Category:

CP Rail's CEO Sees Revenue Doubling in Crude-Oil Shipments

Ltd. ‘s crude-oil shipping business will likely see its revenue double to 10% of the rail’s overall total in the next two or three years, the company’s chief executive said. Hunter Harrison said demand from Western Canada’s oil producers to ship crude by rail to refineries is likely to increase as output rises. "In the next two or three years, it’ll probably go to 10% of the business," he said. "There’s a lot of opportunities." The risk of derailment and other safety issues associated with shipping crude led CP to consider getting entirely out of the business of shipping crude by rail about a year ago, he said. The company’s board discussed ending transporting oil and other hazardous material, such as chlorine and ammonia, through communities in the U.S. and Canada, he said. The board decided to continue moving the products as it believed it would do […]

Posted On :
Category:

CP Rail’s CEO Sees Revenue Doubling in Crude-Oil Shipments

Ltd. ‘s crude-oil shipping business will likely see its revenue double to 10% of the rail’s overall total in the next two or three years, the company’s chief executive said. Hunter Harrison said demand from Western Canada’s oil producers to ship crude by rail to refineries is likely to increase as output rises. "In the next two or three years, it’ll probably go to 10% of the business," he said. "There’s a lot of opportunities." The risk of derailment and other safety issues associated with shipping crude led CP to consider getting entirely out of the business of shipping crude by rail about a year ago, he said. The company’s board discussed ending transporting oil and other hazardous material, such as chlorine and ammonia, through communities in the U.S. and Canada, he said. The board decided to continue moving the products as it believed it would do […]

Posted On :
Category:

China tried to undermine economic report showing its ascendancy

China fought for a year to undermine new data showing it is poised to usurp the US as the world’s biggest economy in 2014 based on purchasing power, according to people who helped compile the report. The report, released this week by the International Comparison Programme under the auspices of the World Bank, included a line stating that the “National Bureau of Statistics of China has expressed reservations about some aspects of the methodology”. Beijing has declined to publish the headline number for China and the report said that the NBS “does not endorse the results as official statistics”. But, according to those involved in compiling the data, China’s distaste for the findings went further. “A year ago, there was a huge debate. China wanted to throw this out. They don’t want to be seen as number one. They’re worried about the political implications with the US,” said one […]

Posted On :
Category:

Putin Urges Ukraine to Withdraw Troops as Unrest Persists

Russian President Vladimir Putin urged Ukraine to withdraw forces from its easternmost regions as the International Monetary Fund warned that extra financing may be needed if control of the industrial heartland is lost. In a telephone call yesterday with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Putin also demanded an end to violence gripping cities in southeastern Ukraine, according to a Kremlin statement. The Ukrainian conflict will top the agenda when Merkel and U.S. President Barack Obama meet today in Washington, according to White House spokesman Jay Carney. “We expect to continue a path that sees an international coalition escalating the costs that Russia will have to endure” if it “continues to destabilize the situation in eastern Ukraine and southern Ukraine, or even goes further and uses its forces to cross the border,” Carney told reporters yesterday. Ukraine no longer controls the eastern city of Donetsk, Acting President Oleksandr Turchynov said on […]

Posted On :
Category:

Ukraine’s East Unravels as IMF Warns on Financing

Ukraine ’s easternmost regions are slipping from the government’s grasp as separatists take over more official buildings, with the International Monetary Fund warning extra financing may be needed if control of the industrial heartland is lost. Armed men stormed the Donetsk regional prosecutors’ office today, throwing stones and stun grenades. Pro-Russian rebels in nearby Slovyansk said they’d begun talks to swap international monitors abducted last week, the Interfax news service said. Acting Ukrainian President Oleksandr Turchynov signed a decree backed by lawmakers last month to reinstate a military draft, his office said on its website. “The government doesn’t control the situation in Donetsk as well as part of the Donetsk region,” Turchynov said yesterday in Kiev. “Because there is a real threat of Russia starting a continental war, our army is on full combat alert.” The IMF, which approved a $17 billion bailout for Ukraine early today, said “a […]

Posted On :
Category:

