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Lies And Deception In Ukraine's Energy
Sector
By Robert Bensh
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN,
February 9 2015
The Ukrainian government has repeatedly claimed it is doing its
best to improve the oil and gas investment climate, but official
statements are the opposite of the reality, as Prime Minister Arseniy
Yatsenyuk is leading the great deception.
According to Prime
Minister Yatseniuk, Ukraine has taken a number of important steps to
reform the energy sector, and has even achieved success in the formidable
fight against rampant corruption, as well as signed open and transparent
contracts for purchase of the natural gas from EU member states. Now he
claims Ukraine is looking forward to Western companies' investment in
Ukraine's gas transportation system.
"I would like to point out
where we have succeeded: we have succeeded in overcoming corruption in the
energy sector. Billions of dollars, which previously used to flow into the
pockets of Ukrainian oligarchs, are now being brought out of the shadows.
At present, Ukraine purchases gas under transparent and open contracts
with European companies," Yatseniuk recently told a joint press conference
with German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin.
Even the President
has made misguided and naïve statements this past week in Davos, declaring
that “…Ukraine will build new ways for receiving Norwegian gas and gas
from Europe, and Ukraine will also produce shale gas."
The stark
reality is that these official statements are in no way reflected by
government action, and the gas market players in Ukraine recognize the
deception as does the energy industry as a whole.
The real story
is that while gas has been received from Norway in reverse flows,
Ukraine's current energy strategy, taxation and fiscal regime has forced
Ukraine's current producers of oil and gas to stop drilling new wells and
curtail production.
The development of Ukraine's potential shale
gas is even further afield with Chevron announcing its departure from
Ukraine and only Cub Energy remaining in the country as an operator with
both technical and local expertise in developing the shale. Even if shale
can be developed in Ukraine it will be extremely challenging given the
highly service-oriented logistical train, which does not presently exist
in Ukraine.
In the course of the last year the Ukraine's private
gas producers were doing their best to overcome, if not merely survive,
the consequences of the government's move to significantly increase fiscal
and administrative pressure on the industry without any consultations with
the latter. The government failed to deliver on its promises, and the only
thing it managed to achieve was an undermining of any trust the industry
may have had in it.
Ukraine's current regulatory and fiscal
systems governing the energy sector are overly complicated and
non-transparent, even without the major political and military conflict
with Russia and annexation of the Crimea. The implications have been
significant. Since last year, all major oil and gas projects in Ukraine
have significantly slowed down at best, and been suspended entirely at
worst.
Issue by issue, the lies continue to mount.
Rising
Taxation
The government recently raised the tax burden on private
natural gas producers twofold (55% of the sales price - for the natural
gas extracted from deposits up to 5km, and 20% - for the natural gas
extracted from deposits deeper than 5km), instead of implementing
long-awaited market reforms. Notwithstanding its own promises for this to
be a temporary measure by 1 January 2015, at the initiative of the
Ministry of Finance, just a few days before the New Year, Parliament
rendered the tax increase permanent--in violation of the Parliament
majority's Coalition Agreement.
It is interesting to note that the
practicability of these high rates was based on the calculations and
official data of the Ministry of Finance for the old huge fields that had
been explored and developed in Soviet times by state-owned oil and gas
companies, while the gas producers were deprived of the opportunity to
present their own figures and assessments for the new wells drilled on
their smaller fields. The government simply brushed the matter aside,
stating that the costs and expenses claimed by the investors were
inflated.
Most poignantly here, the figures suggested by the
Ministry are so wildly out of line with the facts that even state-owned
oil and gas companies refuse to acknowledge them. Recently state-owned
Naftogaz calculated the economical production cost of natural gas
extracted by its subsidiary, Urgazvydobuvannya, up to UAH 5,430 [USD 344]
for 1,000 cubic meters (excluding VAT), which is much higher that the data
submitted by the Ministry of Finance (according to which the gas
production expenses do not exceed UAH 230-240 [USD 14.6-15.2] per 1,000
cubic meters).
