies to Ukraine on June 16. Slovak grid operator Eustream said it didnt record pressure
reduction at the compressor station at the border with Ukraine, according to a statement on its website
today. Ukraine pumped gas into storage for a fourth week since the Russian cut off in the 7-day period
Withinday gas rose as much as 5.1 percent to 39.25 pence a therm on the National
ended July 11, according to data from Gas Infrastructure Europe, a lobby group in Brussels.
Balancing Point hub, while the day-ahead contract gained as much as 5.4 percent to 39 pence a therm,
broker data showed. The nations pipelines were forecast to contain 2 percent less gas at 6 a.m. tomorrow
from the same time today while demand was forecast at 175.9 million cubic meters, 2.3 percent below the
seasonal norm, according to National Grid Plc, the network operator.
of the lower 48 states July 21 through July 25, MDA Weather Services said today. Gas stockpiles last week
probably rose by more than the five-year average for the 13th consecutive week, analyst estimates show.
It does look like there is plenty of heat in the forecast , for Texas especially
and parts of the Midwest, so that will surely affect demand for gas, said Ellen Stamm, global natural gas
analyst at Schneider Electric in Louisville, Kentucky. In the depths of summer, when the cooling demand is
so intense and production is not increasing quite as fast as it was before, theres less gas to be put into
storage. Natural gas for August delivery rose 2.2 cents, or 0.5 percent,
to settle at $4.119 per million British thermal units on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Volume for all
futures traded was 40 percent below the 100-day average at 2:38 p.m. Prices yesterday fell to $4.097, the
lowest settlement since Jan. 10. The futures are down 2.6 percent this year. Forecasts for the Northeast
and Midwest turned hotter for next week compared with yesterdays projection, said MDA in Gaithersburg,
Maryland. Temperatures will drop in the East from July 26 through July 30 with below-normal readings
around the Great Lakes. Hot Weather The high in New York City on July 24 will reach 90 degrees
Fahrenheit (32 Celsius), 6 above average, according to AccuWeather Inc. in State College, Pennsylvania.
The next day, Dallass reading will be 103 degrees, 6 higher than average.
that began in earnest as of mid-January. The U.S. storage balance in Bcf chart tells the sad tale. While
inventory levels were adequate, if not robust, heading into the winter, a series of strong cold spells
punctuated what can be described as a persistently colder than normal winter. By Jan. 10 ,
inventories dipped below their lowest level over the last five years
for that point in the storage cycle. It didnt get any prettier from that point until the very
bottom, when storage levels reached their nadir at 822 Bcf, in late March. At the low, inventories were
essentially half what they normally are, requiring a steep climb to return to normalcy. Following a bit of a
slow start in April, injections into inventory have been going gang-busters, exceeding both the 5-year
average level and the elevated rate observed in 2013. From May 9 through June 20, each weekly addition
forecasts
suggest that inventory levels will fall far short of the five-year
average by the end of the summer, leaving the market a little tighter heading into the
to storage exceeded 100 Bcf, a record rate of storage injection. Despite the improvement,
still
demanding winter season. A key item to watch over the coming months is the influence of summer heat. In
April through June, demand for electricity is low relative to the months of July and August. Consequently,
demand for natural gas to run power generation plants in spring and fall is lower than in the peak of
summer.
If July turns out to be a hot month with higher call on gas-fired generation for
power production, lower volumes of natural gas will flow into storage, and
the price differential between 2014 futures and 2015 futures may
well widen.
