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Project summary document

Project name:STIMUL
Country:Russia
Project number:20819
Business sector:Natural resources
Public/Private:Private
Environmental category:A
Board date:
Status:Cancelled
Date PSD disclosed:
Date PSD updated:
8 November 2001
20 November 2001
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STIMUL [Environmental Impact Assessment]

Project description
and objectives:

Proposed financing for the development of the East Orenburg oil field. The development would include a drilling programme and upgrading of the production and processing facilities. Cancelled.

Project objectives:

Incremental development of the East Orenburg oil field, including a drilling programme and upgrading of the production and processing facilities, in order to increase production to 20,000 barrels per day.

Transition impact:

The project will contribute to improved technology skills by employing high-performance drilling technology as well as supporting the development of a privately owned medium-sized oil company.

The client:

Stimul, a Russian closed joint-stock company, which operates the East Orenburg condensate oil field in south central Russia.

EBRD finance:

US$ 30 million (€33 million) loan for the incremental development of the East Orenburg oil field.

There may be an OPIC parallel loan of US$ 30 million.

Total project cost:

US$ 109 million (€ 121 million).

Environmental impact:

Environmental summary

Project summary

CJSC Stimul, which operates East Orenburg oil field, is located near Orenburg in Russia, south of the Ural River and is the easternmost extension of the Orenburg gas and condensate field. The main Orenburg gas and condensate field was discovered in 1966 and has been developed extensively by enterprises of the former Soviet Union. By 1992, a total of 64 exploration wells had been drilled in the East Field, 38 of which were tested. The first development well was drilled in 1994. Currently, there are 45 producing wells (42 oil wells and 3 gas wells) within the project license area with a cumulative production (October 2001) of about 6.46 million barrels of oil. The sulphur content of the gas is medium-high. Oil and gas are exported from the field via pipeline, around 28 km, to the regional processing facility. During 2001 2003, Stimul plans to drill additional wells and upgrade the processing facilities.

Environmental studies

The project has been screened ‘A/1’, requiring an environmental assessment of impacts associated with the company’s operations and an audit of the existing facilities. Independent environmental consultants carried out an environmental impact assessment (EIA) and baseline audit during February 1999. The Bank required the company to provide an updated version of the EIA in 2001 covering any changes in the project. The revised EIA was completed and released to the public on 19 October 2001. The project will include an Environmental Action Plan (EAP) which will be agreed with the Bank. Representatives of the Bank’s Environmental Appraisal Unit visited the site during due diligence and the Company was seen to have implemented HSE standards to a level of internationally accepted industry practice.

The overall conclusions of the EIA are that there will be no significant or long-term impacts associated with this operation. Some less significant short-term impacts are anticipated although these will be mitigated during operations and not anticipated to persist after project completion. The following information outlines the main issues and mitigation measures:

Surface disturbance: Surface disturbance will occur during drilling operations, for example, through the excavation of mud pits, construction of access roads, drilling pad construction and construction of related facilities. Good engineering practice will be used in the construction of roads and other construction facilities. Roads, for example, will include drainage channels, sediment traps, silt fencing, settling ponds and berms. The siting of roads will avoid disturbance to the flow of surface waters and, where necessary, bridges or culverts will be constructed. All proposals for roads and new facilities will be submitted to local authorities for approval in accordance with Russian regulations.

Air emissions: Air emissions from operations will include emissions from combustion sources such as generators, heaters and compressors. Produced gas will only be flared during the limited drilling phase after which it will be processed and exported by pipeline. A comprehensive monitoring system has been installed throughout the East Orenburg Field to ensure that air emissions continue to meet Russian and World Bank standards. This system includes both stationary and mobile monitoring equipment and covers 8 villages, the sanitary zone and the oil and gas processing areas.

Liquid effluents: Liquid effluents from these operations will include produced water, sewerage and drilling muds. Liquid effluents (e.g. produced water) will be either re-injected or disposed at an approved disposal. As with air emissions, all discharges must meet Russian and appropriate World Bank standards.

Solid wastes: The main wastes will be drilling cuttings, construction wastes (e.g. wood scrap, packaging), domestic wastes (food, plastic, glass) and miscellaneous production wastes. Solid wastes will be divided into combustible and non-combustible wastes. Combustible wastes will be incinerated in an approved installation. Non-combustible wastes will be disposed via a number of routes – tank bottoms, for example, will be processed to remove as many hydrocarbons as possible before being either sold to off-site reclaimers, disposed via re-injection or landfarming.

Environmental Management and Monitoring Plan

The company has developed an Environmental Management and Monitoring Plan for the East Orenburg field. This plan includes measures to mitigate the impacts of oil operations and sets out programmes for monitoring the impact of the company’s operations across all phases of the development. Environmental mitigation measures will focus on maintaining the surrounding environmental quality to levels that will permit the continuation of former land-use after operations have ceased. Environmental monitoring will aim firstly, to characterise the baseline environment, secondly, to monitor production impacts, and thirdly, to assess that reinstatement efforts have been successful.

Health & safety

The company is operating to national and international standards of workplace health and safety. There is a thorough training programme for employees and contractors including the preventative measures and emergency response in the event of a sour gas incident.

An Accident Prevention and Emergency Response Programme has been developed, detailing the procedures and guidelines to follow in the event of a chemical or oil spill, equipment failure or other emergencies. This programme includes emergency identification, response and notification procedures as well as emergency preparedness plan covering drilling, well control, materials handling and flood evacuation.

Public Consultation

The development of the East Orenburg field is part of plans that have been on-going for over 30 years. OrenburgGazProm has published quarterly updates on development plans in the local newspaper "GAZ" since 1976 and has held briefings for local journalists several times a year. Public meeting with local agricultural enterprises were also held to discuss project plans, determine access points and negotiate land leasing rates. The first EIA ("OVOS") was completed in 1993 with the latest versions, with revisions, released in July 1998. The Expertiza Committee, reviewing the OVOS, conducted public meetings with local landowners and leaders in local villages to discuss their views on the project. Those views were taken into account during the finalisation of the OVOS. JSC Stimul continues to have a dialogue with local communities and will continue to publish information on operations and hold briefings with local journalists. A comprehensive consultation programme was carried out for the 21 inch gas pipeline laid during 2000.

Environmental Action Plan

The project will include an EAP which will outline specific commitments, for example, on protection and mitigation measures, emissions & waste management, monitoring programmes and pipeline management. In addition, the Bank will receive routing reports on the project’s performance, will undertake monitoring site visits and require routine independent audits of the EAP.

There is an Environmental Impact Assesment available for this project.

Technical
cooperation:

None.

For consultant opportunities for projects financed by technical cooperation funds, visit procurement of consultants.

Company contact:

 

EBRD contact:

Bert Van der Toorn, Operation Leader: vandertb@ebrd.com

Business opportunities:

For business opportunities or procurement, contact the client company.

General enquiries:

EBRD project enquiries not related to procurement:
Tel: +44 20 7338 7168; Fax: +44 20 7338 7380
Email: projectenquiries@ebrd.com


Project Summary Documents are created before consideration by the EBRD Board of Directors. Details of a project may change following disclosure of a Project Summary Document. Project Summary Documents cannot be considered to represent official EBRD policy.
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