Irish arm of Russian state oil giant weighs impact of sanctions

Dublin-based Rosneft International files annual accounts for the first time since 2012

Rosneft-owned oil treatment facilities in Russia: Rosneft International’s ultimate parent is OJSC Rosneft Oil Company, whose chief executive Igor Sechin is a close ally of president Vladimir Putin. Photograph:  Sergei Karpukhin/Reuters
Rosneft-owned oil treatment facilities in Russia: Rosneft International’s ultimate parent is OJSC Rosneft Oil Company, whose chief executive Igor Sechin is a close ally of president Vladimir Putin. Photograph: Sergei Karpukhin/Reuters

The main Irish unit of Russian state oil giant Rosneft is examining the impact on its business of international sanctions against its Moscow-based parent, the world’s largest oil producer.

Rosneft International – whose registered office is at Molyneux House, Bride Street, Dublin 8 – has filed annual accounts to the Companies Office for the first time since 2012.

While all Irish-registered firms are legally obliged to file annual accounts no later than 11 months after the end of their fiscal year, the filing on February 8th from Rosneft International is for 2013.

Asked to explain the delay in filing, a company representative did not provide a reply.

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Rosneft International’s ultimate parent is OJSC Rosneft Oil Company, whose chief executive Igor Sechin is a close ally of president Vladimir Putin. Both the US and the EU have imposed sanctions on the parent company over the Kremlin’s interference in Ukraine.

The Irish entity had loans totalling $395.92 million (€355.37 million) from its parent at the end of 2013, the accounts state. The company’s auditor is Ernst & Young, Waterford, and its banker is Deutche Bank International in Jersey.

Going concern

The directors of the Irish unit – John Griffin of Limerick, and Nikita Tolstikov of Moscow – state in a report dated January 19th, 2016, that the company is a going concern on the basis of present policy and its shareholder’s expressed written intention to support the buisness.

“As part of their assessment, the directors are also considering the impact of recent US and EU sanctions,” states the report.

“Based on the assessment performed as of today, the directors did not identify any factors that would impact the company’s going concern status.”

Rosneft International borrows money for Rosneft’s subsidiaries and affiliatiates and lends to them.

The Irish unit owns 100 per cent of eight corporate vehicles in Cyprus, the British Virgin Islands, Jerseyand Ireland. In addition, it has shareholdings of between 49 per cent and 74.9 per cent in four entities in China, Cyprus and the British Virgin Islands.

The Irish unit incurred a net loss of $22.66 million in 2013 after a $20.76 million writedown of a “non-recoverable” invesment in a Cypriot company called Oxoil, of which it owns 100 per cent.

Amid mounting anxiety among major producers about the drastic reduction in the price of oil, Russia moved with Saudi Arabia yesterday to frame an agreement with Venezuela and Qatar to freeze freeze their output. The accord is subject to Iran, Iraq and other big producers joining the arrangement.

Arthur Beesley

Arthur Beesley

Arthur Beesley is Current Affairs Editor of The Irish Times