I/L
Gas industry already weak from past fluctuations- a price
drop would collapse the Russia economy
Aron 13(Leon Aron, American Enterprise Institute, May 29 2013, The
political economy of Russian oil and gas, http://www.aei.org/outlook/foreignand-defense-policy/regional/europe/the-political-economy-of-russian-oil-andgas/,PS)
Even more than Russian oil, natural gas rents are likely to shrink significantly in the coming years. In
addition to Gazproms notorious corruption and mismanagementTransparency International ranked it
among the least transparent companies in the world[39] funds available for investment are reduced by
the politically dictated subsidization of domestic gas prices: Gazprom sells 60 percent of its gas
domestically at a loss.[40] The hope for increased profits following a 15 percent rise in the prices of
heating and cooking gas as part of this years utilities reform have been dashed by Putins limiting the
utilities hikes to 6 percent. This price control is estimated to further reduce Gazproms profits by more than
$300 million a year.[41] Gazproms modernization and greenfield investments are also hampered by
enormously expensive projects that seem motivated more by the Kremlins geostrategic ambitions than by
a search for profitability. Thus, in an effort to bypass Ukraine, Gazprom completed the Nord Stream twin
pipeline system under the Baltic Sea in October 2012 and launched the South Stream project, which
includes a stretch under the Black Sea, in December 2012. The price tag for both projects is around $40
billion.[42] In the beginning of April of this year, Putin ordered Gazprom to revive the Yamal-Europe-2
project, which would construct yet another gas pipeline bypassing Ukraine, from the Belarusian border via
drilling to tap shallow but broad deposits and hydraulic fracturing (or fracking) when sand, chemicals,
and water, gel, or liquefied gases are injected under great pressure into shale rock formations to extract
gas and oil. As a result,
45 percent. By contrast, Gazprom has yet to start tapping these resources. Instead, the companys
president, Alexei Miller, has repeatedly decried shale gas as a myth and a well planned propaganda
The rapidly changing supply and price structure will be further altered by a possible (or even probable)
transformation of the United States from an importer to an exporter of natural gas. Among the most
notable casualties of an increased supply and lower prices has been the Shtokman natural gas field in the
Arctic Barents Sea, one of the worlds largest. Last August the members of the consortiumGazprom,
Frances Total, and Norways Statoilquietly abandoned the project, which was to produce LNG to export
to the United States, because it became unprofitable. The Shrinking European Market To make up for
domestic corruption and inefficiency,
Europe, where it used to sell gas at a 66 percent profit.[ 45] Just to break
even, the firm needs to earn $12 per thousand cubic feet. By comparison, natural gas is sold at below $3
per thousand cubic feet in the United States today.[46] Even with the liquefaction and transportation costs,
widely anticipated US exports of LNG to Europe are likely to cut deeper still into Gazproms margins.[47]
Meanwhile, the lower prices have forced Gazprom, which last year supplied a quarter of European gas, to
renegotiate delivery prices to levels closer to those in the spot markets, where commodities are traded for
cash for immediate delivery and where prices have dipped as low as half of those in Gazproms long-term
contracts.[48] In addition, the Russian natural gas behemoth has begun to grant as much as a 10 percent
the sales of Gazproms main competitor in Europe, Norways majority-state-owned Statoil, are up 16
percent. The disparity is largely due to Statoils more flexible pricing that brought at least half of its
contracts down to the spot market level.[50] For the first time, Statoil is catching up to Gazproms
diminishing sales in Europe, exporting 88 billion cubic meters of natural gas as compared to Gazproms
113 billion cubic meters.[51] In the first nine months of last year, Gazproms profits fell by 12 percent
compared to the same period of last year, and operational costs increased by 18 percent.[52] Overall,
between 2008 and 2012, Gazprom lost 53 percent of its market value.[53] Europe is becoming less
hospitable legally and politically as well. Last year, the European Commission started an antimonopoly
investigation of Gazprom, including possible price fixing. Should Gazprom be found in violation of
antimonopoly lawsa very distinct possibilityit will have to open its pipelines to competitors, alter its
pricing formula, in which the price of gas is linked to that of oil, and pay up to $14 billion in fines.[54]
Further aggravating the situation, last September, Putin issued a decree prohibiting Gazprom from
China already imports far cheaper gas from Turkmenistan via a recently constructed pipeline.[55]
Furthermore, with the estimated largest deposits of shale gas in the world, China could well be close to
self-sufficiency by the time the currently planned pipeline from Eastern Siberia materializes.[56] As a
result, Russia and China have repeatedly failed to agree on the price for the putative imports.[57] Despite
the uncertainty, Putin has directed Gazprom to develop for export to China the giant virgin Chayadinsk
field in Yakutia in northeastern Siberia. With the construction of a pipeline to Vladivostok and a LNG plant
there, the project is estimated to cost $4065 billion, likely pushing the delivery price to as high as $15 per
million British thermal units (BTU), a universal energy equivalent compared to $3 per million BTU in the
United States.[58] Similarly, shale gas appears to obviate any prospects for increasing Gazprom sales to
Ukraine, the second-largest European consumer of Russian gas after Germany. By the time Ukraines
current contract with Russia runs out in 2019, Russias southwestern neighbor, which last year bought 33
billion cubic meters of gas from Gazprom, may see its needs for Russian gas significantly, if not
dramatically, reduced. At 1.2 trillion cubic meters (42 trillion cubic feet), Ukraine has Europes third-largest
shale gas reserves, and this past January Kiev signed a $10 billion deal with Royal Dutch Shell to extract
shale gas from a field in Eastern Ukraine. Although, as with other European shale gas prospects as a whole,
the Ukrainian deposits are not likely to be developed as quickly as those in the United States, the project
(which is estimated to produce between 7 billion cubic meters and 20 billion cubic meters within five
years) is an important step toward reducing Ukraines energy dependence on Russia.[59] In the meantime,
seeking to further lessen its dependence on Gazprom, last year Ukraine began to buy more natural gas
from Germany (via Poland and Hungary) and LNG from terminals in Turkey (via Bulgaria and Romania).
