RRI Live!

Listen to Radio Romania International Live

Sovrompetrol

In 1945 Romania took sides with the powers that crushed the Axis Coalition. However, Romania was considered a defeated country, on account of its joining Germany in the Second World War until August 23rd, 1944. The Peace Convention ascribed Romania that particular status, which was all the more relevant in the Convention’s foreword. “The Government and the Higher Command of Romania, acknowledging the defeat of Romania in the war against the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics, the United Kingdom and the United States of America and the other United Nations, has consented to the terms of the armistice as they were laid out by the Governments of the three aforementioned allied Powers, acting in the interest of the United Nations”.

Sovrompetrol
Sovrompetrol

, 10.03.2014, 13:35



Romania was forced to pay hefty reparations. The payments had to be made in installments, over a six-year period. When it failed to meet a deadline, according to the schedule set by the Allied Control Commission, Romania had to make a monthly extra payment of 5 per cent of its overdue payment. Overall damages accounted for as much as 300 million US Dollars, given that an ounce of gold was traded for 35 Dollars, while the price of Romanian commodities that were to be delivered followed the world standards of 1938, with a 15 per cent increase for rail transport and a 10 per cent increase for other categories. In fact, the price for those goods had gone up by 33 percent as compared to the standard price of 1938. Calculations made back then revealed that the 300 million dollars accounted for more than 55 per cent of Romania’s GDP, which in 1945 stood at 519 million dollars.



Actually, Romania paid a lot more than the double of the reparations that had to be paid as stipulated in the peace treaties. The Soviets were very cunning in finding ways to plunder Romania’s economy, so they set up the joint Sov-rom [Soviet-Romanian] enterprises, in the production sector as well as in the raw material exploitation sectors. Sovrompetrol was the first such enterprise, set up on July 17, 1045. Apart from the railway industry, the oil industry was hit hard by the war. The crude oil production in 1944 stood at an all-time low reported for the Second World War, accounting for 3.52 million tons, that is 63 per cent of the average production of 1941-1944. In order to pay part of its debts, Romania had to deliver the USSR 10, 200,000 tons of crude oil each year.



Maxim Berghianu was the head of what was to become the State Planning Committee. In 2001, when he was interviewed by Romanian Radio’s Oral History center, Berghianu believed that part of the blame for Romania’s being plundered by the Soviets had to be laid on the West. Berghianu revealed that lots of Romanian companies with foreign capital, like the IAR aircraft factory, joined the Sovroms. And oil was part of that as well.



When the West took the decision to turn us over to Russia, back then they got the best out of it, since these enterprises had foreign capital, and the IAR had been working for the Germans. It was the Messerschmitt aircraft factory that later made tractors. Then there were the Sovroms, then the chemical industry, with many of its venues tailored for weaponry and producing TNT and dynamite. So what we got were Sovrom Tractor, SovromChim, SovromGaz, Sovrompetrol. The Russians penetrated the richest areas, rich in raw material resources, where they thought they were highly likely to make a profit. Not to mention uranium, which they exploited ruthlessly.”



Sovrompetrol, just like other companies of its kind, was a real burden on Romania’s economy, faced with massive shortcomings by the early 1950s. The Romanian communist leaders were very much aware of that, and they started taking measures, as Gheorghe Apostol, advisor to leader Gheorghe Gheorghiu Dej, recounts in 1994:



Romanian economy was under the USSR’s control through those Sovroms. We were investing in industry, agriculture, in all sectors of the economy, but they would reap all the benefits. At a reception on November 7th, 1952, at the Soviet Embassy, before going to Stalin, Dej summoned us. He wanted to talk to us about a proposal made by the Soviet government to sovromize methane gas too, as they had already done with oil. And Dej said: ‘That’s it! We will not give in any more! This Sovrom issue requires a solution based on mutual agreement, and for that we need to take action. We are now going to the Soviet Embassy. I will pretend to be drinking and I will tell them what we think about these Sovroms.”



It is a well known fact that major decisions are made in informal circumstances and Romanian communists tried to take advantage of that principle too.



At the end of a reception, the ambassador and his deputies would ask us to join them in a room nearby, where there was also food and drinks, in order to discuss both domestic and international matters. And I recall that meeting, with Dej sitting next to the Soviet Ambassador and the Soviet Government Representative for Sovroms and, suddenly, I heard him say: ‘Comrade, would you please tell me what capital export means?’ And the other one said: ‘What’s the point of this question?’ And Dej replied: ‘We make the investments and you take the benefits’. And this is how the conversation ended.”



