Gazprom PJSC, the world’s biggest natural gas
exporter, is planning for the lowest price for its fuel in its main European
market for more than a decade.
The state-run exporter is drafting its
budget for 2016 with preliminary estimates for gas prices outside the former
Soviet Union of about $200 per 1,000 cubic meters ($5.45 a million British
thermal units), said two people with direct knowledge of the matter who asked
not to be identified because the information is private. That compares with the
company’s estimate of an average price for the region, which covers Turkey and
Europe outside the Baltic States, in 2015 of about $238 per 1,000 cubic meters
and $349 last year.
The company’s press office declined to
comment on estimates.
Gazprom, which supplies about a third of
Europe’s gas and relies on exports of the fuel for 40 percent of its annual
revenue of more than $100 billion, is facing declining prices abroad as most of
its contracts are linked to oil with a time lag of six to nine months. Brent
crude has lost 16 percent this year after a 48 percent drop in 2014. The
company is also facing increased competition as the U.S. prepares to export its
first liquefied natural gas from the Gulf Coast.
“Gazprom’s forecasts look reasonable,”
Alexei Kokin, an energy analyst at UralSib Financial Corp. in Moscow, said by
phone Friday. Russia has the capacity to maintain its market share in Europe
given lower prices next year even amid the predicted glut in LNG, he said.
Weaker Ruble
The Moscow-based company is set to this
year note its lowest revenue outside the former USSR in a decade in dollar
terms. Sales in rubles may rise to a record, reflecting a 2.2 percent weakening
of the Russian currency against the dollar this year, following a 46 percent
drop last year.
Exports to the region are expected to
stay stable at about 160 billion cubic meters (5.6 trillion cubic feet) in 2016
with revenue in rubles declining but still near the average of the past few
years, according to one of the people.
GAZPROM SALES OUTSIDE EX-USSR
Price
$/1,000 m3 |
Volume
billion m3 |
Revenue
$b |
Revenue
t rubles |
|
2010
|
302
|
138.6
|
41.9
|
1.3
|
2011
|
383
|
150
|
57.5
|
1.7
|
2012
|
402
|
138.8
|
55.8
|
1.7
|
2013
|
385
|
161.5
|
62.2
|
2.0
|
2014
|
349
|
146.6
|
51.2
|
1.9
|
2015e
|
238
|
160
|
38
|
2.3
|
2016e
|
200
|
160
|
32
|
2.0
|
Source: Gazprom, *Bloomberg calculations
using central bank exchange rates
Note: Sales from Russian territory, excluding gas traded by EU units, LNG
Note: Sales from Russian territory, excluding gas traded by EU units, LNG
Gazprom has most of its costs in rubles
and sees no risks for its investment projects, one of the people said. It also
isn’t ready to agree on advance payments from China, in discussion since at
least last year, if the Asian nation demands a serious price discount in
exchange, the person said.
The company plans to spend more than $50
billion on three major export routes during the next four to five years -- a
new gas link to Germany through the Baltic Sea, a Black Sea pipeline to Turkey
and an export route to China, including development of the fields to feed it.
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