Moscow: Russia’s crude output set another post- Soviet record in December, according to Energy Ministry data, as the nation’s producers seek to withstand the slump in oil prices.

The country’s crude and gas condensate production increased to 10.825 million barrels a day last month, beating the previous record set in November by 0.4 per cent, Bloomberg calculations based on the data show. Output for the year increased 1.4 per cent compared with 2014, exceeding 534 million metric tons, or almost 10.726 million barrels a day, according to the preliminary information emailed from Energy Ministry’s CDU-TEK unit.

Russian crude producers have been setting post-Soviet records even amid plunging prices and US and European Union sanctions that cut access to foreign financing and technology. The companies have managed to squeeze more crude out of some ageing fields in West Siberia and brought a few mid-sized new projects on line.

Supplies jump

Russia’s crude export rose to 5.25 million barrels a day in 2015, according to the data, with supplies to countries outside the former Soviet Union jumping 11 per cent to more than 4.42 million barrels.

The Russian government, which relies on oil for about 40 per cent of its budget revenue, doesn’t expect a drop in production this year. Investments made two to three years ago have been supporting output in 2015 and will do so in 2016, Energy Minister Alexander Novak said December 22. Still, production may decline next year if Russia has to increase the tax burden on the industry to narrow the budget gap given the plunging oil price, he said.

Natural gas output in Russia is declining as the main producer, the state-controlled Gazprom PJSC, faces stronger competition from its domestic rivals and lower sales in former Soviet republics. The nation’s total production decreased 1 per cent to 635 billion cubic meters, the lowest level since 2009, according to the data.

The ministry hasn’t been disclosing Gazprom data since the start of last year, although the company predicted its 2015 output would fall to the record low of about 420 billion cubic meters.