Acheson J. Duncan and Oleg Deripaska: Difference between pages

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{{Infobox Person
{{Cleanup|date=December 2007}}
| name = Oleg Deripaska
| image = Deripaska.gif
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1968|01|02}}
| birth_place = [[Dzerzhinsk]], [[Nizhny Novgorod Oblast]], [[Russia]]
| occupation = Chairman of the Supervisory Board of Basic Element Company
| networth = {{gain}}[[United States dollar|US$]]28.6 [[1,000,000,000 (number)|billion]] (2008)<ref>[http://www.forbes.com/lists/2008/10/billionaires08_Oleg-Deripaska_UCP9.html Forbes lists, World's Billionaires]</ref>
| residence = [[Moscow]], [[Russia]]
| alma_mater = [[Moscow State University]], [[Plekhanov Russian Academy of Economics]]
| spouse = Polina
| website = [http://www.basel.ru/en/ Basic Element]
}}


'''Oleg Vladimirovich Deripaska''' ({{lang-ru|'''Олег Владимирович Дерипаска'''}}) (born [[January 2]] [[1968]] in [[Dzerzhinsk]], [[Nizhny Novgorod Oblast]]) is a [[Russia]]n [[billionaire]], and a member of the Board of Directors of UC [[Rusal]], a Russian [[aluminium]] industry company <ref>[http://www.rusal.ru/en/board_of_directors.aspx]</ref>.
'''Acheson J. Duncan''' professor emeritus of Statistics at [[Johns Hopkins University]] Whiting School of Engineering, was an authority in the field of Quality Control and Industrial Statistics.His book was like a bible for Japanese who came to Baltimore,Md. to learn about quality from Dr.Duncan. Wiley, publisher has called this book as best seller in 50's,60's,70's and 1980s.The 5th edition was printed in 1986 by Wiley.[http://www.itl.nist.gov/div898/handbook/pmc/section1/pmc11.htm]


==Business introduction==
A native of Leonia,N.J.,he attended [[Princeton University]],where he received a bachelor's degree in 1925,a master's in 1927 and a Ph.D. in economics in 1936.He also attended the [[University of Chicago]] and [[Columbia University]].
Deripaska is the sole owner and a Chairman of the Supervisory board of Basic Element, a diversified investment company established in 1997 with assets in [[Russia]] and abroad. Basic Element's main assets are concentrated in six sectors - Energy, Resources, [[Manufacturing]], [[Financial Services]], [[Construction]] and [[Aviation]]. The major assets include UC [[Rusal]]<ref>[http://www.rusal.ru/en/ Russian Aluminium Company website]</ref>, the world’s largest [[aluminium]] and [[alumina]] producer, <ref>[http://www.eurosibenergo.ru/eng/ Eurosib Power Company]</ref>, [[GAZ Group]] automotive company, Soyuz Bank, Ingosstrakh insurance company, [http://aviakor.ru/eng/ Aviacor] aircraft manufacturer, [http://www.smrbasel.ru/en/ SMR] mining company, Continental Management Timber Industrial Company, Glavstroy and Transstroy] construction companies, stakes in [[Strabag]] (25%), [[Hochtief]] (10%) and [[Switzerland]] based Fahrni (100%). In 2007, Basic Element's consolidated revenues exceeded USD26 billion. The [[market value]] of the Company's assets is estimated at USD45 billion <ref>[http://uk.reuters.com/article/oilRpt/idUKL2643840220080626]</ref>. Basic Element employs 300,000 people and owns companies in [[Russia]], the [[CIS]] countries, [[Africa]], [[Australia]], [[Asia]], [[Europe]] and [[Latin America]].
He married Helen Foster in 1960,who died at age 91 in 1995 after his death at age 90.He had two step children, Catharine Foster Black and Joseph Foster, seven grandchildren and 5 great grand children in 1995.