Rosneft sees huge potential in arctic resources

Taking advantage of the resource potential in the Russian arctic is one of the top priorities for oil company Rosneft, President Igor Sechin said. The board of directors at Rosneft said Monday they were ready to start working in the arctic waters of Russia through a joint effort with U.S. energy company Exxon Mobil. Sechin said in an announcement coinciding with the release of the company’s first-quarter financial report that arctic exploration was an integral part of Rosneft’s strategy for the year. "Monetization of Russia’s enormous resource potential in the offshore arctic is the key priority for the company," he said in a statement Wednesday. The U.S. Geological Survey estimates the arctic holds 13 percent, or about 90 billion barrels, of the world’s undiscovered oil reserves and 1.6 quadrillion cubic feet, or about 30 percent, of the world’s undiscovered natural gas. Sechin said exploration […]

Posted On :
Category:

German Businesses Urge Halt on Sanctions Against Russia

Angela Merkel is carrying a clear message from Germany’s business lobby to the White House: No more sanctions. Several of the biggest names in German business—including chemical giant SE, engineering group Siemens AG , AG , Adidas AG and Deutsche Bank AG —have made their opposition to broader economic sanctions against Russia clear in recent weeks, both in public and in private. As a result, Germany’s position on additional, tougher sanctions is unlikely to shift, barring a dramatic escalation of the conflict in Ukraine—a message Ms. Merkel is expected to deliver to President Barack Obama when they meet in Washington on Friday, officials in Berlin say. Sanctions on Russia: Who is Who Europe and the U.S. announced new sanctions in late April in response to Russia’s actions in Ukraine. EU sanctions focus on individuals but U.S. sanctions also target banks and other companies. Here is a full list. […]

Posted On :
Category:

Exxon Sticks With Russia Despite Ukraine Sanctions

Exxon Mobil Corp. is pushing ahead with its plans to drill in Russia’s Arctic seas—its biggest opportunity to discover untapped deposits of oil and gas—even though deteriorating relations between Moscow and Washington have increased the risks. America’s biggest energy producer is set this summer to tap what it calls the University Prospect in the Arctic’s Kara Sea, a trove that could hold the equivalent of 9 billion barrels of oil—more than a third of Exxon’s proven reserves. That prize looks riskier as tensions increase between the West and Moscow over Russia’s . U.S. sanctions this week targeted Igor Sechin, a close associate of President Vladimir Putin and head of OAO , Exxon’s Kremlin-controlled partner in the Arctic. The sanctions didn’t extend to Rosneft itself. "All of the activities that we had originally planned for this year are under way," David Rosenthal, Exxon’s vice president of investor relations, said Thursday […]

Posted On :
Category:

So Far, U.S. Sanctions Over Ukraine May Be Inflicting Only Limited Pain on Russia

As it tries to punish Moscow for its intervention in Ukraine , the White House asserts that the sanctions it has imposed have had a “significant impact” on Russia ’s economy, but their real effect so far, according to economic specialists, appears to be more psychological than tangible. White House officials have pointed to the fall of the Russian ruble and Moscow stock markets as evidence of the success they have had in pressuring the Kremlin. Yet the ruble and Russian markets fell before President Obama began imposing sanctions. Today, in fact, both the ruble and the markets are slightly stronger than they were before the first sanctions were announced. Russia’s economic downturn predated any action by the United States or Europe and, to some extent, predated the Ukraine crisis. Specialists said the volatility surrounding Ukraine has clearly aggravated Russia’s economic problems by sapping international confidence, punishing […]

Posted On :
Category:

Soft on Putin? Blame Big Oil

The latest  sanctions against Russian officials, provoked by Russia’s ongoing violation of Ukraine’s territory, have sparked much criticism because of their perceived weakness. The U.S. is currently targeting wealthy and well-connected individuals, such as Igor Sechin, a crony of Russian President Vladimir Putin, but not companies such as the state-owned energy giant Rosneft, which is the source of Sechin’s wealth. This means that Sechin and other select members of Putin’s inner circle can’t personally travel to or invest in the U.S., but the companies they run can continue business as usual. The Wall Street Journal has accused President Barack Obama of watering down the sanctions, a claim echoed by The Washington Post and by hawkish members of congress such as Sen. John McCain . Russia has responded with mockery. As Sechin himself put it , “I consider Washington’s latest steps as high assessment of the effectiveness of our work.” […]

Posted On :