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OIL AND GAS
Moscow continues to cry foul over Yukos ruling
by Daniel J. Graeber
Moscow (UPI) Aug 12, 2014


Oil arm of Russia's Gazprom posts financial gains
Moscow (UPI) Aug 12, 2013 - The oil arm of Russian gas company Gazprom said Tuesday it made $2.4 billion in net profits in the first half of the year, up 13 percent from 2013.

Gazprom Neft released its report for the first half of the year. On top of a boost in net profits, the company said an increase in hydrocarbon production helped drive sales up 13.9 percent year-on-year.

"Hydrocarbon production volumes in the first half of the year increased 4.1 percent year-on-year to 234.18 million barrels of oil equivalent," the company said in a statement.

The company last month announced a subsidiary started drilling into the arctic Dolginskoye field, where it estimates reserves at more than 200 million tons of oil equivalent. It June, the company started preliminary oil production from the Badra oil field in Iraq, which has estimated reserves of 3 billion barrels of oil.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration, the statistical arm of the Energy Department, said in a July brief that exports of crude oil, petroleum products and natural gas accounted for 68 percent of all export revenues for Russia in 2013.

An arbitration panel at The Hague decided its case against former Russian oil company Yukos on political grounds, Russia's deputy foreign minister said Tuesday.

"Instead of an objective and unbiased consideration of the matter, the Arbitration Court panel was guided by situational considerations in its actions and, as a result, passed a politically motivated decision," Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Vasily Nebenzya said in Tuesday interview with news agency ITAR-Tass.

The Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague in July ruled the Kremlin is liable for around $50 billion in damages in the case against Yukos, disbanded in 2006.

Former Yukos head Mikhail Khodorkovsky was arrested in 2003 and convicted of tax evasion and theft in 2005. The company was then sold off, with most of the shares going toward Russian state-owned oil company Rosneft, controlled by Igor Sechin, a close ally of President Vladimir Putin

Nebenzya said the court at The Hague had no jurisdiction to hear the case in the first place. The amount issued in the decision, he said, was derived arbitrarily.

The European Court of Human Rights followed the Dutch court's decision and ordered the Russian government to pay shareholders of Yukos around $2.6 billion in damages.

Russia's energy sector is the target of economic sanctions issued by Western governments frustrated with Moscow's stance on ongoing crises in Ukraine.

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