Exclusive - EBRD to shut 5 of 7 Russian offices in early 2018

Reuters  |  LONDON 

By Marc Jones

(Reuters) - The European for Reconstruction and Development is to shut five of its seven in next year, as the pursues a freeze on lending there since the 2014 Ukraine crisis.

The axe will fall on all but its Moscow and St Petersburg branches, highlighting the extent to which Western-led sanctions have shifted the development away from what was, for many years, its largest and most profitable markets.

Sources within the London-based told that the cuts had been on the cards for some time. A spokesman confirmed on Tuesday that a decision had now been made.

"We will be closing 5 small regional in Yekaterinburg, Krasnoyarsk, Rostov-on-Don, Vladivostok and Samara at the end of first quarter 2018," the EBRD's managing director for communications Jonathan Charles said.

While the move is likely to underscore the poor state of relations between the West and - the EBRD's biggest shareholders are U.S., European and other G7 governments - the closures are likely to affect only a handful of staff.

The had around 160 personnel in its seven before the 2014 Ukraine crisis. Back then it had around 10 billion euros in projects in Russia, from Volkswagen car plants to a long list of equity stakes in companies and banks.

Since then work has been reduced to tending to the bank's legacy portfolio or to limited projects where Russian companies invest in other countries alongside the

As a result roughly half of those staff have either moved elsewhere in the or left it altogether.

"I deeply regret that the lost Russia, it's largest and most profitable market," Russia's representative at the in London, Denis Morozov, told

"It's also very sad that the cannot any more deliver on its mandate and help to change to a better place," adding that it had also lost experience and contacts built up over two decades of work in the country.

Russia's economy ministry also confirmed it had been informed of the closure plans.

The was created as the Cold War came to end in 1991, specifically to invest in former Soviet-bloc states and help them make the transition to market-based economies.

At the start of 2017 some officials had privately talked about the possibility of restarting some work with the private sector in

But these prospects evaporated shortly thereafter when the scandal over contact between members of U.S. President Donald Trump's team and Russian officials during last year's election campaign soured the international mood towards Moscow further.

Moscow then accused the of becoming a "tool" of western foreign policy in May this year after the governors of the lender to former communist Europe rejected its call to restart lending to

The still has a 3 billion euro portfolio of Russian investments but this continues to steadily shrink as firms there pay back their loans and the itself continues the normal process of selling down its equity stakes.

"Should our operational requirements in change, we would be ready to re-examine our infrastructure and staffing requirements," spokesman Charles said.

(Reporting by Marc Jones; Editing by Richard Balmforth and Cynthia Osterman)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, October 04 2017. 02:47 IST