RM2E7YAYP–A general view shows TNK-BP's Urnenskoe production site, some 400 km (250 miles) from the regional capital Tyumen, June 6, 2007. BP's Russian venture may lose its licence to operate the vast Kovykta gas field, but away from the headlines in a remote corner of Siberia, it is making a long-term bet on the future. To match feature TNKBP-UVAT/ REUTERS/Maria Kiselyova/Files (RUSSIA)
RM2CYCYR2–A huge flame burns off gas at an oil drilling station on an oil field in Verkhnechonsk, some 1100 km (683 miles) from Irkutsk in Eastern Siberia August 19, 2011. A consequence of the field's location is the fate of the associated gas extracted as a by-product of oil production from the gas-rich field. For lack of a nearby market, hundreds of millions of dollars worth of gas is burnt off, or flared. Picture taken August 19, 2011. To match Feature TNKBP-SIBERIA/ REUTERS/Melissa Atkin (RUSSIA - Tags: BUSINESS ENERGY)
RM2CKJ6P6–TNK-BP Chief Executive Robert Dudley speaks at a conference in Moscow May 31, 2008. The CEO of Russian oil firm TNK-BP, half owned by BP and a group of Russian tycoons, said on Saturday he was committed to his role despite demands from the Russians to resign amid a deepening shareholders' row. REUTERS/Thomas Peter (RUSSIA)
RM2CJE0FH–TNK-BP Chief Executive Robert Dudley speaks at a conference in Moscow May 31, 2008. The CEO of Russian oil firm TNK-BP, half owned by BP and a group of Russian tycoons, said on Saturday he was committed to his role despite demands from the Russians to resign amid a deepening shareholders' row. REUTERS/Thomas Peter (RUSSIA)
RM2CH8TM8–TNK-BP Chief Executive Robert Dudley attends a conference in Moscow May 31, 2008. The CEO of Russian oil firm TNK-BP, half owned by BP and a group of Russian tycoons, said on Saturday he was committed to his role despite demands from the Russians to resign amid a deepening shareholders' row. REUTERS/Thomas Peter (RUSSIA)
RM2CRDW6G–TNK-BP Chief Executive Robert Dudley speaks to reporters after a conference in Moscow May 31, 2008. The CEO of Russian oil firm TNK-BP, half owned by BP and a group of Russian tycoons, said on Saturday he was committed to his role despite demands from the Russians to resign amid a deepening shareholders' row. REUTERS/Thomas Peter (RUSSIA)
RM2CKK8N8–TNK-BP Chief Executive Robert Dudley leaves a conference in Moscow May 31, 2008. The CEO of Russian oil firm TNK-BP, half owned by BP and a group of Russian tycoons, said on Saturday he was committed to his role despite demands from the Russians to resign amid a deepening shareholders' row. REUTERS/Thomas Peter (RUSSIA)
RM2D2G5XN–General view of Russia's Federal Security Service headquarters in central Moscow, March 20, 2008. Russian security services have detained an employee of BP's Russian joint venture and a second person with links to the British government's cultural arm on charges of industrial espionage, Russian news agencies reported on Thursday. REUTERS/Alexander Natruskin (RUSSIA)
RM2D1X750–The head of Russian embattled oil firm TNK-BP Robert Dudley speaks to the media in central Moscow, July 18, 2008. Dudley failed on Friday to get his Russian visa renewed but was allowed to stay for 10 more days and said he was optimistic he would get it. REUTERS/Alexander Natruskin (RUSSIA)
RM2D1AYG0–The head of Russian embattled oil firm TNK-BP Robert Dudley speaks to the media holding his visa in central Moscow July 18, 2008. Dudley failed on Friday to get his Russian visa renewed but was allowed to stay for 10 more days and said he was optimistic he would get it. REUTERS/Alexander Natruskin (RUSSIA)
RM2E6RBJ0–TNK-BP Chief Executive, Robert Dudley, leaves a local interior ministry office in Moscow June 10, 2008. The chief exective of oil major BP's Russian joint venture said on Tuesday his questioning by the authorities as part of a tax probe was a routine matter. REUTERS/Alexander Natruskin (RUSSIA)
RM2D1PX5J–TNK-BP Chief Executive Robert Dudley (R) speaks to reporters after leaving a local interior ministry office in Moscow June 10, 2008. The chief executive of oil major BP's Russian joint venture said on Tuesday his questioning by the authorities as part of a tax probe was a routine matter. REUTERS/Alexander Natruskin (RUSSIA)
RM2E763Y3–The head of Russian embattled oil firm TNK-BP Robert Dudley speaks to the media in central Moscow July 18, 2008. Dudley failed on Friday to get his Russian visa renewed but was allowed to stay for 10 more days and said he was optimistic he would get it. REUTERS/Alexander Natruskin (RUSSIA)