Deripaska is one of 16 global business leaders who drafted CEO Climate Policy Recommendations to [[G8]] Leaders, a document outlining international business community's proposals to effectively tackle [[global warming]]. The proposals were signed by more than 100 of the world's leading corporations and handed to Japanese Prime Minister [[Yasuo Fukuda]] on [[June 20]], [[2008]]. [[G8]] leaders discussed the recommendations during the summit in [[Japan]] on July 7-9, 2008. The process was coordinated by the [[World Economic Forum]] in collaboration with the [[World Business Council for Sustainable Development]]. <ref>[http://www.weforum.org/en/initiatives/ghg/index.htm World Economic Forum; Climate Change; CEO Climate Policy Recommendations to G8 Leaders]</ref> <ref>[http://www.basel.ru/en/media/news/200807/news_07_07_2008/ Expert magazine; "Zero Waste"; interview]</ref>
Dr.Duncan spent 13 years on the faculty at [[Princeton University]] and three years in the US Army before coming to [[Johns Hopkins University]] in 1946 as an associate professor of statistics in the School of Business.Later he joined the faculty of the Department of Mechanical Engineering's program in industrial engineering.He retired in 1971 as professor,but remained very active until 1992,spending a few hours at his office at JHU.
Dr.Duncan[http://www.jhu.edu/~gazette/janmar95/jan3095/duncan.html] wrote extensively on his research in the field,having co-authored two statistical text books.His third book,Quality Control and Industrial Statistics,first published in 1952,has been edited 5 times and printed in Indian and Japanese translations.


In 2004, Deripaska was appointed by the [[President of Russia]] to represent the country in the [http://www.abaconline.org Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Business Advisory Council (ABAC)]. He has held the position of Chairman of ABAC Russia since 2007.
[[Robert H Roy]] ,dean emeritus of JHU School of Engineering,has stated that Dr.Duncan and his book/work was revered in [[Japan]],where he frequently lectured in the years following World War 2."A good deal of the credit for the post-war recovery of Japanese economy was attributable in part to his work in statistical quality control.He was a distinguished scholar".


Deripaska is Vice President of the [http://www.rspp.ru/Default.aspx.aspx?CatalogId=2879 Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs], Chairman of the Executive Board of the [http://eng.iccwbo.ru/ Russian National Committee of the International Chamber of Commerce] and a member of the [http://www.government.ru/content/coordinatingauthority/b4eff239-8089-4843-a26a-9b8fbb857226.htm Competitiveness and Entrepreneurship Council, an agency of the Russian Government]. [http://www.basel.ru/en/about/management/di_01/]
The American Society of Quality awarded Shewhart medal to Dr.Duncan in 1964.[http://www.asq.org/about-asq/awards/honors/shewhart.html]
In 1986,an anonymous donor established the Acheson J.Duncan Distinguished Visitor Fund at [[Johns Hopkins University]].The endowed fund supports an annual visit to JHU and lecture by a scholar in mathematical sciences.


He sits on the Boards of Trustees of the [[Bolshoi Theatre]], the School of Business Administration, the School of Public Administration, and the School of Economics at [[Moscow State University]] and the School of Business Administration at [[St. Petersburg State University]]. Deripaska is a co-founder of the National Science Support Foundation and the National Medicine Fund. <ref>[http://www.basel.ru/en/about/management/di_01/ Basic Element website]</ref>
Besides his work with the Japanese Government,Dr.Duncan served as consultant to numerous industries and governmental agencies,including the US Army Chemical Corps,Glenn L.Martin Co. and Esso Standard Oil Co.

Categories:Quality Control;Scholar
In 1999, Deripaska was awarded the [[Order of Friendship of Peoples]] by President [[Boris Yeltsin]].

== Biography ==
=== Education and early career ===
Deripaska was born in [[Dzerzhinsk]], [[Nizhny Novgorod Oblast]], but he grew up in [[Krasnodar krai]]. He graduated with honors in physics from the [[Moscow State University]] in 1993, and in 1996, he earned an economics degree from the [[Plekhanov Russian Academy of Economics]]. He was general manager of [[Sayanogorsk]] Smelter (1994-1997) and held the post of president of Sibirsky Aluminium Investment Industrial Group (1997-2001), which later became a core of [http://www.basel.ru/en/about/history/1997/ Basic Element] Investment Company.

[[The Guardian]] mentions<ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2007/feb/24/business.russia Guardian; "How metals and a ruthless streak put Russian patriot at top of the rich list", by Luke Harding]</ref>:
{{cquote|
(…) as a student at Moscow State University, he was skint. The Soviet Union had just collapsed, the country was in turmoil and "decay"; Deripaska worked on building sites across Russia to prevent himself from starving.

"We had no money. It was a very practical question every day. How do I get money to buy food and keep studying?" he recalls. There was little future in his university subject, theoretical physics. He abandoned his studies and started business as a small-time metals trader.

Between 1993 and 1994 he accumulated a 20% stake in the Siberian aluminium factory - to the annoyance of the plant's communist-era bosses. "I was expecting they would treat me as a shareholder. But they said, 'No, you have the shares, but we run our business. And it's separate.'"

