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2019-03-22 10:35:00

RUSSIA'S BUSINESS CONDITIONS

RUSSIA'S BUSINESS CONDITIONS

REUTERS - Russian President Vladimir Putin met on Wednesday heads of the world's top oil traders Glencore and Vitol, as well as BP's chief executive, among others, promising favorable conditions for business.

The meeting, attended by BP CEO Robert Dudley, Glencore CEO Ivan Glasenberg and Vitol's Chairman Ian Taylor, among others, is a rare gathering in the Kremlin of some of the world's most influential energy players.

Russia, one of the world's top oil producers and exporters, has been under Western sanctions since 2014, which include restrictions on some financial instruments and development of some types of energy resources by foreign firms.

Putin, in opening remarks before the meeting was closed to reporters, said that Russia "is doing all (that's) necessary so that foreign investors, our partners, friends feel themselves as comfortable as possible on the Russian market". He did not elaborate.

Dudley, once the head of TNK-BP, a Russia-British joint venture bought by Rosneft in 2013 for $55 billion, last met Putin in February. BP now holds a 19.75 stake in Rosneft, whose CEO Igor Sechin was also present on Wednesday.

Glasenberg and Taylor are rare visitors to the Kremlin, though they usually attend the economic forum in St Petersburg.

Glencore has a wide range of interests in Russia from oil trading to aluminum and power assets, while Vitol is active in oil trading as well. Putin has invited all the company bosses to take part in an economic forum in St Petersburg, a 'Russian Davos', in June.

The Kremlin meeting comes amid talk that U.S.companies could boycott Moscow's showcase forum in June following Russia's arrest of prominent U.S. investor Michael Calvey on embezzlement charges. Calvey denies the charges.

The Kremlin called Wednesday's gathering a 'meeting with representatives of the UK business circles'.

Russia-UK relations also turned frosty after Britain accused Moscow of the poisoning of a former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal - accusations Moscow denies.

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Tags: RUSSIA, BUSINESS