A file of our news stories stretching back to July 2005 concerning the former Royal Dutch Shell Sakhalin II project can be found on the link below: –
http://www.shellnews.net/blog/our-dire-warnings-about-sakhalin-since-july-2005.html
With all due modesty, no one has run alarm bells as loudly or as long about this ill fated project or have been as accurate in forecasting the current disastrous outcome for Shell both financially and in respect of its reputation. Our warnings have resulted from information received from Shell/Sakhalin insiders. read more
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(Man of the people … Vladimir Putin greets children in Moscow’s Red Square.
Photo: AP/Yuri Kochetkov)
The New York Times
Steven Lee Myers in Moscow
INSIDE the Kremlin last week, the executives of three big international companies – Royal Dutch Shell, Mitsubishi and Mitsui – heaped praise on the man whose government had forced them to cede control of the world’s largest combined oil and natural gas project.
“Thank you very much for your support,” Shell’s chief executive, Jeroen van der Veer, told the President, Vladimir Putin. The meeting ended a six-month regulatory assault on the project, Sakhalin II, but only after the companies surrendered control of it to the state energy giant, Gazprom. read more
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By Heidi Vogt
The Associated Press
Sunday, December 31, 2006
DAKAR, Senegal
Angola is joining the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, African oil exploration is booming, and China is investing. The stampede for oil in Africa has continued even as militant attacks in some countries and precarious governments in others make returns uncertain there.
Though much of the continent is just as conflict-ridden as the Middle East, analysts say, Africa is increasingly attractive because it is one of a diminishing number of regions still welcoming foreign corporations. read more
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EXTRACT: POOR RECORD: The EBRD is supposed to demand strict environmental compliance from its borrowers and green groups said Shell’s poor record in managing Sakhalin-2 meant the project did not qualify.
THE ARTICLE
Sun Dec 31, 2006 3:22 PM GMT
By Tom Bergin
LONDON (Reuters) – Russian gas giant Gazprom’s decision to take a majority stake in the Royal Dutch Shell-led Sakhalin-2 project may save the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) from having to approve its most controversial loan application ever. read more
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By Sylvia Pfeifer
31 December 2006
Europe’s top development bank is set to walk away from the Sakhalin-2 energy project in what will be seen as an embarrassing snub to the renationalisation policy of Vladimir Putin, the Russian president.
The London-based European Bank for Reconstruction & Development – which was established to encourage free markets in the former Soviet bloc – fears that the $20bn Russian scheme no longer qualifies for support after Shell and its two partners were forced to sell stakes to Gazprom, the state-owned gas company.
“With the emergence of Gazprom as the major shareholder in Sakhalin Energy Investment Company, the project has effectively been nationalised,” said one industry executive familiar with Sakhalin. “The bank doesn’t normally back projects of that nature.” read more
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Week of December 31, 2006
Proponents of the Mackenzie Gas Project have invested about C$500 million in the venture so far, but a confluence of rising costs, weakening economics and aboriginal resistance that has slowed down the regulatory process could still undo that commitment, TransCanada Chief Executive Officer Hal Kvisle has warned.
In a year-end interview he delivered one of the bleakest assessments yet of the proposal to finally start shipping gas from Canada’s Arctic region to southern markets. read more
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Production and access challenges may drive growth
By KRISTEN HAYS
Oil exploration and production companies that have enjoyed record profits fueled by high commodity prices over the last two years may go to the altar in 2007 to keep growing.
Analysts say the energy sector could see more mergers and acquisitions to counteract difficulty in gaining access to oil and natural gas and higher costs of getting it to the surface.
Fadel Gheit, an oil analyst with Oppenheimer & Co. in New York, said many oil companies are in prime financial condition with clean balance sheets and billions on hand. read more
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BEHOLDEN TO BIG OIL…. If I didn’t know better, I might just think the Bush administration is a little too cozy with the oil industry.
The Justice Department is investigating whether the director of a multibillion-dollar oil-trading program at the Interior Department has been paid as a consultant for oil companies hoping for contracts.
The director of the program and three subordinates, all based in Denver, have been transferred to different jobs and have been ordered to cease all contacts with the oil industry until the investigation is completed some time next spring, according to officials involved. read more
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There will be bruises as predators, politicians and regulators get stuck in. Chief executives will have to rise to the challenge if they want to keep their jobs – and their huge salaries. Oliver Morgan reports
Sunday December 31, 2006
Politics are likely to play a big role in the last full year that Lord Browne spends at the top of oil group BP. Much of BP’s recent growth has come from its 50:50 joint venture with Russian company TNK. However, earlier this month, BP’s rival Shell was forced to cede control of its joint venture to develop the massive Sakhalin-2 oil and gas field off Russia’s east coast to Gazprom after pressure from the Kremlin. read more
shellplc.website and its sister non-profit websites
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By Sylvia Pfeifer
31 December 2006
Europe’s top development bank is set to walk away from the Sakhalin-2 energy project in what will be seen as an embarrassing snub to the renationalisation policy of Vladimir Putin, the Russian president.
