Russian Oil and Gas: Business Opportunities The LUKOIL Vision September 2003
Russia s Crude Oil Reserves Still Underestimated 145 Russia s Proved Reserves Russia s Share in Global Proved Oil Reserves 125 Russia 6% bln bbl 105 85 150 2002 Saudi Arabia 25% 65 45 25 48 60 2002(A) Western estimates of Russia s total proved oil reserves (Sources: BP Statistics) 2002(B) Internationally audited oil reserves of Russia s ten leading oil and gas companies (Sources: Miller&Lents, DeGolyer and MacNaughton, Company data) 2010-15E Expected increase in proved oil reserves due to development of new regions, including Timan-Pechora, Caspian Sea region, Eastern Siberia, Arctic shelf and Sakhalin 76 2001(A) 2002(A) 2002(B) 2010-2015E 1 Others 69% Others 59% 2010-15E 67% Russia 18% Saudi Arabia 23%
Just Getting Back the Historical Volumes Russia 19% Russia 8% Russia 11% Russia 15% Rest of the world 81% 1987 Rest of the world 92% 1998 Rest of the world 89% 2002 Rest of the world 85% 2012 600 Crude oil production in Russia 12 mln tonnes pa 500 400 300 200 100 10 8 6 4 2 mln bpd 0 0 1985 1986 1987 1988 * On 8 month basis, annualized. 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003E* 1985 2012E 2
Russia a Future Oil Supplier to the U.S. US crude oil suppliers USA Canada 15% Arab OPEC 28% Mexico 15% North Sea 6% Others 13% 2002 Other OPEC 23% Canada 14% Arab OPEC 23% As export infrastructure in Russia expands, Russian oil companies will be able to supply at least 13% of total oil imports to the United States Mexico 14% North Sea 2% Others 13% 2010E Russia 14% Other OPEC 20% Source: US Energy Department, IEA, WOOD MACKENZIE, LUKOIL. 3
Pipelines Capacities Grow Slower Than Production 450 Deficit of export capacities 400 Alternative export options 350 Дефицит Murmansk Pipeline System 300 Angarsk China mln tonnes 250 200 DEFICIT Odessa Brody pipeline reverse Adria pipeline reverse 150 CPC-Transneft connector Venspils terminal 100 Varandei terminal 50 BPS (2nd and 3rd stages) 0 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Current capacities 4
Alternative Export Options Export alternatives to Transneft pipeline system are railroads, river transport and commercial pipelines The companies have to boost their exports via railroads and river tankers that increase ecological risks Export transportation costs for railroads and river transport are significantly higher comparing to pipelines: Transneft $10-12/tonne Murmansk pipeline $20-24/tonne River transport $35-40/tonne Railroad 45-60$/tonne Fire on river tanker in Samara (September, 2003) 5
Russia A New Source of Crude For the U.S. 1.0 0.8 Gulf of Mexico Crude Production Russia s oil industry is expected to grow at a 4-6% average annual rate over the next decade mln b/d 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 1990 1994 1998 2002 2006E 2010E 8 North Sea Crude Production 6 Russian crude oil production is projected to increase to 11 mbpd by 2010, a 45% increase from 2002 Terminals capable of handling supertankers will open the US market to Russian crude oil mln b/d 4 2 0 1998 2000 2002 2004E 2006E 2008E 2010E As a new source of crude, Russia can help ensure US energy stability, replacing a portion of declining North Sea and Gulf of Mexico oil production Norway United Kingdom Denmark Other Source: WOOD MACKENZIE. 6
Russian Oil Exports Unsecured Storms in the Black Sea in December 2002 forced the terminal in Novorossiysk to stop the operations almost for a month Gulf of Finland (the Baltic Sea) has been frozen in December, 2002 January, 2003 resulting in 20% of working time loss Total exports 197 mln tonnes (2002) $/bbl 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 Russian Domestic Crude Price Dynamics Jul-02 Sep-02 Nov-02 Jan-03 Historical minimum Mar-03 May-03 Jul-03 The problems with sea terminals in December, 2002 January, 2003 caused the dramatic fall of domestic crude oil price Sep-03 Source: Petroleum Agrus. Russian oil exports are unsecured: Strong dependence from consumers in Eastern Europe ( Druzhba pipeline) Restrictions in Turkish and Dutch straits limit growth of exports Russian sea terminals strongly depend on weather conditions 7
Caspian Oil Will Intensify Competition at the Traditional Markets for Russian Oil Companies 8
