Moldovan businessman threatens to force sale of Kazakhstan’s Kashagan oilfield stake

ASTANA (TCA) — A spokesman for Moldovan businessman Anatolie Stati says that Stati will demand the sale of a $5.2 billion stake in Kazakhstan’s Kashagan oil field in the Caspian Sea if Astana refuses to pay an arbitration award, RFE/RL reports.

Stati, his son Gabriel, and two family-controlled companies have been involved in legal battles with the Kazakh government for several years.

The Statis, who invested in Kazakhstan’s oil and gas industry, claim they were subjected to significant harassment from the state aimed at forcing them to sell their investments cheaply.

Kazakhstan denies the allegations.

Anatolie and Gabriel Stati, together with their companies Ascom Group and Terra Raf Trans Trading, have won an international arbitration award of about $500 million against the Kazakh government.

But Astana has refused to pay.

On January 5, 2018, Amsterdam District Court issued a judgment in which it upheld an earlier ex parte attachment granted by the same court on September 8, 2017 to Anatolie Stati, Gabriel Stati, Ascom Group S.A. and Terra Raf Trans Traiding Ltd with respect to the Republic of Kazakhstan’s shareholding in the Dutch entity KMG Kashagan B.V. which shareholding is held via the Kazakh sovereign wealth fund Samruk-Kazyna. Through its stake in Kashagan, which has a nominal value of approximately US$5.2 billion, the Kazakh State participates in the international consortium relating to the Kashagan oilfield, one of the largest offshore oilfields in the Caspian Sea. Other members of the consortium include Eni, Royal Dutch Shell, Total, ExxonMobil, China National Petroleum Corporation and Inpex.

In the Judgment, the Dutch court held that, despite Samruk being a separate legal entity from Kazakhstan, “the corporate objective of Samruk is … completely subordinated to Kazakhstan’s national interest, as this is established at the political level, that Kazakhstan is and will remain the sole shareholder, and that Samruk’s board is controlled by (those politically responsible in) Kazakhstan.” The court went on to conclude that “Samruk lacks de facto-economic independence in its relation to Kazakhstan, in the sense that Samruk cannot invoke its separate legal personality against Kazakhstan in order to pursue a policy of its own that deviates from the policy of (those politically responsible in) Kazakhstan… it has to be assumed that Samruk has been established by Kazakhstan (at least partially) with a view to shield Kazakhstan’s assets from Kazakhstan’s creditors.”

The said attachment was secured as part of the Stati Parties’ long-lasting battle to enforce an arbitral award that was issued in December 2013 for violations of the investor protection provisions of the Energy Charter Treaty. A tribunal constituted under the auspices of the Stockholm Chamber of Commerce found that Kazakhstan violated its international obligation to treat the Stati Parties’ investments fairly and equitably and awarded the Stati Parties more than US$500 million by way of damages and legal costs. The Award has since been fully upheld by two tiers of the Swedish judiciary, including the Swedish Supreme Court.

The claims originally arose out of Kazakhstan’s seizure of the Stati Parties’ petroleum operations in 2010. The Stati Parties acquired two companies in 1999 that held idle licenses in the Borankol and Tolkyn fields in Kazakhstan. They invested in excess of a billion dollars over the ensuing decade to turn the companies into successful exploration and production businesses. In late 2008, after the businesses had become profitable, had yielded considerable revenues for the Kazakh state, and the Stati Parties expected to start receiving dividends, more than half a dozen government agencies carried out a number of burdensome inspections and audits of the companies’ businesses that resulted in false accusations of illegal conduct directed at the Stati Parties and their Kazakh companies, including criminal prosecutions of their general managers on false pretenses. Kazakhstan’s actions challenged the Stati Parties’ title to their investments, subjected them to hundreds of millions of dollars in unwarranted tax assessments and criminal penalties and ultimately led to the seizure and nationalization of their investments by Kazakh authorities in 2010, the Stati Parties said.

Sergey Kwan

TCA

Sergey Kwan has worked for The Times of Central Asia as a journalist, translator and editor since its foundation in March 1999. Prior to this, from 1996-1997, he worked as a translator at The Kyrgyzstan Chronicle, and from 1997-1999, as a translator at The Central Asian Post.
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Kwan studied at the Bishkek Polytechnic Institute from 1990-1994, before completing his training in print journalism in Denmark.

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