Kiev is also looking to triple extraction from the Black Sea to 3 billion cubic meters by 2016 and plans to
build a LNG terminal to process 10 billion cubic meters from either Qatar or Azerbaijan.
News, Sempra Wins Final U.S. FERC Approval for LNG Export Plant,
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-06-19/sempra-wins-final-u-s-approvalfor-cameron-lng-exports.html)
Sempra Energy (SRE) won final U.S. approval to build an export
terminal for liquefied natural gas, becoming the second such facility to win government
approval. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission voted unanimously today to let Sempras Cameron
LNG project in Louisiana move forward.
trade agreements, such as Canada and Mexico. The department is reviewing 24 applications for such
projects. The FERC leads U.S. environmental reviews of gas export projects. It is weighing 14 applications
for proposed facilities in the U.S. I think it is a positive data point for others awaiting FERC approval, Paul
Patterson, Glenrock Associates LLC, said of the Sempra decision in a telephone interview. Sempra
increased to a 52-week high $105.25 after the FERC decision, then surrendered some of the gains as U.S.
markets fluctuated after the Federal Reserve promised to keep interest rates low. Its closed at $104.65, up
this important milestone successfully and to be one step closer to starting construction later this year,
according to the company. Sempra owns 50.2 percent of the facility, which will be able to export 1.7 billion
cubic feet of the fuel per day. Frances GDF Suez (GSZ) and Japans Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc.
(8316) each own a 16.6 percent stake. A joint venture of Tokyo-based Mitsubishi Corp. (8058) and Nippon
the only response is for the U.S. to boost its own LNG exports,
which they say would weaken Russias energy influence while helping American allies.
Chinas deal with Russian-firm Gazprom is only helping them make the case, they say. Hoeven said the Gazprom
agreement shows more than ever that exports from the United
States would hurt Russia. Clearly, our providing LNG to Europe and
working with Europe for them to develop other sources of energy
supply weakens Putins hand, he said.
though, say
Well sell
natural gas at a good old-fashioned profit and at a price lower than Russias. Lets
power not only this democracy but also the European democracies with American natural gas. Lets
give Europe the means to escape the claws of the Russian bear . Lets
peace, not by convoys of troops headed to Europe, but by convoys of natural gas shipments.
deprive Putin of the wealth to build his military. Lets create tens of thousands of high-wage jobs here
building three or four large ship-loading facilities. Lets take another step and put American workers to
building the equivalent unloading facilities needed in Europe. Theyll agree. Lets reawaken our shipyards
Commitments can be
made with the European leaders and formally signed in weeks. Fasttracking is important to them and the lives of their nations.
Construction can begin by years end. Everything can be different. Peace can be built
to build the tankers to convoy this American gas to the European ports.
on prosperity as prosperity builds on peace. Lets use conservative common sense and make American
jobs for American workers. Lets be friends to friends. Help the democracies in Europe stand firm,
prosperous and independent. Teach Putin that the United States is not content playing checkers.
concerns. In Paillard's estimation, Brussels and Moscow both regard issues such as human rights or the
consequences of interrupting the EU revenue stream, while the European Union cannot do without
Russian gas supplies. Europe has few alternative suppliers, and cannot develop alternative energy
One of the worlds two largest oil producers and the leading provider
of natural gas to Europe, Russia has increasingly used its revenues
from energy exports to strengthen the Putin regime. As new, cheaper energy
providers emerge and the market becomes leaner and more competitive, Russia needs to lessen its
dependence on profits from these resources if it is to avoid stagnation and possibly an economic crisis.