RM2D19F69–TNK-BP Chief Executive Robert Dudley leaves a local interior ministry office in Moscow June 10, 2008. The chief executive of oil major BP's Russian joint venture said on Tuesday his questioning by the authorities as part of a tax probe was a routine matter. REUTERS/Alexander Natruskin (RUSSIA)
RM2CYEF1G–A car drives past a BP petrol station in Moscow June 1, 2012. A Russian state firm has offered to buy BP Plc's half share in its Siberian joint venture, a source said on Friday, in what would amount to a stunning reversal for the British firm and a bold assertion of Kremlin control over the oil sector. REUTERS/Denis Sinyakov (RUSSIA - Tags: BUSINESS ENERGY TRANSPORT)
RM2E5GGE5–Traffic lights are seen near a BP petrol station in Moscow June 1, 2012. A Russian state firm has offered to buy BP Plc's half share in its Siberian joint venture, a source said on Friday, in what would amount to a stunning reversal for the British firm and a bold assertion of Kremlin control over the oil sector. REUTERS/Denis Sinyakov (RUSSIA - Tags: BUSINESS ENERGY)
RM2E7MP0B–TNK-BP Chief Executive Robert Dudley speaks during a news conference in Moscow July 17, 2008. Dudley said a shareholder dispute would 'tear the company apart' after a group of employees filed a lawsuit against him in Thursday, accusing him of mismanaging Russia's No. 3 oil firm. REUTERS/Denis Sinyakov (RUSSIA)
RM2D24X7A–TNK-BP Chief Executive Robert Dudley gestures after a news conference in Moscow July 17, 2008. Dudley said a shareholder dispute would 'tear the company apart' after a group of employees filed a lawsuit against him in Thursday, accusing him of mismanaging Russia's No. 3 oil firm. REUTERS/Denis Sinyakov (RUSSIA)
RM2CXEYF0–British Petroleum CEO Bob Dudley (L) and Rosneft CEO Igor Sechin shake hands outside the BP headquarters in central London March 21, 2013. Russian state oil company Rosneft closed its deal to buy TNK-BP from UK-based BP and four tycoons on Thursday, releasing $40 billion cash to the sellers and becoming a bigger oil producer than Exxon Mobil. The $55 billion deal, which also gives BP a near 20 percent stake in Rosneft, was announced last year after months of on-off negotiations. It is the biggest in Russia's corporate history.. REUTERS/Olivia Harris (BRITAIN - Tags: BUSINESS POLITICS ENERGY)
RM2CYPCPF–British Petroleum CEO Bob Dudley (L) and Rosneft CEO Igor Sechin (R) arrive outside the BP headquarters in central London March 21, 2013. Russian state oil company Rosneft closed its deal to buy TNK-BP from UK-based BP and four tycoons on Thursday, releasing $40 billion cash to the sellers and becoming a bigger oil producer than Exxon Mobil. The $55 billion deal, which also gives BP a near 20 percent stake in Rosneft, was announced last year after months of on-off negotiations. It is the biggest in Russia's corporate history.. REUTERS/Olivia Harris (BRITAIN - Tags: BUSINESS POLITICS ENERGY)
RM2CY34W6–British Petroleum CEO Bob Dudley (R) and Rosneft CEO Igor Sechin arrive outside the BP headquarters in central London March 21, 2013. Russian state oil company Rosneft closed its deal to buy TNK-BP from UK-based BP and four tycoons on Thursday, releasing $40 billion cash to the sellers and becoming a bigger oil producer than Exxon Mobil. The $55 billion deal, which also gives BP a near 20 percent stake in Rosneft, was announced last year after months of on-off negotiations. It is the biggest in Russia's corporate history.. REUTERS/Olivia Harris (BRITAIN - Tags: BUSINESS POLITICS ENERGY)
RM2CXPTE4–British Petroleum CEO Bob Dudley (L) and Rosneft CEO Igor Sechin embrace outside the BP headquarters in central London March 21, 2013. Russian state oil company Rosneft closed its deal to buy TNK-BP from UK-based BP and four tycoons on Thursday, releasing $40 billion cash to the sellers and becoming a bigger oil producer than Exxon Mobil. The $55 billion deal, which also gives BP a near 20 percent stake in Rosneft, was announced last year after months of on-off negotiations. It is the biggest in Russia's corporate history.. REUTERS/Olivia Harris (BRITAIN - Tags: BUSINESS POLITICS ENERGY)
RM2E6CMWX–British Petroleum CEO Bob Dudley (C) and Rosneft CEO Igor Sechin (R) speak to journalists as they arrive outside the BP headquarters in central London March 21, 2013. Russian state oil company Rosneft closed its deal to buy TNK-BP from UK-based BP and four tycoons on Thursday, releasing $40 billion cash to the sellers and becoming a bigger oil producer than Exxon Mobil. The $55 billion deal, which also gives BP a near 20 percent stake in Rosneft, was announced last year after months of on-off negotiations. It is the biggest in Russia's corporate history.. REUTERS/Olivia Harris (BRITAIN - Tags:
RM2CXJD9H–British Petroleum CEO Bob Dudley (L) and Rosneft CEO Igor Sechin (R) arrive outside the BP headquarters in central London March 21, 2013. Russian state oil company Rosneft closed its deal to buy TNK-BP from UK-based BP and four tycoons on Thursday, releasing $40 billion cash to the sellers and becoming a bigger oil producer than Exxon Mobil. The $55 billion deal, which also gives BP a near 20 percent stake in Rosneft, was announced last year after months of on-off negotiations. It is the biggest in Russia's corporate history.. REUTERS/Olivia Harris (BRITAIN - Tags: BUSINESS POLITICS ENERGY)
RM2D02WGG–British Petroleum CEO Bob Dudley and Rosneft CEO Igor Sechin (R) speak to journalists as they arrive outside the BP headquarters in central London March 21, 2013. Russian state oil company Rosneft closed its deal to buy TNK-BP from UK-based BP and four tycoons on Thursday, releasing $40 billion cash to the sellers and becoming a bigger oil producer than Exxon Mobil. The $55 billion deal, which also gives BP a near 20 percent stake in Rosneft, was announced last year after months of on-off negotiations. It is the biggest in Russia's corporate history.. REUTERS/Olivia Harris (BRITAIN - Tags: BUS
RM2CXHC3P–British Petroleum CEO Bob Dudley (L) and Rosneft CEO Igor Sechin arrive outside the BP headquarters in central London March 21, 2013. Russian state oil company Rosneft closed its deal to buy TNK-BP from UK-based BP and four tycoons on Thursday, releasing $40 billion cash to the sellers and becoming a bigger oil producer than Exxon Mobil. The $55 billion deal, which also gives BP a near 20 percent stake in Rosneft, was announced last year after months of on-off negotiations. It is the biggest in Russia's corporate history.. REUTERS/Olivia Harris (BRITAIN - Tags: BUSINESS POLITICS ENERGY)
RM2D0BE4W–British Petroleum CEO Bob Dudley (L) and Rosneft CEO Igor Sechin speak to journalists as they arrive outside the BP headquarters in central London March 21, 2013. Russian state oil company Rosneft closed its deal to buy TNK-BP from UK-based BP and four tycoons on Thursday, releasing $40 billion cash to the sellers and becoming a bigger oil producer than Exxon Mobil. The $55 billion deal, which also gives BP a near 20 percent stake in Rosneft, was announced last year after months of on-off negotiations. It is the biggest in Russia's corporate history.. REUTERS/Olivia Harris (BRITAIN - Tags: BUS
RM2CX6MNA–Rosneft CEO Igor Sechin speaks outside the BP headquarters in central London March 21, 2013. Russian state oil company Rosneft closed its deal to buy TNK-BP from UK-based BP and four tycoons on Thursday, releasing $40 billion cash to the sellers and becoming a bigger oil producer than Exxon Mobil. The $55 billion deal, which also gives BP a near 20 percent stake in Rosneft, was announced last year after months of on-off negotiations. It is the biggest in Russia's corporate history.. REUTERS/Olivia Harris (BRITAIN - Tags: BUSINESS POLITICS ENERGY)
RM2CY34W8–British Petroleum CEO Bob Dudley (L) and Rosneft CEO Igor Sechin embrace outside the BP headquarters in central London March 21, 2013. Russian state oil company Rosneft closed its deal to buy TNK-BP from UK-based BP and four tycoons on Thursday, releasing $40 billion cash to the sellers and becoming a bigger oil producer than Exxon Mobil. The $55 billion deal, which also gives BP a near 20 percent stake in Rosneft, was announced last year after months of on-off negotiations. It is the biggest in Russia's corporate history.. REUTERS/Olivia Harris (BRITAIN - Tags: BUSINESS POLITICS ENERGY)
RM2CXGW1A–The company logo at a Rosneft petrol station in St.Petersburg October 23, 2012. Russian oil company Rosneft tightened its grip on Russia's oil industry on Monday with a $55 billion deal to buy TNK-BP that also makes Britain's BP a one-fifth shareholder in the state-controlled company. REUTERS/Alexander Demianchuk (RUSSIA - Tags: BUSINESS ENERGY LOGO)
RM2D2NNPM–TNK-BP Chief Executive Robert Dudley speaks during a news conference in Moscow July 17, 2008. Dudley said a shareholder dispute would 'tear the company apart' after a group of employees filed a lawsuit against him in Thursday, accusing him of mismanaging Russia's No. 3 oil firm. REUTERS/Denis Sinyakov (RUSSIA)