Deripaska persuaded the workforce not to go on strike, boosted production, and - it's not entirely clear how - crushed the local mafia.
}}

=== Later career ===
In 2005, he was included in the [[Sunday Times Rich List 2005|Sunday Times Rich List]] (on account of the time he spends living in the [[United Kingdom]]) with an estimated wealth of £4,375m, but was not listed in 2006; however, according to an August 2006 article in the ''[[New York Times]]'', the Russian business newspaper ''Vedomosti'' has estimated Deripaska's total wealth at $14 billion, which, if true, would either make him Russia's richest man or possibly tied for the spot with fellow multibillionaire oligarch [[Roman Abramovich]].<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/20/business/yourmoney/20oligarch.html?ei=5094&en=0c93c066a04577ad&hp=&ex=1156046400&partner=homepage&pagewanted=all Kramer, Andrew E. "Out of Siberia, A Russian Way to Wealth."] [[New York Times]], [[August 20]] [[2006]].</ref>

He is currently the richest person in Russia according to an April 18, 2008 [[Forbes]] magazine report, with "a fortune of $28.6 billion -- $11.8 billion more than he was worth last year."<ref>[http://www.forbes.com/lists/2008/10/billionaires08_Oleg-Deripaska_UCP9.html Forbes lists, World's Billionaires]</ref> However, he has consistently said that the estimate of his wealth was exaggerated and he should have been ranked far below the top ten on the list of Russian billionaires. <ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2007/feb/24/business.russia]</ref>

Deripaska has a [[London]] home in [[Belgrave Square]], which was originally the town residence of the [[Dukes of Bedford]]. In September 2006, Deripaska was rumored to be interested in buying [[Arsenal F.C.]] for £350m;<ref>[http://football.guardian.co.uk/News_Story/0,,1873107,00.html. Gunners' takeover bid | News | Guardian Unlimited Football<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> however, Arsenal subsequently denied these claims. Deripaska also denied these rumors. <ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2007/feb/24/business.russia]</ref>.

In 2006, [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GAZ GAZ Group], which combines automotive assets of [http://www.basel.ru/en/ Basic Element's] [http://www.russianmachines.ru/ Russian Machines Corporation], purchased 100% shares of [[LDV Limited| LDV Holdings]] (producer of light commercial vehicles, the city of [[Birmingham]], [[Great Britain]]) from the American Fund Sun Capital [http://www.basel.ru/en/media/sectornews/machine/2006/news_31_07_2006/]. The main product of [[LDV Limited| LDV]] is the light commercial vehicle [http://www.ldv.com/gb/new.asp Maxus]. In less than a year after the Group had gained control of [[LDV Limited| LDV]] the factory returned to profitability.<ref>[http://www.basel.ru/en/structure/machine/auto/]</ref> <ref>[http://www.ldv.com/gb/aboutnews_article.asp?NewsID=570 LDV back in profit one year after GAZ purchase; press-release.]</ref>

In April 2007, Deripaska acquired 25 percent (€1.05 billion) of the Austrian construction company [[Strabag|STRABAG]] SE, which is owned by [[Hans-Peter Haselsteiner]]. STRABAG SE is the 6th largest construction business in Europe. He also bought 9.99 percent big stakes in the German construction company [[Hochtief|HOCHTIEF]].<ref>[http://www.basel.ru/en/structure/building/]</ref>

In May 2007, [[Magna International]] chairman [[Frank Stronach]] announced that Deripaska was becoming a strategic partner in Magna. <ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.reportonbusiness.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20070510.wmagna10/BNStory/robNews/home|first=Greg|last=Keenan|title=Russian billionaire buying Magna stake|date=2007-05-10|accessdate=2007-05-10|publisher=Globe and Mail}}</ref>

On 25 July, 2008 [[GAZ Group]] launched the serial production of <ref>[http://www.gazgroup.ru/news/news/?id=1330 Volga Siber]</ref> sedan, which is based on a platform acquired from the American corporation [[Chrysler]] and was designed by the leading British studio [http://www.ultramotive.eu/ UltraMotive]. Engineers and specialists from [[Magna International]] played an active role in the installation and fine tuning of the assembly line, as well as in the training of the Group employees. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GAZ GAZ Group] plans to add other models to the production at the assembly line. <ref>[http://www.basel.ru/en/media/news/200807/news_25_07_2008/]</ref>

On October 3, 2008 [[Magna International]] announced that Russian Machines terminated its participation as a shareholder of the Canadian auto parts maker [http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=86334&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=1205294&highlight=]. However the companies said that development of autocomponents business in Russia, as well as other joint projects, would continue.