The regime needs to implement deep institutional reforms to create a better investment climate and
diversify the economy, but in doing so it risks undermining the authoritarian vertical of power. Vladimir
In Putins view, the only way for Russia to achieve economic growth
of 4 to 6 percent per yearthe tempo he deemed minimally necessary for Russia to reduce its lag behind
the developed countrieswas
might and an essential condition for modernization of the military-industrial complex.[4] Finally, he
believed the mineral extraction sector of the economy diminishes social tensions by raising the level of
antitotalitarian revolution of late 198791.[6] The state was to become again the only sovereign political
and economic actor in Russia, with the private sector, civil society, and its institutions mere objects. Putin
saw as nonnegotiable the states control of rent flows from the sale of mineral resources, with nonstate
the authors of an
influential analytical report on the composition and division of labor
in the Kremlins Politburo singled out long-term natural gas
property rights remaining contingent.[7] Almost a decade and a half later,
the national output and has a pipeline and export monopoly.[9]) The key to the effective state takeover of
more than half of Russian oil output was a dramatic expansion of the majority state-owned Rosneft,
headed since 2010 by Putins confidant and former KGB officer Igor Sechin. Starting as a minor company
that the government tried and failed to sell in 1998 because nobody wanted it, Rosneft skyrocketed in
2004 after it took over the key assets of Russias formerly largest and privately owned oil corporation,
Yukos, which the Kremlin had bankrupted, broken up, and sold at rigged auctions.[10] "For Putin, oil and
gas were also paramount politically as guarantors of the security and stability of the Russian state."Since
Rosneft bought Russias third-largest private company, TNK-BP, for $55 billion this past March, it has
become the largest publicly traded oil company in the world by output.[11] As a result, the state share of
Russias oil production increased from 20 percent in the early 2000s to 56 percent today, with Rosneft
accounting for 48 percent of the total.[12] The increase in the state ownership paralleled a steady rise in
overall production, which reached a post-Soviet record of 10.5 million barrels per day, or 518 million tons
economy contracted by almost 8 percentthe largest drop among the G20 top industrial nations. Russia
overreliance on
commodity exports depresses other sectors of the economy by
starving them of investments and modernization while the
increasing value of the national currency makes exports of other
goods and services more expensive and thus less competitive in
world markets.
has begun to exhibit the signs of what economists call the Dutch disease, when
Campbell Prize winner, May 3 2010, da: August 2 2014, Russia's Natural Gas:
The Strategy and the State Behind It,
https://lsaw.lib.lehigh.edu/index.php/campbell/article/view/169/32,PS)
Natural gas is not an ordinary commodity. Unlike fuel oil, fruit, vegetables, consumer electronics and many
other goods that regularly trade between states, this vital economic requirement is not solid or liquid at
room temperature. Although seemingly innocuous, this attribute limits the options for transporting gas to
two: pipeline and liquefaction.[ii] Because of the high costs of liquefying natural gas and shipping it by
specialized tankers (LNG), pipelines are the dominant way gas is transported: 93% of global gas demand
was sent through this medium in 2004.[5] Gas trade is further concentrated because pipeline construction
is very capital-intensive, and subject to large economies of scale and geographical constraints.[6]
Concentration also exists on the supply side. Natural gas deposits are not distributed evenly across the
globe; they are found only in places that have the proper geologic formations to capture the gas as it
forms from organic material. This concentration of routes and supply creates market power for suppliers
and transporters, leading to higher prices for a commodity that is vital to economic welfare. High prices,
however, are not the only issue downstream customers must face. When economic terms like supplier and
transporter are replaced with the term sovereign state, a political component is added to the equation.
States do not always act in an economically "rational" manner: turning a profit may not always be their
sole, or even main, motivation. They can choose to view trade simply as a means of economic enrichment
in the liberal spirit, or they can easily adopt a more mercantilist view, where economic efficiency takes a
back seat to considerations of political power. Thus, in gas trade, geography, and the politics of the land
through which the gas passes, are just as important as discrete considerations of supply and demand.
Energy security can no doubt come into question when a supplier or transporter state chooses motives
other than profit, which is clearly the case in the trade of Russian gas. There are very few barriers
between the Russian state and its most strategic industry; the Kremlin keeps vigilant watch over Russia's
lucrative gas deposits and pipelines. In 2007, Gazprom (the Russian state-owned gas monopoly) oversaw
85% of Russia's production, and owned 100% of Russia's transit system.[7] Through these means, the
government closely controls the largest gas reserves on earth 47.5 trillion cubic meters, which translates
to 27-28% of the world's total. On top of having vast deposits of its own, Russia also acts as the main
transportation bridge for shipping gas out of the Caspian Basin to the European continent, as illustrated in
figure 1-1 (see appendix).[8] These reserves, in countries such as Iran, Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan and
Kazakhstan, account for another 23% of world gas supplies.[9] The Russian government has consistently
sought to constrain the trade of natural gas across Eurasia to keep its geographic monopoly and the
advantages that flow from it intact. The first advantage for the Kremlin is financial .
