In 1979, he moved to Western Siberia and began the “Siberian chapter” of the biography of a young but already highly qualified specialist. He was soon appointed head of an oil and gas production shop at a production association of Surgutneftegaz [Surgut Oil and Gas]. From 1980 to 1983, he headed Surgutneftegaz production associations in the towns of Noyabrsk and Lyantor, Tyumen region. From 1983 to 1985, he worked as head of an oil and gas production administration at Bashneft [Bashkir Oil] Production Association in Kogalym, the Tyumen Region. In 1985, he was appointed first deputy director of Bashneft, responsible for the association’s production operations in West Siberia. During this period, he proved himself to be a talented, proactive engineer and a skillful production organizer capable of solving the most difficult problems. In 1987, he was appointed general manager of Kogalymneftegaz [Kogalym Oil and Gas] Production Association. He worked there for three years, after which he was transferred to Moscow to serve as USSR deputy minister of the oil and gas industry, and was later appointed first deputy minister.
During this time, he attentively studied the experience of the world’s leading oil companies and concluded that the Soviet Union needed to create vertically integrated joint-stock corporations. Thanks to the insistence of Vagit Alekperov and other like-minded entrepreneurs, the Russian Federation formed the country’s first vertically integrated oil company, combining enterprises of the entire production cycle “from well to gas pump.”
In 1992, Alekperov was appointed president of the LangepasUrayKogalymneft [Langepas, Uray, and Kogalym Oil] state oil concern, which later became LUKOIL.
In 1993, Vagit Alekperov became chairman of the Board of Directors and Executive Board of LUKOIL Open Joint-Stock Company and was appointed the company’s president.
Today, LUKOIL is one of the largest independent oil companies in Russia, with authorized capital of 21,264,081 rubles and 37.5 kopecks, divided into 850,563,255 shares of common stock. ING Bank (Eurasia) nominally holds 63.3% of LUKOIL’s stock, and the American company ConocoPhillips holds a 20% interest in the company.
According to data audited by Miller and Lents, the company’s proven hydrocarbon reserves as of January 1, 2010 were 17.5 billion barrels of oil equivalent, including 13.7 billion barrels of oil and 22.9 trillion cubic feet of gas.
In 2009, expansion of proven reserves through geologic exploration, operational drilling, and acquisitions totaled 782 million barrels of oil equivalent, or 95% of annual production volume. LUKOIL remains among the leaders of Russian and international companies in volume of proven reserves.
Vagit Alekperov is a doctor of economics and an active member of the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences. In recent years, he has chaired the Energy Policy Committee of the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs. He has written several monographs, including Russia’s Vertically Integrated Oil Companies [Vertikalno integrirovannye neftyanyye kompanii Rossii] (1999), and edited the anthologies The Eve of the Petroleum Era [Predvestiye ery nefti] (2003), Soviet Union’s Oil [Neft strany Sovetov] (2005), and New Russia’s Oil [Neft novoy Rossii] (2007).
He is actively involved in charitable activities. In 2007, he founded the Our Future Foundation of Regional Social Programs.
Vagit Alekperov was awarded the orders “For Service to the Fatherland” (3rd and 4th degrees), “Friendship of Nations,” “Badge of Honor,” the medal “For Exploitation and Development of the Oil and Gas Industry in Western Siberia,” and Azerbaijan’s highest state medal, the order Shohrat (“Glory”). He has also been awarded the Russian Federation Government Prize and many honorary titles from a number of Russian and international public organizations.
He is married, with one son.