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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: LindyBill who wrote (59080)11/27/2002 8:33:52 AM
From: John Carragher  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 281500
 
Russia plans U.S. oil link

Four firms team to build terminal at Arctic port to provide more oil to U.S. market.
November 27, 2002: 8:11 AM EST

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia's top oil firms teamed up in a multi-billion dollar deal on Wednesday to build a giant
export terminal in Russia's only ice-free Arctic port, a move that should help the U.S. cut its dependency on the Middle
East.

The planned deal comes as Russia seeks new markets outside Europe while the U.S., the world's biggest oil consumer, wants to
diversify its sources of oil away from more traditional but politically turbulent suppliers.

"Russian firms could supply up to 13 percent of the United States' total crude oil imports by 2010,'' the four firms said in a
statement.

The memorandum of understanding was signed by executives from Lukoil, Yukoa, Tyumen Oil Co. and Sibneft, which together
account more than half of Russia's eight million barrel per day output.

They agreed to build a one million barrels-per-day terminal in Murmansk on the Barents Sea, the only port Russia has in the Arctic
thast does not freeze over in winter, and a 935-mile link between Murmansk and the country's existing pipeline network.

They should be completed by 2007.

Lukoil first floated the idea to build a terminal in Murmansk, a major naval base since Soviet days, in May.

Russia, the world's second-largest oil exporter, currently ships up to four million barrels per day of crude oil to world markets. Its
output is booming for the fourth straight year and Moscow needs new export routes as its domestic consumption remains flat.

Russian oil firms, which traditionally ship their crude to Europe, say they are ready to supply more crude to the United States but
need more deep water ports.

The United States has said Russia's booming output could help cushion oil markets against volatile supplies from OPEC producers
in the Middle East.

The proposed new port comes amid increasingly friendly relations between Moscow and Washington, particularly since last year's
Sept. 11 attacks on the United States.



To: LindyBill who wrote (59080)11/28/2002 12:44:47 AM
From: D. Long  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
But the Turks aren't Arabs, and they aren't a one-factory town like the Arabs. Just notice all the little stickers on stuff at the store that says "Made in Turkey." When was the last time you saw anything that said, "Made in Kuwait?"

I believe we should reward those nations whose cooperation has been, and continues to be, a strategic asset to us. The European route is to try and insult them into being Norwegians.

Derek