«Buyer's Market» in Eastern Europe Will Strengthen ( Druzhba Pipeline) Crude price ($/bbl) Urals/Brent Discount Dynamics (Russian average): Historical Discount (20 years) $0.7-0.8/bbl 2001-2003 $1.3-1.5/bbl 40 35 30 25 20 15 Urals/Brent Discount ("Druzhba" pipeline) Dated Brent (NWE) Urals ("Druzhba") $2.2/bbl $3.6/bbl 10 Jan-02 Mar-02 May-02 Jul-02 Sep-02 Nov-02 Jan-03 Mar-03 May-03 Jul-03 9
Low Diversification Causes Losses Monopoly of Druzhba pipeline crude oil consumers and limitation of other export directions causes export revenues losses of up to $2.3 bln pa (comparing to export through Novorossiysk) $/bbl* 24 22 20 18 16 14 12 22.55 22.05 FOB Novorossiysk 0.50 1.85 2.45 4.81 7.48 Litva (FIT Mazeikiu) 20.70 20.10 "Druzhba" - south direction "Druzhba" - north direction 17.74 Ukraine (DAF Krasny Yar) 15.07 Belorussia (FIT Mozyr) * Real prices in the middle of 2002. Sources: Petroleum Argus, Ministry of Energy of Russia. 10
The Murmansk Project Gives an Opportunity to Export Oil to the USA Exports of Russian oil to the USA has not been profitable so far Unavailability of deep-water export terminals has not allowed for 270 thousand tons (2 million barrels) and bigger shipments. In this case savings on freight makes it possible to reach efficiency comparable with traditional supplies to the European market. The Murmansk project provides for an opportunity to profitably export oil to the USA and has advantages over other routes Murmansk is the only ice-free Russian port with a closed deep-water harbor allowing a year-round shipments of oil in tankers having 300 thousand tons (2.2 million barrels) deadweight and bigger The project s costs match any other projects with regard to the total transportation costs to the customer The project is expected to cover all of forecasted export capacity deficit in Russia 11
Comparison of the Different Routes to Carry Oil to the U.S. 12
Murmansk Pipeline Will Improve Russia Export Exposure Route Western Siberia Usa region Murmansk Pipeline capacity 70 mln tones pa Pipeline length 2,717 km Pipeline diameter 1,220 mm Capital expenditures $5,165 mln Tariff at pay-off period $20.0 per tonne Route Western Siberia Ukhta Murmansk Pipeline capacity 70 mln tones pa Pipeline length 3,241 km* Pipeline diameter 1,220 mm Capital expenditures $5,744* mln Tariff at pay-off period $24.4 per tonne * Taking into account distance and capital expenditures for Usa Ukhta pipeline construction. 13
Murmansk Pipeline System Implementation Plan PROJECT PARTICIPANTS PROJECT SCHEDULE Commissioning Elaboration of the pre-project documentation Capital costs and construction feasibility study, executive documents Construction 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 14
LUKOIL Today Today LUKOIL is: 1.3% of global oil reserves and 2% of global oil production. 20% of total Russian oil production and 18% of total Russian oil refining. The only private Russian oil company whose share capital is dominated by minority stakeholders The 2nd largest private oil company worldwide by proven reserves. The 6th largest private oil company worldwide by production. The leading Russian oil business group with annual turnover of over $15 bln. The most liquid among Central and Eastern European stocks on the London Stock Exchange (LSE). The most liquid oil stock and second most liquid stock overall on the Russian Trading System (RTS). A leader among Russian oil companies for openness and transparency. The first Russian company to be listed on the London Stock Exchange. Sources: Energy Intelligence Group, Petroleum Intelligence Weekly, International Energy Agency, OPEC, US Energy Department, Russian Ministry of Energy, RTS, LSE, LUKOIL. 15
Part of the World Premier League 2002 Reserves 2002 Production ExxonMobil 21.0 Shell 4.3 ЛУКОЙЛ** 19.7* ExxonMobil 4.2 Shell 19.0 BP 3.5 BP 17.3 ChevronTexaco 2.6 ЮКОС 15.0 TotalFinaElf 2.4 ChevronTexaco 11.9 LUKOIL 1.6 TotalFinaElf 11.2 Yukos 1.4 ConocoPhillips 7.7 ENI 1.4 ENI 6.9 ConocoPhillips 1.0 RepsolYPF 5.1 RepsolYPF 0.4 0 5 10 15 20 25 Reserves (bln boe) 0 1 2 3 4 5 Production (mln boe/day) * Taking into account acquisitions in early 2003. Source: company s annual reports Crude oil and natural gas liquids 16 Natural gas
LUKOIL s Global Operations Baltic States Byelorussia Poland Ukraine Cyprus USA Czech Republic Bulgaria Romania Azerbaijan Kazakhstan Turkey Uzbekistan Colombia Georgia Egypt Iran Iraq 17
