'Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD)'
Doi
Abstract
The gas industry is perhaps Russia’s least reformed major sector. Prices are regulated, exports are
monopolised and the domestic market is dominated by a state-controlled, vertically integrated monopolist,
OAO Gazprom. Gazprom combines commercial and regulatory functions, and maintains tight control over
the sector’s infrastructure and over information flows within it. The sector as it is currently constituted is
highly unlikely to be able to sustain sufficient output growth to satisfy both rising export commitments and
domestic demand. There is significant potential for accelerating the growth of non-Gazprom production
and making gas supply in Russia more competitive, but this will require fundamental reform. The
proposals for reform advanced in the paper address two sets of issues. First, there is an urgent need to
increase transparency in the sector and transfer many of the regulatory functions now performed by
Gazprom to state bodies. Secondly, there is a longer-term need for a considerable degree of unbundling of
Gazprom. In particular, it would be desirable to remove control of the sector’s transport infrastructure from
the company and to revise the arrangements governing gas exports to non-CIS states, which are currently
monopolised by Gazprom. At the same time, recent increases in domestic gas tariffs must continue until
internal gas prices rise above full, long-term cost-recovery levels