The amount
of money that changes hands in natural gas and oil markets is
enormous. In 2007, the World Bank estimated that 64% of Russia's export
revenues were attributable to the sale of hydrocarbons.[10] This massive
flow of foreign currency accounted for anywhere from 50 to 75% of Russia's budget revenues.[11]
however, is a misleading aggregate. As figure 1-2 shows, Europe's dependence on Russian energy
increases as one moves east across the continent, hitting 100% in some Central and Eastern European
countries and all of the Baltic nations. Gas consumption is expected to grow by 2.1% a year from 2000 to
2030, making it the fastest growing primary fuel in Europe.[13] Because of its lack of domestic supplies,
the EU must rely on external sources for its future and current energy needs, as figure 1-3 illustrates.
Falling domestic production has forced the EU's reliance on imports up 40% in the ten-year span between
1996 and 2006. Russian imports currently make up 42% of the total.[14] In the case of a supply disruption
of technical or political dimensions, switching between fuels for a prolonged period of time in the short
term is nearly impossible natural gas has no immediate substitutes. Although alternative fuel sources like
coal, oil and various "renewables" exist, it takes significant time and infrastructure development to make
the conversion from one fuel source to another.[15] For the EU, Russia's highest-paying customer,
dependence on natural gas is certain in the short run. The first two advantages just listed are undoubtedly
appealing enough to warrant the Russian government's intervention into gas markets. However, they fall
short of explaining why gas can be used as an effective tool of foreign policy, as dependence cuts both
natural gas as an instrument of coercion? For many countries in Europe reliant on Russian gas,
dependence runs deeper. Not only is it impossible for them to substitute for another fuel source, they are
stuck with their supplier. In contrast, consider the example of oil, another vital primary fuel. Although the
US and many other countries are highly dependent upon oil, they are able to procure it with relatively short
notice from many other sources. Because oil is a liquid at room temperature, it can be easily transported
by a variety of means, including pipeline, tanker, truck, and railroad car.[16] Many transportation options
allow oil customers to buy the commodity from a diverse set of suppliers, who are aware that if they turn
off the tap completely, another company will be happy to oblige a consumer's needs.[iii] Thus, in the case
of oil, liquid international markets ensure that supply meets demands in a transaction that is mostly
business, depriving supplier states the option of using the liquid commodity for coercive power in foreign
that tie Europe to Russia as an "umbilical chord", linking the economic welfare of the downstream party to
the decisions of the supplier.[18] Above all others, this characteristic of the trade of natural gas makes it
able to be wielded like a weapon. Limited transportation routes leads to limited supply options, which puts
the bargaining power squarely in the hands of the country that holds control of both.
according to Morgan Stanley analysts. That would send energy costs soaring and leave European countries
scrambling to find alternatives in time for the winter, when they need gas the most. We think that Russia
could block transit of gas through Ukraine to Europe, pending settlement by [Ukrainian oil and gas
company] Naftogaz of outstanding debt and might also allow a decline in oil exports, which could add a
geopolitical risk premium to the oil price," analysts Jacob Nell and Alina Slyusarchuk wrote in a Tuesday
separatists in Ukraine, they said. Putin now faces a stark choice between a pragmatic response
supporting de-escalation in Ukraine in return for neutrality, decentralization and the lifting of sanctions or
what we characterize as a patriotic response, in which Putin focuses on support to the pro-Russian
separatist movement in Ukraine, Nell and Slyusarchuk wrote. The latter move would trigger a further
tightening of sanctions and deepen the divide with the West. Kurt Oswald, a Middle East partner at the
global consultancy A.T. Kearney, said that Europe would suffer in the short term if Russia blocked gas
exports. He noted that Russias state-owned Gazprom exported 162 billion cubic meters of gas to Europe
last year about one-third of Europes total gas consumption and that replacing those supplies would be
difficult and costly. There is a strong dependency of Europe on the Russian gas supply he told IB Times
by phone from Vienna last week. Russia is still in a quite comfortable position, short and midterm. Still,
Oswald seemed less convinced than the Morgan Stanley analysts that
Russia would choose this option. Russia is still dependent on the export of its
resources, he explained. From that perspective, its most likely
they would not cut the gas supplies to Europe. But will Putin behave
completely rationally? Im not 100 percent sure. I dont see Russia turning
off the taps, Michael Geary, a global Europe fellow at the Wilson Center in Washington, told IB Times on
Tuesday. Reducing
for them.