International Upstream Activities International Strategy: proximity to consumer markets low-cost production favorable taxation Region Status CIS (Caspian region) Middle East Latin America Under development, new opportunities New opportunities Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan 18 Egypt, Iran, Iraq Algeria, Libya, Kuwait, UAE, Oman Colombia Ecuador, Brazil, Venezuela
International Upstream Activities Strategy: increasing share of natural gas LUKOIL international activities will help to meet a key target of the Company s development strategy, which is to increase the share of gas revenues to 30-40% in the medium term. Gas revenues will be boosted by developments in the Caspian and Northern Africa regions, oriented to sales on liberalizing European markets. 19
Rich Upstream Project Portfolio Strong Competitive Advantage 20
Management Report 1 st Stage of Restructuring Program In April 2002 LUKOIL launched a restructuring program to increase its efficiency Restructuring program: implemented measures Revenue enhancement Increase exports Accelerate development of new fields Cost reduction Shut down marginal wells Cost control Corporate structure Consolidate subsidiaries Divest non-core assets Centralize treasury and risk management Establish investment committee 21
Increasing Daily Output per Well Reducing Costs Crude oil production cost dependence on daily output per well Targeted daily output per well Targeted production cost Cost ($/bbl) 4.5 4.0 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 y = - 0,3x + 5 LUKOIL: 8.76 t/d; $2.7/bbl Tatneft: 3.82 t/d; $4/bbl SurgutNG: 8.48 t/d; $2.96/bbl Cost $/bbl 4.5 4.0 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 2001: 8.76 t/d; $2.7/bbl 1.5 1.0 0.5 YUKOS: 13.27 t/d; $1.72/bbl Sibneft: 13.65 t/d; $1.75/bbl 1.5 1.0 0.5 Target 2005-2008: 12 t/d; $2.0/bbl 0.0 0 3 6 9 12 15 0.0 0 3 6 9 12 15 tonnes/day tonnes/day 22
79 78 77 76 75 74 73 Rising Efficiency of Upstream Operations Watercut of LUKOIL's oil fields 1Q 2001 2Q 2001 3Q 2001 4Q 2001 1Q 2002 2Q 2002 3Q 2002 4Q 2002 9.8 9.6 9.4 9.2 9.0 8.8 8.6 8.4 9.6 9.4 8.8 9.0 9.4 1999 2000 2001 2002 1H 2003 23 Watercut (%) Average daily output per well (t/day)
Crude Production Growth bpd bpd 1.52 1.50 1.48 1.46 1.44 1.42 1.40 105% 103% 101% 99% Jan- 03 Daily crude production Feb- 03 100.0% Mar- 03 Apr- 03 Crude production recconsilation 1.5% May- 03 Jun- 03 0.6% 1.8% 6M 2003 production: +4% comparing to January 2003 +3% comparing to 6M 2002-0,1% 103.8% 97% 95% Production January 2003 Brown Field Production Growth Green Field Production Growth Acquistion/ consolidation International Production Growth Production June 2003 24
Reducing Crude Production Costs * in Spite of Ruble Appreciation $/bbl 3,6 3,4 3,2 3,0 2,8 2,6 2.75 Decrease of extraction costs per barrel 2.70 2.92 2.78 7% 6% 5% 4% 3% 2% 1% 0% 2.58 2.60 Ruble appreciation 1Q 2002 2Q 2002 3Q 2002 4Q 2002 1Q 2003 2.66 2.56 2.56 2,4 2,2 2001 average 2.74 2002 average 2.60 2,0 1Q 2001 2Q 2001 3Q 2001 4Q 2001 1Q 2002 2Q 2002 3Q 2002 4Q 2002 1Q 2003 * Exploration and production costs, including lifting costs, maintenance and repair of expensed wells, insurance and other costs; excluding taxes and depreciation. Calculated in accordance with US GAAP data. 25
Restructuring: 1 st Stage Results 2002 The economic effect of marketing subsidiaries runs up to over $50 mln provided by: Group s income increase due to divesting the companies with low or negative profitability and return on investments; Decrease of administrative expenditures. Economic effect of shutting down marginal wells accounts to about $110 mln in 2002. Increasing refinery throughput and reducing domestic crude oil sales allowed LUKOIL to get economic effect of about $240 mln in 2002. TOTAL ECONOMIC EFFECT FROM 1 st STAGE OF RESTRUCTURING PROGRAM REACHED OVER $400 mln 26
Restructuring Program Objectives for 2003-2004 Restructuring LUKOIL s service subsidiaries LUKOIL has over 35 service subsidiaries employing about 15,000 people (10% of Group s personnel) Financial sector Engineering companies Transport companies Within 3 rd stage of restructuring the Group will divest unprofitable, non-core companies and rely on outsourcing 27
