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CPC oil pipeline operator: Repairs of drone damage will take 2 months

Repairs to damage to a pumping-station on the Russian section of Kazakhstan's main export oil pipeline will take at least two months, Caspian Pipeline Consortium said on Wednesday.

A Ukrainian drone attacked the Kropotkinskaya Pumping Station in Russia's southern Krasnodar Region on February 17. This sparked market concerns over supply from Kazakhstan. Kazakhstan is a supplier of more that 1% of world oil.

The impact of the flow on the economy was a subject of conflicting reports.

Tengizchevroil said that the flow of oil from Kazakhstan's Tengiz field via CPC was uninterrupted. Alexander Novak, Russian Deputy Premier, stated that volumes were down by 30-40%. The pipeline transports oil from Kazakhstan and Russian fields to Russia’s Black Sea port, Novorossiisk. News of possible disruptions in supply has impacted the global oil market.

Vladimir Putin, the Russian president, said that repairing damage would be difficult as it would require Western-made equipment which is currently under sanctions.

Industry sources claim that despite the drone accident, Kazakhstan has produced record oil volumes, with CPC rerouting flows to bypass damaged pumping stations.

KazMunayGas, the KazMunayGas company, as well as Russian state-owned Lukoil and KazMunayGas are all shareholders.

CPC reported that the pipeline will deliver 63 million metric tonnes of oil in 2024 (roughly 1.3 million barrels of oil per day). It also said its exports for this year were 9.8 million tones as of February 23, 2019.

The company reported a revenue of $2.3billion for 2024, with dividends of $1.3billion paid to shareholders. Both figures are little changed from the year before. (Reporting and writing by Olesya Almakhova, editing by Louise Heavens & Jason Neely).

(source: Reuters)