The London-based European Bank for Reconstruction & Development – which was established to encourage free markets in the former Soviet bloc – fears that the $20bn Russian scheme no longer qualifies for support after Shell and its two partners were forced to sell stakes to Gazprom, the state-owned gas company.
“With the emergence of Gazprom as the major shareholder in Sakhalin Energy Investment Company, the project has effectively been nationalised,” said one industry executive familiar with Sakhalin. “The bank doesn’t normally back projects of that nature.” read more
shellplc.website and its sister non-profit websites
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By Alfred Donovan
Saturday 30 December 2006
The Sakhalin II project and related backdrop events have been marked by deception, double-dealing, corruption, massive pollution, intrigue, blackmail, murder and spies. Some might unfairly say this constitutes a fairly typical Shell project, as per the example of Shell’s activities in Nigeria.
With the assistance of a number of Shell/Sakhalin Energy insiders, we are completing the draft of an article which will be published next week on our own website and simultaneously by a news publishing source. Individuals associated with the project who are mentioned in the current draft include Jeroen van der Veer, Malcolm Brinded, David Greer, Mike Taylor, Steve McVeigh, David Meehan, Campbell Wyper and Togrul Tosun. We understand that Tosun was made redundant in the late 90s when the failure of managing Kashagan was unfairly blamed on him in order to keep the real culprits (such as Henk Dijkgraaf) out of the firing line. read more
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By ANDREW E. KRAMER
Published: December 30, 2006
MOSCOW, Dec. 29 — For Gazprom, the Russian energy monopoly, 2006 is ending as it began: in a dispute over prices and control of a pipeline in a neighboring country that is threatening the smooth flow of natural gas to Europe.
But this time, the price increase was levied on a Russian ally, Belarus, a country whose foreign policy is aligned with Moscow in all but one important aspect: support for increasing cash flow at Gazprom.
“All this means destruction of our relations” with Russia, Belarus’s president, Aleksandr G. Lukashenko, said in comments carried on state television on Friday. read more
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(Photo: Joseph Sywenkyj for The New York Times: The Sakhalin 2 project in Russia’s Far East is still under construction. Last week Gazprom took control of the project when foreign developers, led by Royal Dutch Shell, agreed to sell it 50 percent plus one share.)
By ANDREW E. KRAMER
MOSCOW: The Russian government has won another concession from the foreign partners of the oil and natural-gas field being developed in Russia’s remote Far East, known as Sakhalin 2.
Last week Gazprom, the Russian energy monopoly, took control of the project when foreign developers led by Royal Dutch Shell agreed to sell 50 percent plus one share to Gazprom, after months of pressure on the company and accusations about environmental issues from a Russian regulator. Critics called the sale a forced nationalization. read more
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By Robert Orr
Published: December 30 2006 02:00 | Last updated: December 30 2006 02:00
The year’s worst performer was Carnival, the cruise-ship operator, while other notable underperformers included oil giant BP and GlaxoSmithKline, the pharmaceuticals company.
With the price of crude falling below $60 a barrel for the first time in a month,oil stocks were lower. Royal Dutch Shell eased 0.7 per cent to £17.90, further unsettled by news that it would have to share the burden of cost overruns at the Sakhalin-2 development in Russia with its two Japanese partners. The news is the latest blow to Shell in Russia, where it has been forced to cede control of Sakhalin-2 to local group Gazprom. read more
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By Christopher Brown-Humes
Published: December 30 2006 02:00 | Last updated: December 30 2006 02:00
…one of the surprises of the year was just how many of the UK’s top 20 companies did so badly. Six of them actually saw their share prices fall – BP, Shell, GlaxoSmithKline, AstraZeneca, BHP Billiton and HSBC.
BP was the FTSE 100’s third worst performer, falling 8.3 per cent, while Royal Dutch Shell dropped 3.7 per cent. Both felt the effect of the drop in oil prices towards the end of the year but the average price of crude in 2006 was still almost 17 per cent higher than in 2005. BP was beset by problems in the US, including the fatal explosion at its Texas City refinery in March last year, an oil spill in Alaska in March and delays to the opening of the flagship Thunder Horse project in the Gulf of Mexico. read more
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David Teather and Angela Balakrishnan
Saturday December 30, 2006
Behind many of the year’s stories was the shifting world order: the emerging power of Russia, India and China.
The year began with Russia cutting gas supplies to Ukraine, raising fears of shortages and soaring prices across Europe. At the end of the year Shell was forced by the Russian government to reduce its stake in the world’s biggest liquefied gas project. Both raised fears about the Kremlin using the country’s natural resources as a political weapon as well as highlighting concerns about both the security and cost of energy supplies as emerging economies began to compete for resources. read more
shellplc.website and its sister non-profit websites
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John Donovan. There is also a
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