Sovroms and Sovrompetrol could only be dismantled after the death of Stalin. The first ones disappeared in 1956, among which Sovrompetrol, after 12 years of functioning, instead of 6, as initially planned. The last sovroms were dismantled in 1959, after 14 years.


Gheorghe Gheorghiu –Dej şi Petru Groza /
The History Show Monday, 14 October 2024

The Romanian Communist Party and the Agrarian Reform

According to the Marxist-Leninist theses about means of production, property had to be common, owned by all those who used it and created added...

The Romanian Communist Party and the Agrarian Reform
Bricul Mircea foto mapn ro @Capitan Gabriel Chiriloiu
The History Show Monday, 07 October 2024

The Romanian military fleet in WWII

The history of the Romanian military fleet begins in the middle of the 19th century, when, after the union of the two principalities of Moldova and...

The Romanian military fleet in WWII
pe Aeroportul Băneasa înainte de plecare la Conferinţa de Pace de la Paris, întreţinându-se cu Ana Pauker şi Florica Bagdasar.
The History Show Monday, 30 September 2024

Ana Pauker

Ana Pauker is one of the most conspicuous figureheads in the history of the communist regime in Romania. Ana Pauker played a crucial part in the team...

Ana Pauker
banner-Pro-Memoria.-960x540-2
The History Show Monday, 23 September 2024

Nicolae Titulescu and the Romanian diplomacy in Europe in the 1930s

  The diplomacies of countries that gravitate around the powerful ones, always have the mission of being one step ahead of events. They must...

Nicolae Titulescu and the Romanian diplomacy in Europe in the 1930s
The History Show Monday, 16 September 2024

The early days of BBC’s Romanian-language broadcasting

In the world of radio broadcasting, the BBC needs no introduction. The BBC is one of the landmarks without which the history of radio broadcasting...

The early days of BBC’s Romanian-language broadcasting
The History Show Monday, 19 August 2024

Restored Romanian monuments in Bessarabia

  On March 27, 1918, Bessarabia, stretching between rivers Prut and Dniester, united with Romania after it had been annexed by Russia in 1812...

Restored Romanian monuments in Bessarabia
The History Show Monday, 29 July 2024

Desertions in the Romanian Army in WWI

In a state of war, conscripted into a strict institutional form like the army, the military man is under great pressure. It’s about being alive...

Desertions in the Romanian Army in WWI
The History Show Monday, 22 July 2024

Radio NOREA

Between 1945 and 1990, a number of international radio stations used to broadcast in Romanian. These were mainly stations from Western Europe and...

Radio NOREA

Partners

Muzeul Național al Țăranului Român Muzeul Național al Țăranului Român
Liga Studentilor Romani din Strainatate - LSRS Liga Studentilor Romani din Strainatate - LSRS
Modernism | The Leading Romanian Art Magazine Online Modernism | The Leading Romanian Art Magazine Online
Institului European din România Institului European din România
Institutul Francez din România – Bucureşti Institutul Francez din România – Bucureşti
Muzeul Național de Artă al României Muzeul Național de Artă al României
Le petit Journal Le petit Journal
Radio Prague International Radio Prague International
Muzeul Național de Istorie a României Muzeul Național de Istorie a României
ARCUB ARCUB
Radio Canada International Radio Canada International
Muzeul Național al Satului „Dimitrie Gusti” Muzeul Național al Satului „Dimitrie Gusti”
SWI swissinfo.ch SWI swissinfo.ch
UBB Radio ONLINE UBB Radio ONLINE
Strona główna - English Section - polskieradio.pl Strona główna - English Section - polskieradio.pl
creart - Centrul de Creație Artă și Tradiție al Municipiului Bucuresti creart - Centrul de Creație Artă și Tradiție al Municipiului Bucuresti
italradio italradio
Institutul Confucius Institutul Confucius
BUCPRESS - știri din Cernăuți BUCPRESS - știri din Cernăuți

Affiliates

Euranet Plus Euranet Plus
AIB | the trade association for international broadcasters AIB | the trade association for international broadcasters
Digital Radio Mondiale Digital Radio Mondiale
News and current affairs from Germany and around the world News and current affairs from Germany and around the world
Comunità radiotelevisiva italofona Comunità radiotelevisiva italofona

Providers

RADIOCOM RADIOCOM
Zeno Media - The Everything Audio Company Zeno Media - The Everything Audio Company