President Vladimir Putin on Friday launched the first loading of
liquefied natural gas (LNGLF) at the
Novatek (NVTK.ME)-led Yamal LNG project in the Arctic, which will further expand Russia's global energy reach.
The Yamal project, which required investments of $27 billion, will allow Russia to fulfil a plan to double its share of the global LNG market by 2020 from around 4 percent now.
The LNG was loaded onto the ice class tanker "Christophe de Margerie", named after the former head of France's energy major Total, who died in a plane crash in Moscow in 2014. Total holds a 20 percent stake in Yamal LNG.
"The loadings will be carried out all year round... I am confident the second and the third parts of the project will be commissioned ahead of schedule," Putin said at a ceremony in the remote greenfield site in the heart of the Arctic tundra
"Russia can and should get a decent stake in the market," he told the attendees, who included Saudi Arabia's Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih.
Putin has in the past expressed his personal support for Yamal LNG, in which Novatek holds a 50.1 percent stake. Novatek is owned by Leonid Mikhelson, Russia's richest businessman with wealth estimated by Forbes at $18.4 billion.
Investments in the Yamal project were put at risk after Novatek came under Western sanctions over Moscow's role in the Ukraine crisis, but it managed to secure funding from Chinese and Russian banks, as well as from the Russian government.
Yamal LNG's loan deals with Chinese banks total more than $12 billion. It also secured Russian state funds worth 150 billion roubles ($2.5 billion) from a rainy day fund and 3.6 billion euros ($4.24 billion) from state-controlled Russian lenders Sberbank and Gazprombank.
More than 95 percent of future production from Yamal has already been pre-sold for the next 20 years or so, mostly to the Asia-Pacific region.
Yamal LNG is designed to be made up of four trains - three with an annual capacity of 5.5 million tonnes each and one train with a capacity of one million tonnes.
The second train is expected to be launched in the third quarter of 2018, the third train in the first quarter of 2019 and the fourth by the end of 2019.
Global Fight
Currently, Russia has only one operational LNG producing plant, on the Pacific island of Sakhalin, controlled by gas giant Gazprom. Shell is also a shareholder in the project, known as Sakhalin-2, which produces almost 11 million tonnes of the frozen gas per year.
While Gazprom holds monopoly rights to export natural gas via pipeline, Novatek has secured the right to ship LNG abroad, becoming the second Russian gas exporter.
LNG is frozen from offshore gas deposits into liquid at minus 160 degrees Celsius (minus 256 Fahrenheit) for shipment by tanker, with Qatar, Australia, the United States and
Papua New Guinea among other producers.
Qatar is by far the largest exporter, selling 77.2 million tonnes of liquefied gas and accounting for just under 30 percent of global market share in 2016, energy research group IHS and the International Gas Union said. Russia ranked seventh.
Novatek, which aims to topple Qatar as top LNG exporter, also plans another project, Arctic LNG, on the neighbouring Gydan peninsula. Both projects could produce more than 70 million tonnes of LNG annually.
As well as Novatek and Total, the other shareholders in Yamal LPC are China's CNPC, with 20 percent, and the Chinese Silk Road Fund, with 9.9 percent.
($1 = $1.0000, $1 = 0.8501 euros)
(Reporting by Vladimir Soldatkin and Oksana Kobzeva; writing by Vladimir Soldatrik and Denis Pinchuk; editing by Gareth Jones)