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Putin pledges tax breaks to revive Russian oil growth

Putin pledges tax breaks to revive Russian oil growth

Write: Roslyn [2011-05-20]
UST LUGA, Russia - Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said on Wednesday Russia would grant tax breaks to new oil provinces to revive output growth at the world's No.2 oil exporter and add over a tenth to current output levels by 2015.

The Russian stock market .IRTS, dominated heavily by oil stocks, rose 2.84 percent on the news to its all time high with the MICEX oil and gas index jumping 5.14 and No.4 oil firm Surgutneftegaz (SNGS.MM: Quote, Profile, Research) soaring almost 11 percent.

Putin said Russia should grant tax breaks for a period of up to seven years to firms developing offshore fields, the Yamal peninsula and the northern Timan-Pechora province. Currently such breaks exist only for East Siberia.

"It is necessary to introduce tax breaks for companies exploring and developing new deposits. Seven years is a reasonable term," Putin said while visiting Baltic Sea oil export ports of Primorsk and Ust Luga.

Oil is the backbone of the Russian economy and Putin chose it as the key topic of his first trip as a prime minister since he stepped down as president last week.

He also called on the parliament to urgently reduce mineral extraction tax on oil, give bigger tax incentives to develop depleted fields and increase processing of light products.

Russian oil companies have long urged the government to change the tax system, which has not been amended for several years despite rising costs and inflation, to encourage producers to invest in new regions to support falling production.

Russia's oil output grew by just 2 percent in 2007 and has moved into negative territory in the first quarter of this year after large spikes earlier this decade, which allowed Russia to exceed production levels at the world's top oil nation, Saudi Arabia, during some months.



OIL RALLY

Slower production growth in Russia, the main source of incremental crude for the world outside OPEC in the past years, has been often cited as one of the reasons behind the oil price rally amid growing global demand for energy.

Putin said he expected Russian oil output to rise by 67 million tonnes (1.3 million bpd), or 13.6 percent, by 2015. Russia produced 491.481 million tonnes (9.9 million barrels per day) last year. In April, production stood at 9.72 million bpd.

Putin appointed this week one of his closest allies, Igor Sechin - seen as one of the main architects of the partial renationalisation of the Russian energy industry - as his deputy in charge of the oil industry.

Sechin, seen as one of Russia's most influential and secretive officials, told Interfax news agency on Wednesday he was upbeat about the oil output growth prospects this year despite gloomy forecasts by the previous government.

For a story on Sechin click on [ID:nL1449713]. Traders said the two men's comments were behind the stock rally.

"I haven't seen anything like this in a long time. A real oil rally -- both Russians and foreigners buying. And the oil names pulling up the rest of the market," said Pavel Koryshev of investment group East Kommerts.

The Russian market had underperformed other emerging markets at the beginning of the year due to what traders said were concerns over the smoothness of power handover in Russia.

Putin's protege Dmitry Medvedev was sworn in as president last week, but first government and Kremlin's administration appointments have shown Putin is still largely in charge.

Putin visited Primorsk, already Russia's biggest crude oil export outlet, to open a new refined product export terminal, which will ship over 8 million tonnes of diesel.

He reiterated that Russia would drastically reduce refined products exports via Latvia and other Baltic Sea countries, with which Moscow has difficult diplomatic relations, when the new product terminal in Primorsk is expanded.

But he said Primorsk won't get more crude in addition to its current exports of 1.6 million bpd as it makes more sense to build new facilities in Ust Luga to ship abroad an extra 600,000 bpd of crude and up to 20 million of refined products.