RM2E6RKED–Russia's Natural Resources Minister Yuri Trutnev speaks during his news conference in Moscow on the results of his trip to Sakhalin in the country's far east, October 27, 2006. Trutnev said on Friday that British-Russian oil firm TNK-BP, which is half-owned by BP Plc, had the worst record of exploiting oil wells in Russia. REUTERS/Anton Denisov (RUSSIA)
RM2E794NE–Russia's Natural Resources Minister Yuri Trutnev attends a news conference in Moscow on the results of his trip to Sakhalin in the country's far east, October 27, 2006. Trutnev said on Friday that British-Russian oil firm TNK-BP, which is half-owned by BP Plc, had the worst record of exploiting oil wells in Russia. REUTERS/Anton Denisov (RUSSIA)
RM2E6T42N–TNK-BP President Robert Dudley speaks at Renaissance Capital's 10th Annual Investors Conference in Moscow June 19, 2006. Russian oil company TNK-BP plans to raise a $1.8 billion syndicated loan, Dudley said on Monday. REUTERS/Viktor Korotayev (RUSSIA)
RM2CYXPCF–A sign board of a BP petrol filling station is seen with the Ostankino telecommunications tower in the background, in Moscow June 1, 2012. A Russian state firm has offered to buy BP Plc's half share in its Siberian joint venture, a source said on Friday, in what would amount to a stunning reversal for the British firm and a bold assertion of Kremlin control over the oil sector. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin (RUSSIA - Tags: BUSINESS ENERGY)
RM2CWTG11–A sign board of a BP petrol station is seen with the Ostankino telecommunications tower in the background, in Moscow June 1, 2012. A Russian state firm has offered to buy BP Plc's half share in its Siberian joint venture, a source said on Friday, in what would amount to a stunning reversal for the British firm and a bold assertion of Kremlin control over the oil sector. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin (RUSSIA - Tags: BUSINESS ENERGY)
RM2D0F93D–A sign board of a BP petrol station is seen in Moscow June 1, 2012. A Russian state firm has offered to buy BP Plc's half share in its Siberian joint venture, a source said on Friday, in what would amount to a stunning reversal for the British firm and a bold assertion of Kremlin control over the oil sector. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin (RUSSIA - Tags: BUSINESS ENERGY)
RM2D2J270–People walk past a plaque of the oil firm TNK-BP at its headquarters in Moscow June 11, 2008. The four billionaire Russian shareholders in BP's troubled Russian joint venture, TNK-BP, said on Wednesday they would sue BP in a Stockholm court and launch separate legal actions in Moscow to strip BP-nominated TNK-BP directors of their powers. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin (RUSSIA)
RM2D2N9F6–The plaque of the oil firm TNK-BP is seen at its headquarters in Moscow June 11, 2008. The four billionaire Russian shareholders in BP's troubled Russian joint venture, TNK-BP, said on Wednesday they would sue BP in a Stockholm court and launch separate legal actions in Moscow to strip BP-nominated TNK-BP directors of their powers. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin (RUSSIA)
RM2D183ND–A man walks past a plaque of the oil firm TNK-BP at its headquarters in Moscow June 11, 2008. The four billionaire Russian shareholders in BP's troubled Russian joint venture, TNK-BP, said on Wednesday they would sue BP in a Stockholm court and launch separate legal actions in Moscow to strip BP-nominated TNK-BP directors of their powers. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin (RUSSIA)
RM2E6YPB3–A police officer walks past a plaque of the oil firm TNK-BP at its headquarters in Moscow June 11, 2008. The four billionaire Russian shareholders in BP's troubled Russian joint venture, TNK-BP, said on Wednesday they would sue BP in a Stockholm court and launch separate legal actions in Moscow to strip BP-nominated TNK-BP directors of their powers. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin (RUSSIA)
RM2D14KT5–People leave the main office of TNK-BP Russian joint venture in central Moscow, March 20, 2008. Russian security services have detained an employee of BP's Russian joint venture and a second person with links to the British government's cultural arm on charges of industrial espionage, Russian news agencies reported on Thursday. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin (RUSSIA)