It was reported in May 2008 that Deripaska had shown an interest in purchasing an [[English Premier League]] Football Club, and was strongly linked to purchasing [[West Bromwich Albion F.C.|West Bromwich Albion]]. In June 2008, Albion announced that they are looking for serious investors and/or buyer and The [[Daily Mirror]] stated that the move of Oleg Deripaska taking over is a possibility. However, Deripaska has made no indication that he is interested in buying West Brom. Earlier he had even denied having any commercial interest in English football industry in an interview with [[The Guardian]] newspaper <ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2007/feb/24/business.russia]</ref>.

=== Lawsuits ===
In 2005, [[David and Simon Reuben]] pursued legal action against Deripaska for alleged breach of contract. The dispute was settled out of court.

A [http://news.independent.co.uk/europe/article2303035.ece law suit] against Deripaska was filed in the [http://www.hmcourts-service.gov.uk/infoabout/admiralcomm/commercial_court.htm Commercial Court of the High Court] in [[London]] on [[November 24]], [[2006]] by [[Michael Cherney]]. Cherney is seeking $3 billion, which he claims represents 20 percent of [[RUSAL| Rusal's]] stock. In May 2007 Judge Langley refused to hear the case, because Deripaska is not domiciled in England and the claim form had not been duly served upon him. [http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2007/965.html]

On [[July 3]], [[2008]], British High Court Judge Christopher Clarke ruled that Cherney had the right to sue Deripaska for $4 billion (£2 billion). A spokesman for Deripaska stressed that the ruling was "not on the substance of the case...[R]ather, it is a procedural judgment about where that case should be heard" adding "We disagree with the pejorative claims made about Russian courts in the judgment"<ref>[http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/statement-spokesman-mr-deripaska/story.aspx?guid=%7B70DB7A9A-32AC-486E-8D0F-080F31BBD2B6%7D Statement from a Spokesman for Mr Deripaska - MarketWatch<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>. "On the substance of the case, we vehemently reject the vexatious claims made by Mr Cherney, and look forward to setting out our case on these claims", he said in the statement [http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/statement-spokesman-mr-deripaska/story.aspx?guid=%7B70DB7A9A-32AC-486E-8D0F-080F31BBD2B6%7D]

On [[July 22]], [[2008]], Clarke granted leave to appeal to Deripaska<ref>[http://www.pr-inside.com/statement-from-a-spokesman-for-mr-r715587.htm Statement from a Spokesman for Mr Deripaska on the Decision to Grant Him Leave to Appeal in His Case Against Michael Cherney<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>.

== References ==

{{reflist}}

<br />

[[Category:Businesspeople in metals|Deripaska, Oleg]]
[[Category:1968 births|Deripaska, Oleg]]
[[Category:Living people|Deripaska, Oleg]]
[[Category:Russian billionaires]]
[[Category:Russian businesspeople|Deripaska, Oleg]]
[[Category:Moscow State University alumni|Deripaska, Oleg]]

[[bg:Олег Дерипаска]]
[[cv:Дерипаска Олег Владимирович]]
[[de:Oleg Wladimirowitsch Deripaska]]
[[et:Oleg Deripaska]]
[[fr:Oleg Deripaska]]
[[id:Oleg Deripaska]]
[[it:Oleg Vladimirovič Deripaska]]
[[he:אולג דריפסקה]]
[[lt:Olegas Deripaska]]
[[hu:Oleg Vlagyimirovics Gyeripaszka]]
[[nl:Oleg Deripaska]]
[[ja:オレグ・デリパスカ]]
[[pl:Oleg Deripaska]]
[[pt:Oleg Deripaska]]
[[ru:Дерипаска, Олег Владимирович]]
[[fi:Oleg Deripaska]]

Revision as of 01:16, 13 October 2008

Oleg Deripaska
File:Deripaska.gif
Born (1968-01-02) January 2, 1968 (age 56)
Alma materMoscow State University, Plekhanov Russian Academy of Economics
OccupationChairman of the Supervisory Board of Basic Element Company
SpousePolina
WebsiteBasic Element

Oleg Vladimirovich Deripaska (Russian: Олег Владимирович Дерипаска) (born January 2 1968 in Dzerzhinsk, Nizhny Novgorod Oblast) is a Russian billionaire, and a member of the Board of Directors of UC Rusal, a Russian aluminium industry company [2].