brutally cold winter of 2009 Russia cut off gas supplies to Europe allegedly over a pricing dispute with
Ukraine. However, it was also a lesson to Western Europe on its dependence on Russia for energy.
is in better shape. A mild winter and stagnant demand have left Europe with higher levels of
inventory than in past years. According to a spokeswoman at the European Commission, the EU has 40
billion cubic meters of natural gas on hand in storage, which accounts for 10% of annual demand for the
entire European Union. Those figures vary by country (Czech Republic and Slovakia have 90 days of
supplies; Hungary two months; Austria six months), but as a bloc, the EU has 20% greater supplies at its
disposal than it did last year. And its not just seasonal patterns that have put the EU in a better spot.
Europe has been reducing its reliance on Russian gas for a while now in 2003 the EU imported 45% of its
production allowed LNG from other parts of the world Qatar, for example to be rerouted to Europe.
(Several U.S. members of Congress have tried to exploit the Ukrainian crisis, arguing for the Obama
administration to issue a blanket approval for LNG exports in order to isolate Russia. Over the short-term,
that is nonsense it will take years to build the terminals, so issuing licenses for exports wont do anything
Russia are so interdependent that it is unlikely Russia will proactively cut off gas supplies to Europe. In fact,
For Putin, cutting off gas exports to Europe would be akin to him cutting off his nose to spite his face. It
would be highly counterproductive for Russian interests at a time when Europe is considering how to
respond to Russian actions in Crimea, to take steps that would have a major and negative direct impact on
Europe, said Laurent Ruseckas, a senior associate at IHS CERA, as reported by Politico. The economic
damage of energy supply disruptions cuts both ways. Putin likes to play the role of bully, but Russia is not
exactly in a strong position in terms of using energy as a political weapon. Whether or not the Ukraine
crisis deepens, it is unlikely that Moscow would intentionally turn off the taps for any prolonged period of
time.
AT: Link UQ
Sanctions targeted Russias oil sector but not natural gas
Reuters 7-29(Published on CBC, July 29 2014, da: August 2 2014, Ukraine
crisis: U.S., EU, Canada announce new sanctions against Russia,
http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/ukraine-crisis-u-s-eu-canada-announce-newsanctions-against-russia-1.2721836,PS)
Some member states are nervous about the risk to their own
economies, and EU leaders struggled to strike a balance between inflicting
pain on Russia and preventing fragile EU nations from sliding back into recession. In a letter to EU leaders
would leave France free to go ahead with the delivery of helicopter carrier warships it is building for
impact measure will ban Europeans from buying new bonds or shares issued by banks owned 50 percent
or more by the Russian state, which analysts say will affect their ability to finance the economy.
Syndicated loans were not included "at this stage", one senior EU diplomat said, adding that European
banks will not be able to purchase targeted debt anywhere in the world. "It applies to primary markets
and to secondary markets, bonds and shares of targeted, well-defined, state-owned Russian banks," he
said.
free to go ahead with the delivery of helicopter carrier warships is it building for Russia. Another principle
was that EU measures targeting energy technology could hit Russia's oil sector but not its natural gas.
Europe depends
on it far more for gas, which arrives mainly by pipeline and is harder
to source from elsewhere than oil that arrives mostly by ship.
Russia is the world's biggest exporter of gas and second biggest exporter of oil;
Governments
from the UK and Poland to China and Argentina are dreaming of
cheap power and, just as importantly for some, energy security. Shale, many have
decided, is the answer. But can the shale gas revolution in the US really be replicated around
the world? Poland was seen as the poster boy for European shale gas
but, according to Stuart Elliott, managing editor at the industry information provider Platts, " the
Polish experiment has been a failure to date". Enticed by seemingly abundant
higher. Understandably, countries around the world want a piece of the action.