RM2D03CE8–Rosneft President and Chairman of the Management Board Igor Sechin attends a meeting of Russia's President Vladimir Putin and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping at the Kremlin in Moscow March 22, 2013. Shares in TNK-BP Holding, the traded unit of TNK-BP oil producer, fell more than 14 percent to reach its historic low on Friday after Igor Sechin, the head of Rosneft, reiterated that Rosneft will not buy out TNK-BP shares. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin (RUSSIA - Tags: POLITICS BUSINESS ENERGY)
RM2D1D55P–Mikhail Fridman, chairman of Alfa Group, speaks during his news conference in Moscow, June 16, 2008. Russian co-owners in oil venture TNK-BP asked oil major BP to offer them an option to exchange their holdings in TNK-BP for BP stock but do not want to conduct a swap now, a key Russian shareholder said on Monday. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin (RUSSIA)
RM2D2C64H–Mikhail Fridman, chairman of Alfa Group, speaks during his news conference in Moscow, June 16, 2008. Russian co-owners in oil venture TNK-BP asked oil major BP to offer them an option to exchange their holdings in TNK-BP for BP stock but do not want to conduct a swap now, a key Russian shareholder said on Monday. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin (RUSSIA)
RM2D15J4H–Mikhail Fridman, chairman of Alfa Group, speaks during his news conference in Moscow, June 16, 2008. Russian co-owners in oil venture TNK-BP asked oil major BP to offer them an option to exchange their holdings in TNK-BP for BP stock but do not want to conduct a swap now, a key Russian shareholder said on Monday. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin (RUSSIA)
RM2E7B1W8–Mikhail Fridman, chairman of Alfa Group, gestures during his news conference in Moscow, June 16, 2008. Russian co-owners in oil venture TNK-BP asked oil major BP to offer them an option to exchange their holdings in TNK-BP for BP stock but do not want to conduct a swap now, a key Russian shareholder said on Monday. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin (RUSSIA)
RM2D1H1X0–Chief Executive of Russian oil producer TNK-BP Robert Dudley speaks during a conference in St Petersburg, June 8, 2008. Dudley said on Saturday he hoped that a conflict between BP and the Russian shareholders would be resolved 'within days'. REUTERS/Serhei Karpukhin (RUSSIA)
RM2E77070–Chief Executive of Russian oil producer TNK-BP Robert Dudley reacts during a conference in St Petersburg, June 8, 2008. Dudley said on Saturday he hoped that a conflict between BP and the Russian shareholders would be resolved 'within days'. REUTERS/Serhei Karpukhin (RUSSIA)
RM2D09FTX–Rosneft President and Chairman of the Management Board Igor Sechin attends a meeting of Russia's President Vladimir Putin and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping at the Kremlin in Moscow March 22, 2013. Shares in TNK-BP Holding, the traded unit of TNK-BP oil producer, fell more than 14 percent to reach its historic low on Friday after Igor Sechin, the head of Rosneft, reiterated that Rosneft will not buy out TNK-BP shares. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin (RUSSIA - Tags: POLITICS BUSINESS ENERGY HEADSHOT)
RM2CXRTK9–Mikhail Fridman, chairman of Alfa Group, attends a session of the management board of the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs in Moscow in this October 13, 2010 file photo. Fridman once seemed omnipotent as one of the elite group of Russian businessmen who amassed vast fortunes and huge political influence under President Boris Yeltsin in the 1990s. More than a decade after Vladimir Putin succeeded Yeltsin and started reining in the oligarchs, Fridman is on the defensive as a new generation of businessmen snatch up assets and the Kremlin reasserts control over the economy. Pict
RM2E74P06–Chief Executive of Russian oil producer TNK-BP Robert Dudley reacts during a conference in St Petersburg, June 8, 2008. Dudley said on Saturday he hoped that a conflict between BP and the Russian shareholders would be resolved 'within days'. REUTERS/Serhei Karpukhin (RUSSIA)
RM2E6NEGA–Chief Executive of Russian oil producer TNK-BP Robert Dudley smiles during a conference in St Petersburg, June 8, 2008. Dudley said on Saturday he hoped that a conflict between BP and the Russian shareholders would be resolved 'within days'. REUTERS/Serhei Karpukhin (RUSSIA)
Download Confirmation
Please complete the form below. The information provided will be included in your download confirmation