The natural resources policy was approved by the EBRD board on 23 March 1999.
Natural resources in this context include oil (covering all the product
cycle), gas, coal mining and mining of precious and non-precious metals.
Natural resources are an important endowment of several transition economies,
particularly in the Former Soviet Union. In Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Russia,
and Turkmenistan, oil and gas production has accounted for between 10-20 per
cent of GDP and generated around half of all foreign exchange revenues.
Uzbekistan's and Ukraine's production of natural gas is also sizeable,
although the majority of it is consumed domestically. In eastern Europe,
Romania produces significant amounts of crude oil, while several other
countries have important refining capacity. Mining of precious metals is a
major foreign exchange earner in countries such as Georgia, Kazakhstan, the
Kyrgyz Republic, Russia and Uzbekistan.
The prospects for natural resource development in the countries of the region
are generally considered favourably. Russia and Turkmenistan harbour the
world's estimated largest and third largest reserves of natural gas
respectively. Russia also ranks among the world's five largest oil producers
and significant unexplored structures remain in the northern and eastern
Siberian territories. Caspian oil reserves are estimated by several observers
to be approximately equal to those in the North Sea, giving the region
significant importance as a global producer.
However, reserve estimates provide only an imperfect indication of the
economic potential of a country's natural resource endowments. In order to be
of economic value, natural resources need to be marketed. The commercial
viability of natural resource extraction is thus a function of the
availability of competitive technology, transportation routes to major
consumption centres, and production costs determined by the geological
structure of natural resource reservoirs. In the case of oil and precious
metals, prices fluctuate widely on international commodity markets, and
substantial financial muscle as well as high flexibility are required to
remain competitive on international markets. The natural gas market is less
volatile and given the need for extensive investments into pipeline
transportation entry costs are high. Nonetheless, given substitution
possibilities between various types of fuel and sources of supply, competition
in the market for natural gas is also high.
Marginal production costs for oil in Russia are very high by international
standards, a reflection of geological factors but also of the relative
organisational and technological backwardness of its oil industry. More
favourable geological factors, higher levels of foreign investment and more
recent development of the major fields lie behind lower production costs in
the Caspian, but here transport bottlenecks continue to constrain the
development of production. Against this background, the recent fall in oil
prices imposes severe adjustment pressures on the oil industry throughout the
region and could slow its development at least temporarily. It also highlights
the need to attract high calibre international players to the region to make
it globally competitive. Appendix III provides a detailed analysis of market
supply and demand in the oil, gas and mining sectors of the transition
economies, including likely investment needs and required organisational
restructuring.
In the Balkans region, the Bank is called on to participate mainly in
downstream projects (refining and petrochemicals), as well as corporate
restructuring and privatisation. In Romania, the privatisation of Petrom is an
opportunity for the Bank to participate in the restructuring and privatisation
of the oil and gas sector, so vital in this "oil and gas transit" country.
Central European countries like Poland and Hungary have already successfully
restructured (or are restructuring) their operations. The main areas of
interest for the Bank are in direct equity investments and other "advanced
products" such as quasi-equity or mezzanine financing.