reserves and a government keen to kick-start production, US energy majors moved in, hoping to replicate
their domestic success on foreign shores. Thirty to 40 wells were planned for 2013. To date, there is just
one well producing enough gas to be economically viable. Exxon Mobil, Talisman and Marathon have all
pulled out, while Chevron, Conoco Phillips and San Leon are persevering. Much of the blame has been laid
at the door of the government, which got "greedy and stupid", according to Prof Paul Stevens, senior
research fellow at the Chatham House think tank. A punitive tax regime and an insistence that foreign
companies work with local partners did much to dampen enthusiasm, although the government has since
made its regulatory regime more attractive to overseas investors. But more significant for the wider shale
industry in Europe, says Prof Stevens, were comments made by Exxon's chief executive. The technology
that had proved so successful in the US did not work on Polish geology, Rex Tillerson said. 'High suspicions'
The UK government is another that has high hopes for shale, but only a handful of test wells have been
drilled in the past four years. In the US, more than 100 wells were needed before the industry was satisfied
that shale gas was viable. This inactivity is largely due to public opposition to fracking - the process of
drilling for shale gas - and an 18-month moratorium on drilling following concerns about earth tremors.
How fracking recovers natural gas from shale "Suspicions are high so the regulatory regime needs to be
very robust," says John Williams, senior principal at Poyry Management Consulting. "Everything needs to
be gold-plated - any slip-ups and it's game over. This is why we haven't really moved forward." And
opposition will not go away. Concerns about water contamination, earthquakes and disruption to rural
communities have captured the public imagination, but experts suggest we may be worrying about the
wrong things. "The argument that fracking damages the water supply doesn't stack up, and any disruption
would be fairly short-lived," says Prof Stevens. Concerns about earthquakes were always something of a
red herring. "The legitimate concerns," says Prof Stevens, "are 'What do we do with the waste water - there
are nasty heavy metals and radioactivity [deep under ground]?' There is also the question of fugitive
methane - we simply don't know how much leakage there is." He also points out that while shale gas may
be less polluting than coal and oil, it is still a fossil fuel. "If we have any hope of hitting our two-degree
[climate change] target, burning gas is not the way. "Diverting investment from renewables is also a
Protests have taken place around the world, with activists from more than 20 countries signing up to
Global Frackdown day last year. France has banned fracking, while moratoriums have been put in place in
Europe is
more densely populated than the US, where people are far more
familiar with oil and gas operations, is just one of many factors
holding back shale development. For a start, environmental regulation is far stronger in
Europe. There has also been relatively little government investment in
research and development outside America. The US government ploughed millions
Germany, Romania and Bulgaria. Basic research But public opposition, partly because
of dollars into basic scientific research in the early 1980s, while the European Commission wants the
industry itself to make these investments in R&D. This is by no means a given. After all, the US shale
industry did not appear overnight, but has developed over the past 25 years. Property rights are also key,
says Prof Stevens. In the US, homeowners usually own the minerals under their land, so they can agree a
price and hand over the rights to an energy company. In Europe, the state tends to own the minerals, and
no-one is going to let an energy company rip up their land without a fight. Add to this questions about the
suitability of the geology in many countries and the lack of infrastructure and pipelines,
and it is
spend billions on shale," says Mr Elliott. The government plans to produce about one-third of the current
US shale gas capacity by 2020. Shale gas test well in India India drilled its first shale gas test well last
November Experts view this target as ambitious to say the least, but the country has the right geology, a
The
main issue is water. Much of China's shale reserves are located in
the north west of the country, which is extremely arid. This is a
"major sticking point", says Mr Elliott. And despite the government's
grand plans, so far all China's efforts to exploit its abundant shale
resources have come to nothing. In fact, while there are thousands
of shale wells in the US, there are only a handful producing
commercial quantities of gas in the whole of the rest of the world. Mr
Williams thinks it will be eight to 10 years before China is producing a
significant amount of shale energy, let alone enough to affect the
overall price of gas. And this in a country where there are relatively
few barriers to entry. For the rest of the world, then, any significant
shale production within this timescale seems wholly unrealistic. "You
can forget about the next five to 10 years," says Prof Stevens. "Fifteen to 20 is a
cheap labour market, far fewer regulatory obstacles and, so far, relatively little public opposition.
possibility". Those governments looking to shale as a quick fix for high energy prices and security of supply
may, then, have unrealistic expectations. Shale may not be the saviour that many hope it to be.
