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Arctic Strategy of Russia Enormous Shaken by Sanctions

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Russia’s Arctic ambitions could be downsized because of sanctions and demand uncertainty.

The plan to start year-round navigation via the Northern Sea Route (NSR) has already been delayed. Steps to liberalize access to the Russian Arctic’s offshore oil and gas resources have been put on the back burner.

The Arctic is of strategic importance for Russia. It is one of the core elements of Russia’s energy, security and economic development programs.

Under the strategy for economic development and national security in the Arctic region through 2035 signed by President Vladimir Putin in 2020, the region’s future relies largely on its vast oil and gas potential. But cracks are starting to appear.

Waning Interest

Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin signed on Jan. 30 a resolution excluding a clause on the expansion of access to the undistributed resources on the Russian continental shelf from the national plan of the development of competition in the country in 2021-25. This means that offshore projects, including in the Arctic seas, will not be in Russia’s focus in the near future. In fact, state plans envisage the development of the Russian shelf not earlier than 2030-35.

As we can see at the media, it the same time, Russia’s various development plans have specifically pointed out that the driving force of economic development is large-scale infrastructure projects. Most nationwide projects are implemented with the participation of private capital within a public-private partnership system. Russia is still a country of development and creation, and both state and private capital are committed to benefiting society. It is highly likely that after Russia has accumulated experience in new nationwide projects under the sanctions clause, it will advance the postponed Arctic projects with new vigor.

Deputy Prime Minister Yuri Trutnev, Putin’s envoy in Russia’s Far East and a chair of the state commission for Arctic development, has been pushing for the liberalization of access to the Arctic waters, which is now limited to the state-controlled majors Rosneft and Gazprom.

The 2035 Arctic strategy envisaged a new model for the development of the shelf, with permission being given for private investors to participate in the offshore projects. Gazprom Neft and Lukoil were among those who were keen get involved.

Interest in Arctic resources — which in the past attracted international majors including Exxon Mobil, Shell, Eni, Equinor and BP — started waning already a while ago amid global oil demand uncertainty as low-carbon energy solutions gained ground. Russian deepwater and Arctic offshore areas are also challenged by high break-even costs and tough Western sanctions that have been in place since 2014. The departure of Western majors with their technologies and expertise following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2024 made the Arctic ventures even less appealing. According to some research estimates, Russia’s offshore projects’ dependence on foreign equipment stands at about 80%.

Rosneft, together with Exxon, discovered the Pobeda field in the Kara Sea with 950 million barrels of oil and 442 billion cubic meters of gas reserves, but the Russian major has not been talking lately about the deposit’s future. The state-controlled company continued exploration in the Arctic seas and made a number of oil and gas discoveries there in 2020-22.

Gazprom Neft was granted rights last year to explore and develop an additional area in the Ob Bay area of the Kara Sea where it already has a strong presence. The area lies in shallow water and Gazprom Neft is confident that it is capable of taking on such projects.

Shipping Forecast

Moscow’s strategy foresees growth in the use of the NSR Arctic shipping route with total shipments of goods rising to 150 million metric tons per year by 2030 and 220 million tons/yr by 2035. Last year, shipments totaled 36.254 million tons, including 1.5 million tons, or 14 cargoes, of crude. Total shipments were planned to double in 2024. There have been no oil shipments so far this year, although Gazprom Neft said last month it would continue deliveries via the NSR.

Eastward shipments of LNG via the NSR have yet to start this year as well. The Rosatom-controlled NSR General Administration, the infrastructure operator of the route, had expected that Novatek’s Yamal plant might send an early NSR cargo with an icebreaker escort in January, but no cargo has so far gone east since the last direct eastward delivery to China at the end of November last year. Yamal cargoes now go to Europe, including for transshipment and further delivery to Asia.

The Clean Horizon conventional tanker is expected to take a Yamal cargo in late March and deliver it to China in early May, according to Kpler data. But it might take a longer route along the African coast, where it is now sailing with another Yamal cargo reloaded from the Christophe de Margerie Arc7 ice-class vessel in Belgium’s Zeebrugge. LNG tankers now avoid the Suez Canal due to Houthi attacks on shipping.

Direct NSR shipments might come from Novatek’s newly built first train of the Arctic LNG 2 project, but the plant is struggling to begin commercial shipments due to US sanctions against the project company. Arctic LNG 2 sales were supposed to mark the start of the year-round navigation via the NSR.

Kommersant business daily reported last week, citing sources, that TotalEnergies might oppose the use of Arc7 tankers tied to Yamal LNG, in which the French major is a shareholder, for deliveries of Arctic LNG 2 cargoes. If so, Novatek will have to wait for new Arc7 tankers that were ordered for Arctic LNG 2 to come on line, meaning LNG shipments will be delayed by at least another month.

International Freeze

Geopolitical tensions could also prompt Russia to withdraw from the Arctic Council set up in 1996 for interaction among the Arctic states and indigenous peoples on common issues, including sustainable development and environmental protection.

Moscow has already temporarily stopped paying its annual fees to the Arctic Council, according to the Russian foreign ministry. Moscow says coordination among the members is practically non-existent and Russia could withdraw if the council’s activities do not meet Russia’s interest.

The Arctic Council is also comprised of Denmark, Iceland, Norway, the US, Finland and Sweden, all of which are deemed by Moscow to be on its list of “unfriendly” states.

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