Native name | ОАО «ФосАгро» |
---|---|
Company type | Public (OAO) |
MCX: PHOR LSE: PHOR | |
Industry | Chemical |
Founded | 2003 |
Headquarters | Moscow, Russia |
Key people | Xavier R. Rolet KBE,(Chairman) Andrey A. Guryev, (CEO) |
Products | Fertilizer |
Revenue | $5.71 billion [1] (2021) |
$2.23 billion [1] (2021) | |
$1.76 billion [1] (2021) | |
Total assets | $5.51 billion [1] (2021) |
Total equity | $2.24 billion [1] (2021) |
Number of employees | 5,001 |
Website | www.phosagro.com |
PhosAgro is a Russian chemical holding company producing fertilizer, phosphates and feed phosphates. The company is based in Moscow, Russia, and its subsidiaries include Apatit, a company based in the Murmansk Region and engaged in the extraction of apatite rock. The company is Europe's largest producer of phosphate-based fertilisers.
The original owner of PhosAgro's assets (most notably Apatit, a Soviet-era mining company) was exiled Russian billionaire Mikhail Khodorkovsky via his company, Menatep. In 2003, Khodorkovsky was arrested for tax evasion and fraud; the charges against him were ostensibly connected to Menatep's purchase of shares in Apatit. However, some have seen the charges as punishment for publicly clashing with Vladimir Putin. [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]
During Khordorkovsky's trial, the state seized Menatep's stake in Apatit. [7] In 2004, Andrey Guryev, who at the time ran Apatit on behalf of Khodorkovsky's Menatep and was also a Russian senator, wrote a message to Khodorkovsky in prison to convince him to sell his remaining 50% stake in PhosAgro to Guryev. Khodorkovsky sold his shares to Guryev for a low price. [8]
In July 2011, PhosAgro raised $538 million in a London IPO. [9]
In 2012, PhosAgro paid $344 million at a state tender to buy back a 26.7% share in Apatit, bringing the company's ownership to 76%. [10]
As of 2012, Andrey Guryev and his family owned 5.47% of PhosAgro via various trusts. [11]
PhosAgro is 19.35% owned by Vladimir Litvinenko, [12] who oversaw Vladimir Putin's plagiarized doctoral thesis in 1996. [13] [8]
In 2022, the company's revenue amounted to 164 billion rubles. [14]
PhosAgro reported Total CO2e emissions (Direct + Indirect) for 31 December 2020 at 5,961 Kt (+113/+1.9% y-o-y). [15] There is little evidence of a consistent declining trend as yet.[ citation needed ]
Dec 2017 | Dec 2018 | Dec 2019 | Dec 2020 |
---|---|---|---|
3,971 [16] | 5,971 [17] | 5,848 [18] | 5,961 [15] |
In June 2017, Igor Sychev, a former head of PhosAgro's tax department, presented a claim against PhosAgro to the London High Court of Justice. In his claim he demanded 1% of the company's shares or their value in cash (approximately $55 million, and also $8 million in cash to serve as his remuneration for having previously defended PhosAgro interests in court). [19]
According to Sychev's statement, the conflict started after he didn't receive the agreed remuneration for defending PhosAgro's interests in court.
The defendants in the London court case are Andrey Guryev, PhosAgro's Vice President of the board of directors, and another member of the board, Igor Antoshin, together with some offshore companies based in Seychelles and Belize. A London judge has given permission to open proceedings against the defendants. [20]
In October 2019, another lawsuit was launched against PhosAgro in the London High Court. Alexander Gorbachev, a Russian businessman and former senior executive at PhosAgro, is suing the company for what he alleges is his rightful share of the business, a stake that is worth £1 billion at today's market value. The full trial will be heard in the High Court in 2020-2021. [21]
Mikhail Borisovich Khodorkovsky, sometimes known by his initials MBK, is an exiled Russian businessman, oligarch, and opposition activist, now residing in London. In 2003, Khodorkovsky was believed to be the wealthiest man in Russia, with a fortune estimated to be worth $15 billion, and was ranked 16th on Forbes list of billionaires. He had worked his way up the Komsomol apparatus, during the Soviet years, and started several businesses during the period of glasnost and perestroika in the late 1980s. In 1989, he became Chairman of the Board of Bank Menatep, which he founded. After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, in the mid-1990s, he accumulated considerable wealth by obtaining control of a number of Siberian oil fields unified under the name Yukos, one of the major companies to emerge from the privatization of state assets during the 1990s.
OJSC "Yukos Oil Company" was an oil and gas company based in Moscow, Russia. Yukos was acquired from the Russian government by Russian oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky's Bank Menatep during the controversial "loans for shares" auctions of the mid 1990s. Between 1996 and 2003, Yukos became one of the largest and most successful Russian companies, producing 20% of Russia's oil output. In the 2004 Fortune 500, Yukos was ranked as the 359th largest company in the world. In October 2003, Khodorkovsky—by then the richest person in Russia and 16th richest person in the world—was arrested, and the company was forcibly broken up for alleged unpaid taxes shortly after and declared bankrupt in August 2006. Courts in several countries later ruled that the real intent was to destroy Yukos and obtain its assets for the government, and act politically against Khodorkovsky. In 2014, the largest arbitration award in history, $50 billion (€37.2 billion), was won by Yukos' former owners against Russia. This $50 billion award by the Permanent Court of Arbitration was ruled invalid by the District court in The Hague in 2016, but reinstated by the Court of Appeal of the Hague in 2020.
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Alexander Litvinenko was an officer of the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) and its predecessor, the KGB, until he left the service and fled the country in late 2000.
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