Turns Relations
LNG destroys US-Russia relations
Allison and Blackwill 11(Graham Allison and Robert D. Blackwill,
director of the Belfer Center for Science and Intnational Affairs at Harvards
Kennedy School and senior fellow for the US foreign policy at the Council on
Foreign Relations, October 2011, da: August 1 2014, Russia and US National
Interests Why Should Americans Care,
http://belfercenter.ksg.harvard.edu/files/Russia-and-US-NI_final-web.pdf, PS)
Americans often tend to focus on either Russias strengths or its weaknesses without seeking an
integrated understanding of the real Russia. This is problematic, because it leads to dangerous
are clearly caricatures, views like those described above can produce damaging misjudgments. Russia is
grappling with the contradictions between imperial nostalgia, on the one hand, and the dramatic decline
States has the opportunity to manage its relations with an evolving Russia in a manner that advances
Turns Warming
LNG increasing warming- turns the advantage
Romm 12(Joe Romm, PhD from MIT and fellow at American Progress, June
18 2012, da: August 1 2014, Exporting Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) Is Bad For
The Climate, http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2012/06/18/500954/exportingliquefied-natural-gas-lng-is-bad-for-the-climate/,PS)
The surge in U.S. production of shale gas is creating a surge in permit requests to build liquefied natural
gas (LNG) terminals. Thats because the glut of U.S. gas has dropped domestic prices sharply below global
viability of some gas infrastructure investment if climate change objectives are to be met. And
infrastructure, which in any case will last many decades, long after the electric grid will not benefit from
replacing coal with gas. Furthermore, the U.S. Energy Information Administration concluded in a 2012
report on natural gas exports done for DOEs Office of Fossil Energy that such exports would also increase
domestic greenhouse gas emissions: [W]hen also accounting for emissions related to natural gas used in
the liquefaction process, additional exports increase CO2 levels under all cases and export scenarios,
a major new 2012 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences study on technology warming
potentials (TWPs) found that a big switch from coal to gas would only reduce TWP by about 25% over the
first three decades (see Natural Gas Is A Bridge To Nowhere Absent A Carbon Price AND Strong Standards
To Reduce Methane Leakage). And that is based on EPAs latest estimate of the amount of CH4 released
because of leaks and venting in the natural gas network between production wells and the local
distribution network of 2.4%. Many experts believe the leakage rate is higher than 2.4%, particularly for
shale gas. Also, recent air sampling by NOAA over Colorado found 4% methane leakage, more than double
industry claims. A different 2012 study by climatologist Ken Caldeira and tech guru Nathan Myhrvold finds
basically no benefit in the switch whatsoever see You Cant Slow Projected Warming With Gas, You Need
A new paper published last week by Brookings Hamilton Project, A Strategy for U.S. Natural Gas Exports,
asserts a different conclusion, primarily because it ignores all of the issues discussed above. Indeed, the
paper rather amazingly asserts Natural gas, though, has the same climate consequences whether it is
burned in the United States, Europe, or Asia, which would be true for exported U.S. gas only if we could
use magic to take the U.S. shale gas and put it into European or Asian gas-fired power plants. In the real
world,
No bridge to renewables
Oreskes 7-28(Naomi Oreskes, Professor of the history of science and
so emissions continue to
rise. To ensure that natural gas use doesnt follow such a path, youve got to do something. You could
introduce a law, like AB32, the California emissions control law, or put in place the pending EPA carbon rule
just introduced by the Obama administration that mandates emissions reductions. Or you could introduce
a hefty carbon tax to create a strong financial incentive for people to choose non-carbon based fuels. But
laws like AB32 are at present few and far between, the fossil fuel industry and its political and ideological
allies are fighting the EPA carbon rule tooth and nail, and only a handful of political leaders are prepared to
stand up in public and argue for a new tax. Meanwhile,
consumption are rising. A recent article by the business editor of the British Telegraph
describes a frenzy of fossil fuel production that may be leading to a new financial bubble. The huge
increase in natural gas production is, in reality, helping to keep the price of such energy lower,
discouraging efficiency and making it more difficult for renewables to compete. And this raises the most
worrisome issue of all. Embedded in all positive claims for gas is an essential assumption: that it replaces
Canada, where shale-gas development is well advanced, only a small fraction of electricity is generated
competition from
cheap gas was recently cited by the owners of the Vermont Yankee Nuclear
power plant as a factor in their decision to close down. And while the
evidence may be somewhat anecdotal, various reports suggest that cheap gas has
delayed or halted some renewable power projects . It stands to reason that if
from coal; most comes from hydropower or nuclear power. In the U.S.,
people believe natural gas is a green alternative, they will chose it over more expensive renewables.