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		 Russia 
		oil output hits post-Soviet high, small firms help 
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		[January 02, 2015] By 
		Vladimir Soldatkin 
		MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia's 2014 oil output 
		hit a post-Soviet record high average of 10.58 million barrels per day 
		(bpd), rising by 0.7 percent helped by small non-state producers, Energy 
		Ministry data showed on Friday. | 
			
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			Oil and gas condensate production in December hit 10.67 million bpd, 
			also a record high since the collapse of the Soviet Union.
 The data showed Russia's so-called small producers, mostly privately 
			held, increased their output by 11 percent to just over 1 million 
			barrels per day.
 
 Crude oil exports via state monopoly Transneft fell 5 percent to 
			195.5 million tonnes due to rising domestic demand and refinery 
			runs.
 
 Exports to China reached a new high of 22.6 million tonnes (452,000 
			bpd), up 43 percent on the year as Russia seeks to diversify its 
			energy customers.
 
 Russian producers capitalized on rising oil prices in the first half 
			of 2014, when they reached over $113 per barrel. However, they have 
			halved since then.
 
 Hurt by falling oil prices and Western sanctions prompted by 
			Moscow's role in Ukraine, growth in oil output in 2014 slowed from a 
			gain of 1.4 percent in 2013.
 
 Top listed oil company Rosneft, which produces more oil than OPEC 
			members Iraq or Iran, saw its output slip 0.7 percent as it 
			struggled to arrest declining production at its West Siberian 
			fields.
 
 Oil and gas fund about half of Russia's budget.
 
			
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			The country's economy is slipping into recession following a fall in 
			oil prices and could see oil output decline to 525 million tonnes in 
			2015, according to an Energy Ministry forecast.
 The International Energy Agency (IEA) expects Russian oil output to 
			fall by 1 percent.
 
 The country's natural gas production in 2014 fell by 4 percent to 
			640.237 billion cubic meters (bcm)
 
 Top producer Gazprom posted an output fall of 9 percent to an 
			all-time low of 432 bcm due to its pricing dispute with Ukraine, 
			once its second-largest customer after Germany.
 
 (Editing by Jason Neely)
 
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