LUKOIL s Development Strategy Short-term strategy (2003-2005) 4% average annual production growth To improve technology and systems of oil extraction, well-stream gathering, transportation and treatment To accelerate development of new oil reserves Medium-term strategy (2005-2008) 5% average annual production growth 17-20% weighted-average ROCE in upstream Technology and equipment renovation in the Company s core oil producing regions Completion of preparatory stage and launch of commercial production in Northern sector of the Caspian Sea Long-term strategy (2008-2010) To increase output: min (oil 2.2 mln b/d, natural gas 0.5 mln boe/d), max (oil 2.8 mln b/d, natural gas 0.65 mln boe/d) To control lifting costs (in constant 2002 prices and at $/RR exchange rate for 2002): oil 2.0-2.5 $/bbl, gas 0.10 $/1000 cf To increase output from international operations to 15% of total production 28
LUKOIL s Oil Reserves in Russia (PP, mln bbl) Total reserves 1,208,331 mcm 29
LUKOIL in Timano-Pechora 0,7 0,6 LUKOIL s production of hydrocarbons in the province forecast Production, Mboe/day 0,5 0,4 0,3 0,2 0,1 0,0 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 30
LUKOIL in North Caspian LUKOIL s production of hydrocarbons in the province 0,3 0,3 forecast Production, Mboe/day 0,2 0,2 0,1 0,1 0,0 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 31
Upstream Sector Outside Russia Strong Efficient Growth International diversification of upstream: Geographical diversification Strong natural growth of production Low lifting costs Attractive taxation environment mln tonnes 30 25 20 Average output growth rate is about 25% 15 10 5 0 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 D-222 Shakh-Deniz Kumkol Karachaganak Colombia Meleiha WEEM 32
LUKOIL s Export Infrastructure and Expanding Export Operations 4Q 2002 2002 Sales breakdown 1Q 2003 1Q 2002 65.8% 66.0% Export sales and sales on international markets to total volume of sales 68.8% 62.2% Refined products to total volume 61.8% 57.0% 56.4% 49.4% of sales 51.4% 49.4% 62.2% 58.9% Share of oil products in total export volumes and international sales Share of oil products in total export sales and international sales 43.6% 42.7% 53.6% 48.7% 33
Vysotsk New Export Outlet Construction work on the Vysotsk Export Terminal began in June 2002. The terminal. will be able to lift crude oil and finished products (fuel oil, gas oil, gasoline and lubricants) and load tankers of 20,000-40,000 tonnes deadweight at the initial/first stage and tankers up to 80,000 tonnes deadweight when construction finished Vysotsk St.-Petersburg SWEDEN ESTONIA DENMARK Capacity (mln tonnes per annum) Vysotsk terminal capacity 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 LATVIA 3 Initial stage LITHUANIA (End- 2003) 6 First stage (Mid- 2004) 10 Projected capacity (End- 2004) With Vysotsk terminal on stream LUKOIL will get better exposure to European and US markets 34
Aiming to Be Gas Producer #2 in Russia Natural and associated gas bcm Total reserves (ABC2 category) 1,208 2005 production forecast 11.27 2010 production forecast 38.7 35
LUKOIL s Gas Reserves in Russia (PP, bcm) * Total reserves 1,208 bcm * Including natural gas and associated gas; Russian classification of reserves (ABC2 category). 36
Bolshekhetskaya Depression Gas Reserves In 2001 LUKOIL acquired Yamalneftegazdobycha, which holds licenses for significant reserves in the Bolshekhetskaya depression 290 bcm of total P1+P2 reserves; management estimates total reserves of 1 tcm (including C1-C2 categories) Production is expected to start in 2005 First stage Nakhodkinskoe field Expected payback period 5-10 years Close proximity to Gazprom s fields and transport infrastructure (150 km) Preliminary agreement with Gazprom to connect the field with the trunk natural gas pipeline system At the advanced stage of development program at Yamal peninsula the partners plan to set up a 200 kbpd LNG plant Yamburg Novy Urengoi 1st stage: Nakhodkinskoe L=150км Yevo-Yakhta Perekatnoe Pipelines Pipelines Existing Existing gas gas Existing Existing condensate condensate Projected Projected S. Messoyakhskoe Samburg Fields Fields Perekatnoe Yamburg Samburg Vareiskoe Pyakyakhinskoe Khalmerpayutinskoe Zapolyarnoe LUKOIL LUKOIL Gazprom Gazprom Arctic Arctic Gas Gas 37
Strategic Objectives Main objective maintaining ROACE at the set level Aiming to maintain output growth rate above 5% after 2005 Export-to-output ratio 70% Reaching and keeping production cost at $2.0-2.5/bbl Reaching average daily output per well at 12 t/d (88 bbl/d) Targeting one fourth of Russia s total crude output by 2010 Targeting over 3% of the world s total output by 2010 To be natural gas producer #2, control 5% of Russia s total gas output 38