Page added on December 27, 2008
Plan for ‘gas Opec’ could tighten Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s grip on Europe’s gas supplies.
The Russian national anthem blared over the loudspeakers as dozens of oilmen and officials braved the freezing cold to watch the tanker come in, celebrating the launch of year-round oil production from Sakhalin-2, the largest oil and gas project in the world.
They congratulated themselves and stared out to the sea with pride.
Yet this month’s event will be dwarfed by one to come early next year, when the sprawling plant on the tip of Russia’s Far Eastern island of Sakhalin begins producing liquefied natural gas, or LNG, a relatively new form of energy.
The advent of LNG may one day allow gas exporting countries, who gathered in Moscow last week to create a new organisation, to act as a cartel along the lines of Opec, holding sway over prices and supply, and thus consumers around the world.
Leave a Reply