Environmental
Consciousness in Sakhalin:
Background and Views on the Sakhalin
Offshore
Oil-Gas Development
Tsuneo Akaha and
Anna Vassilieva
This
study was made possible by a grant from the Japanese Ministry of
Education administered through Hokkaido University's Slavic Research
Center. The grant supported our travel to Sakhalin in August 1998. We
thank the ministry and the Slavic Research Center. We want to thank the
Environmental Watch of Sakhalin and the Sociological Research
Laboratory of Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk State University for their assistance
in conducting this survey. Thanks also go to Alina Spradley, a graduate
assistant at the Center for East Asian Studies, Monterey Institute of
International Studies, for her assistance in the translation of all
survey responses. We also thank Philip Chou, Sarah Lane, and Kevin
Orfall, also graduate assistants at the Center for East Asian Studies,
for their assistance in survey data entry.
Vasilii
Kliuchevskii, Aphorisms: Historical
Portraits, Sketches, Moscow: Mysl, 1993, pp. 25-26; quoted in Anna
Vassilieva and Nikolai Sokov, Influence of Culture on Russian
Negotiating Style, U.S. Institute of Peace-supported study,
Monterey Institute of International Studies, Monterey, California 1999,
chapter 2.
See,
for example, Miwa Ito, "Roshia no ecology
gyosei to kyokuto," Roshia Kenkyu, No. 24 (April 1997), pp.
60-77.
Vladimir
Ivanov, "Prospects for Russia's Energy
Diplomacy in Northeast Asia," Global Economic Review
(forthcoming). (Seoul, Korea), Summer 1999
Regiony Rossii; Informatsionno-statisticheskii
sbornik, vol. 1, Moscow: Goskomstat Rossii, 1997, p. 280; cited in
Judith Thornton, "Sakhalin Energy Projects: Their Governance and
Prospects," paper presented at the annual conference of Asian Studies
on the Pacific Coast, San Diego, California, June 17-20, 1999, p. 2.
Regiony Rossii; Informatsionno-statisticheskii
sbornik, vol. 2, Moscow: Goskomstat Rossii, 1997, pp. 194-195;
cited in Thornton, "Sakhalin Energy Projects" p. 2.
Sakhalin
Energy is composed of Marathon, Mitsui,
Mitsubishi, and Shell.
Vladimir
I. Ivanov, "Prospects for Russia's 'Energy
Diplomacy' in Northeast Asia," paper presented at the conference on "A
Vision for Northeast Asia: International Cooperation for Regional
Security and Prosperity," organized by the Center for East Asian
Studies, Monterey Institute of International Studies, Monterey,
California, February 12-14, 1999, p. 23, note 25. See also, Tadashi
Sugimoto and Kazuto Furuta, "Sakhalin Oil and Gas and Japan," in
Vladimir I. Ivanov and Karla S. Smith, eds., Japan and Russia in
Northeast Asia: Partners in the 21st Century, Westport,
Connecticut: Praeger, 1999, pp. 259-267.
Thornton,
"Sakhalin Energy Projects," pp. 11-12. The
contradictory information was contained in Sakhalin Regional
Administration, "Sakhalin Island Infrastructure Development Plan"
prepared by Northern Economics, Anchorage, Alaska, 1998, pp. 3-9; cited
in Thornton, p. 12.
Ivanov,
"Prospects for Russia's 'Energy Diplomacy'" p.
11.
The
estimated reserves of Sakhalin-1 and Sakhalin-2
are shown in the table below.
"Development of the
Far Eastern Fuel and Energy Complex Development: Sakhalin-1 and
Sakhalin-2 Projects Implementation," OAO Rosneft-Sakhalin Morneftegas,
May 1997, p. 3.
In
December 1998 Mobil Oil was absorbed by Exxon
for about $80 billion. (David Ignatius, "Corporate Suicide: Mobil'sOnly Option," The Japan Times, January 14, 1999, p.
18; Bruce Gilley, "Wake-Up Call," The The Far Eastern Economic
Review, December 17, 1998, p. 56.)
Mobil
-Texaco would develop the Kirinskii field,
Exxon the East Odoptu and Ayashky fields.
These
concerns were expressed by representatives of
Environmental Watch of Sakhalin interviewed on August 24, 1998.
The
fishery industry is the largest producer and
employer in Sakhalin and accounts for 39.6 percent of industrial output
and 25 percent of employment.
"Deviantnoe
povedenie molodezhi," Sakhalin Information
and Analytical Agency Publication, No. 3 (May 1995), p. 21.
See
Vassilieva and Sokov, chapter 2. For an
extensive psychoanalytical discussion of the historical and cultural
sources of "moral masochism" in Russia, see Daniel Rancour-Laferriere, The
Slave Sole of Russia: Moral Masochism and the Cult of Suffering,
New York: New York University Press, 1995.
This
observation is attributed to Yale Richmond, From
Nyet to Da: Understanding the Russians, Revised and Updated
Edition, Yarmouth, Maine: Intercultural Press, 1966, p. 41; cited in
Vassilieva and Sokov, chapter 2.
In
most remote towns and villages of Sakhalin,
the residents have access to only one central channel as transmissions
of local channels do not work.
George
F. Kennan, Memoirs, 1925-1950,
Boston: Little, Brown, 1967, pp. 528-529; quoted by Vassilieva and
Sokov, chapter 2.
See
, for example, Tsuneo Akaha, Pavel A. Minakir,
and Kunio Okada, "Economic Challenge in the Russian Far East," Tsuneo
Akaha, ed., Politics and Economics in the Russian Far East:
Changing Ties with Asia-Pacific, London: Routledge, 1997, pp.
61-67; Evgenii B. Kovrigin, "Problems of Resource Development in the
Russian Far East," in Akaha ed., Politics and Economics in the
Russian Far East, pp. 70-86.
See
, for example, Akaha, Minakir, and Okada,
"Economic Challenge in the Russian Far East";
Tsuneo Akaha, "Environmental Challenge in the
Russian Far East," in Akaha, ed., Politics and Economics in the
Russian Far East, pp. 130-132.
For
a recent succinct discussion of Russian
identity vis-a-vis Europe and Asia, see Pierre H. Hart, "The West," and
Mark Bassin, "Asia," in Nicholas Rzhevskii, ed., The Cambridge
Companion to Modern Russian Culture, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge
University Press, 1998, pp. 85-102 and pp. 57-84, respectively.
Karen
Horney, The Neurotic Personality of Our
Time, New York: W.W. Norton, 1964, p. 228; quoted in Daniel
Rancour-Laferriere, The Slave Soul of Russia, p. 93. The
point is not that Sakhalin citizens are neurotic but that to the extent
that they share the historically rooted tendency toward moral
masochism, it is likely that many of them will view the ongoing oil and
gas developments in their territory as a development beyond their
control.