Investors Are Ready for Cooperation, Not the
Government
Private gas producers have been open about their costs
and expenses. Some of them are actually publicly traded companies (JKX Oil
& Gas, Serinus Energy, Regal Petroleum and Cub Energy), and their
financial data is open, transparent and publicly available. Over and over
again investors sent letters to the Ministry of Finance, with a call for
cooperation and open dialogue, demonstrating the relevant figures and
presenting underlying documents and statistics. For some reasons the
Ministry chose to ignore their efforts and declined any suggestions to
establish a joint working group on this matter.
Instead of working
closely with the industry the Government has already pushed independent
businesses out of the gas market by introducing Naftogaz's monopoly on gas
supplies to large industrial consumers. This is because the government has
been trying desperately to ensure financial support for the eternally
cash-starved Naftogaz. Forcefully redirecting the financial flows from gas
consumers in favor of Naftogaz was a small-minded, short-sighted remedy.
Such administrative measures shocked the Energy Community, which demanded
explanations from Ukrainian officials as such measures completely
contradict European 3rd Energy package.
Corruption in the Energy
Sector
No need to say that such a state of affairs only encourages
corruption in the country. In spite of the Prime Minister's promises and
assurances to the contrary, the energy sector is still the biggest source
of corruption in the Ukrainian economy.
Repeated reports by the
IMF, the World Bank, and the International Energy Agency (IEA) bring up
the issue of corruption in the energy sector. They strongly recommend
abolishing price subsidies and cross-subsidization, as well as raising gas
prices to a level that will at least cover the production costs of the
state producers. Ukraine's system of gas subsidies for households has long
been abused by the gas distribution companies that are able to buy gas
intended for households at subsidized prices and sell it to businesses at
much higher market prices, with a 200-400% margin. The estimated budget
losses exceed hundreds of millions of dollars per year. No need to say
that the existing system only further destabilizes Ukraine's economy and
puts enormous pressure on Naftogaz and its subsidiaries, at whose cost
these subsidies are cross-directed by the Government.
No Reforms,
No Success
It is obvious that the measures and steps taken by the
Ukrainian Government have nothing in common with successes and reforms
claimed by Arseniy Yatseniuk, as neither doubling tax rates and serving
the oligarchs' interests nor corruption and monopolization of the gas
market correspond to the recommendations given by the Energy Community and
IMF to Ukraine. Despite repeated announcements, implementation of the
reform has been held back by fear of losing the electorate's support and
approval of the oligarchs' groups. Under the mask of nominal fight with
the oligarchs the Government takes populist decisions and the Parliament
adopts killing laws. One must admit that the Government seems to be
unwilling to undo the money-making mechanisms in the energy sector.
Given the desperate situation in which Ukraine finds itself today, it
should have become extremely committed to the proper development of its
domestic gas production, as that would introduce some extra volumes of the
gas produced, in addition to 20 bcm domestically, into the local market to
satisfy Ukraine's ever-hungry annual consumption of around 53 bcm. This
would also allow Naftogaz to save some foreign currency reserves on buying
imported gas in lesser volumes, including gas coming from Russia. As a
result, financial pressure on the state budget and government (which
attempts to plug Naftogaz' deficit by any means necessary - including
loans from state-owned banks, international financial institutions and
currency reserves of the National Bank of Ukraine) could have been
significantly lowered.
Instead, the government has directed its
actions against independent gas producers and the continuing crackdown is
severely affecting both the country's energy independence and its currency
reserves. The massive fiscal and administrative burden and lack of
investment in the national gas extraction industry will only result in
further decline of gas production, worsening of economic conditions and a
higher degree of Ukrainian dependence on Russia. Ukraine's short sighted
policy moves ensure that investment in the sector will cease and
attracting new capital will become nearly impossible as Ukraine will be
viewed as hostile based on it's treatment of businesses currently
operating in the country.
The revenues that the government hoped
to generate from taxation of the oil and gas companies with the
concomitant politically popular taxation of the oligarchs is proving to be
a failure, as its actions are not only killing the independent gas
production industry in the country, but are in fact depriving Ukraine of
the opportunity to become a strong, energy independent economy. Without
implementation of the necessary reforms, the Ukrainian energy sector will
continue to be the nursery of corruption and playground for blackmail,
which Russia enjoys greatly.
Source:
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Lies-And-Deception-In-Ukraines-Energy-Sector.html
By Robert Bensh for Oilprice.com
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