Russia focused on conventional gas projects
With the world’s largest reserves of conventional gas, the country can afford to leave shale gas in the ground
As Russia’s conventional reservoirs mature, shale will be critical to the country’s future production – of oil, that is. The Bazhenov shale-oil formation, in Western Siberia, is a world-class deposit, with about 75 billion barrels of recoverable oil thought to be within reach. Some estimates put the figure at 1 trillion barrels, suggesting the source rock dwarfs the US’ Bakken. ExxonMobil and Rosneft are about to begin fracking it. Shale gas reserves are big, too. The US’ Energy Information Administration says Russia has 285 trillion cubic feet (cf) of recoverable shale gas. But that figure only covers the Bazhenov and the data were too sparse to offer a telling figure from several other str
Also in this section
13 November 2025
The new federal government appears far more supportive of oil and gas than former prime minister Justin Trudeau’s climate-focused administration, but the prospects look better for the latter hydrocarbon
12 November 2025
The November 2025 issue of Petroleum Economist is out now!
10 November 2025
The Russian firm made a significant attempt to expand overseas over the past two decades but is now trying to divest its global operations
10 November 2025
OPEC+ has proven to be astute at bringing back oil production, but mysteries around Chinese buying, missing barrels and oil-on-water have left the group in wait-and-see mode







