The Prirazlomnaya offshore rig, Gazprom Neft's oil production outpost on the Russian Arctic Shelf.
Alexei Danichev/RIA NovostiThis week the annual S&P Global Platts ranking of world’s largest energy companies welcomed a new leader. The Russian state-owned energy corporation Gazprom trumped American ExxonMobil, which had topped the bill since 2004.
The U.S. corporation has taken a serious dive, falling back to ninth position, behind German E.ON SE, Indian Reliance Industries, Korea Electric Power Corp, and Chinese CNPC, among others. The top 10 companies’ combined profit reached $63.7 billion last year, which is 14 percent lower that the previous period.
How did Gazprom reach such lofty heights? Ivan Kapitonov, professor at the Higher School of Corporate Management at the Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration (RANEPA), thinks the main reason that ensured Gazprom’s rise was ExxonMobil’s slip, triggered by falling oil prices and the sanctions war with Russia. The price of crude oil in 2016 (a period considered by the ranking) was on average $46 per barrel, well below 2015’s average.
“There is nothing supernatural here. If ExxonMobil hadn’t suffered to such an extent, Gazprom wouldn’t be able to surpass it,” he told Russia Beyond.
According to Kapitonov, Gazprom is still confidently moving forward with its North Stream-2 gas pipeline project from Russia to the EU. It’s due to be completed by the end of 2019. “A whole area of potential investment opportunities is emerging here, even though some are not obvious at the moment,” the expert says.
Speaking of the ranking itself, which is based on the annual assessment of companies’ asset worth, revenues, profits, and return on investment, Kapitonov says Gazprom’s position shouldn’t be taken for granted. “Falling back or climbing up by 100 positions is possible in this ranking, so gaining first place should be treated as motivation (for Gazprom) to keep going forward,” he told Russia Beyond.
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