Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Gazprom Neft's"


6 mentions found


London CNN —Russia’s decision to ban diesel exports to most countries could not have come at a worse time for Europe. But the EU still needs a steady flow of Russian diesel to global markets to keep prices stable. The Russian government announced the curbs — which also apply to gasoline — Thursday, saying they were aimed at stabilizing domestic fuel prices. Diesel is Europe’s economic workhorse, powering the majority of vans and trucks ferrying goods and raw materials round the continent. Before Europe imposed its import ban, Russia supplied 40% of the country’s diesel.
Persons: London CNN —, ” Jorge León, , Natalia Kolesnikova, Pamela Munger, Henning Gloystein, Gloystein, , Tim Lister, Anna Chernova Organizations: London CNN, European Union, Reuters, Kremlin, Diesel, Analysts, European, Rystad Energy, CNN, Gazprom, Getty, Eurasia Group, , Brent Locations: Europe, Russian, Moscow, Ukraine, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South America, East, North Africa, AFP, Turkey, United States
Russia's Gazprom Neft Q2 net profit falls 43% y/y
  + stars: | 2023-08-24 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +1 min
Profits for global oil majors have dropped by about half from a bumper 2022, when Russia's actions in Ukraine sent oil and gas prices soaring. Gazprom Neft did not publish its financial results last year. The company, the oil arm of gas giant Gazprom (GAZP.MM), also said its April-June total revenues decreased to 821.6 billion roubles from 835.8 billion in the same period in 2022. Russia's energy sector has been under severe pressure from Western sanctions, imposed over Moscow's actions in Ukraine. They include price caps and an embargo on purchases of Russia's sea-borne oil.
Persons: Vladimir Soldatkin, Mark Potter, Gareth Jones Organizations: Gazprom Neft, Kremlin, Gazprom, Gazprom Neft's, Thomson Locations: Russia, Ukraine MOSCOW, Ukraine, Moscow, China, India
ST PETERSBURG, Russia, July 20 (Reuters) - Russia's successor to McDonald's has teamed up with energy company Gazprom Neft (SIBN.MM) to fuel marine vessels with biofuel produced using waste cooking oil an effort to lower their carbon footprints, the companies said on Thursday. Russia has said it was still committed to its climate targets despite the deepest political rift with the West in decades. It said the new fuel is in compliance with technical regulations and can be used for most sea and river vessels. Vkusno & tochka already supplies waste cooking oil for production of biofuel used for heating of electric-powered buses in Moscow and has been recycling used cooking oil for over a decade. Irina Korshunova, in charge of sustainable development at Vkusno & tochka, said the company processes around 5,500 tonnes of waste cooking oil each year.
Persons: McDonald's, Gazprom Neft Marin Bunker, Anton Soboled, Irina Korshunova, Olesya Astakhova, Vladimir Soldatkin, Alexander Marrow, Angus MacSwan Organizations: Gazprom Neft, Biofuels, Gazprom Neft's, Thomson Locations: PETERSBURG, Russia, Baltic, St . Petersburg, McDonald's, Ukraine, Moscow
London CNN —The price of Russian crude oil has risen above a price cap set by the Group of Seven nations, in the first “real test” of whether the West can enforce one of its key sanctions against Moscow. “This is the first real test of the price cap sanctions,” Matthew Wright, a senior freight analyst at Kpler, told CNN. “High interest rates, declining economic activity in China, and a potential recession in the West,” have depressed oil prices globally. The smaller gap shows that the G7 price cap is “having a diminishing impact on Russian oil revenues,” Richard Bronze, co-founder and head of geopolitics at Energy Aspects, told CNN. Despite rising oil prices, buyers like India are unlikely to turn their backs on Russian oil, said Wright at Kpler.
Persons: ” Matthew Wright, Wright, “ It’s, Russia —, That’s, ” Richard Bronze, Natalia Kolesnikova, , Tim Lister Organizations: London CNN, Group, Moscow, Argus Media, European Union, Argus, EU, CNN, Organization of, Petroleum, Gazprom, US Treasury, International Energy Agency, IEA Locations: China, India, Europe, Russia, OPEC, Ukraine, Brent, Moscow, AFP, Western, Kpler, Russian, Saudi Arabia
The stable output at Gazprom Neft, which controls Russia's largest oil refinery in the western Siberian city of Omsk, shows the resilience of the Russian oil industry despite the harshest Western sanctions in recent history. The 400,000-barrel per day (bpd) Omsk plant, 1,600 km east of Moscow, started operations in 1955 and is Russia's largest oil refinery. He said the company continues modernisation of the plant following the launch of a deep oil refining complex earlier this year. Next year, Gazprom Neft plans to install a primary refining complex at the plant with capacity of 8.4 million tonnes per year. According to Vedernikov, the Omsk refinery is also working on production of the needle coke.
Russia's security elites are silovarchs, a term combining "oligarch" and "siloviki" ("people of force.") Analyst Hugo Crosthwaite said silovarchs are closer to President Vladimir Putin than oligarchs. According to Treisman, oligarchs do not hold a great deal of political influence, while silovarchs are more powerful. Table of Silovarchs Viktor Ivanov – former chair of the board for Almaz-Antei and Aeroflot – had a career in Soviet KGB and Russian FSB. Rashid Nurgaliev– former interior minister and deputy secretary of the Security Council – is Army General and worked for the FSB.
Total: 6