Business introduction

Deripaska is the sole owner and a Chairman of the Supervisory board of Basic Element, a diversified investment company established in 1997 with assets in Russia and abroad. Basic Element's main assets are concentrated in six sectors - Energy, Resources, Manufacturing, Financial Services, Construction and Aviation. The major assets include UC Rusal[3], the world’s largest aluminium and alumina producer, [4], GAZ Group automotive company, Soyuz Bank, Ingosstrakh insurance company, Aviacor aircraft manufacturer, SMR mining company, Continental Management Timber Industrial Company, Glavstroy and Transstroy] construction companies, stakes in Strabag (25%), Hochtief (10%) and Switzerland based Fahrni (100%). In 2007, Basic Element's consolidated revenues exceeded USD26 billion. The market value of the Company's assets is estimated at USD45 billion [5]. Basic Element employs 300,000 people and owns companies in Russia, the CIS countries, Africa, Australia, Asia, Europe and Latin America.

Deripaska is one of 16 global business leaders who drafted CEO Climate Policy Recommendations to G8 Leaders, a document outlining international business community's proposals to effectively tackle global warming. The proposals were signed by more than 100 of the world's leading corporations and handed to Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda on June 20, 2008. G8 leaders discussed the recommendations during the summit in Japan on July 7-9, 2008. The process was coordinated by the World Economic Forum in collaboration with the World Business Council for Sustainable Development. [6] [7]

In 2004, Deripaska was appointed by the President of Russia to represent the country in the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Business Advisory Council (ABAC). He has held the position of Chairman of ABAC Russia since 2007.

Deripaska is Vice President of the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs, Chairman of the Executive Board of the Russian National Committee of the International Chamber of Commerce and a member of the Competitiveness and Entrepreneurship Council, an agency of the Russian Government. [9]

He sits on the Boards of Trustees of the Bolshoi Theatre, the School of Business Administration, the School of Public Administration, and the School of Economics at Moscow State University and the School of Business Administration at St. Petersburg State University. Deripaska is a co-founder of the National Science Support Foundation and the National Medicine Fund. [8]

In 1999, Deripaska was awarded the Order of Friendship of Peoples by President Boris Yeltsin.

Biography

Education and early career

Deripaska was born in Dzerzhinsk, Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, but he grew up in Krasnodar krai. He graduated with honors in physics from the Moscow State University in 1993, and in 1996, he earned an economics degree from the Plekhanov Russian Academy of Economics. He was general manager of Sayanogorsk Smelter (1994-1997) and held the post of president of Sibirsky Aluminium Investment Industrial Group (1997-2001), which later became a core of Basic Element Investment Company.

The Guardian mentions[9]:

(…) as a student at Moscow State University, he was skint. The Soviet Union had just collapsed, the country was in turmoil and "decay"; Deripaska worked on building sites across Russia to prevent himself from starving.

"We had no money. It was a very practical question every day. How do I get money to buy food and keep studying?" he recalls. There was little future in his university subject, theoretical physics. He abandoned his studies and started business as a small-time metals trader.

Between 1993 and 1994 he accumulated a 20% stake in the Siberian aluminium factory - to the annoyance of the plant's communist-era bosses. "I was expecting they would treat me as a shareholder. But they said, 'No, you have the shares, but we run our business. And it's separate.'"

Deripaska persuaded the workforce not to go on strike, boosted production, and - it's not entirely clear how - crushed the local mafia.

Later career

In 2005, he was included in the Sunday Times Rich List (on account of the time he spends living in the United Kingdom) with an estimated wealth of £4,375m, but was not listed in 2006; however, according to an August 2006 article in the New York Times, the Russian business newspaper Vedomosti has estimated Deripaska's total wealth at $14 billion, which, if true, would either make him Russia's richest man or possibly tied for the spot with fellow multibillionaire oligarch Roman Abramovich.[10]

He is currently the richest person in Russia according to an April 18, 2008 Forbes magazine report, with "a fortune of $28.6 billion -- $11.8 billion more than he was worth last year."[11] However, he has consistently said that the estimate of his wealth was exaggerated and he should have been ranked far below the top ten on the list of Russian billionaires. [12]

Deripaska has a London home in Belgrave Square, which was originally the town residence of the Dukes of Bedford. In September 2006, Deripaska was rumored to be interested in buying Arsenal F.C. for £350m;[13] however, Arsenal subsequently denied these claims. Deripaska also denied these rumors. [14].

In 2006, GAZ Group, which combines automotive assets of Basic Element's Russian Machines Corporation, purchased 100% shares of LDV Holdings (producer of light commercial vehicles, the city of Birmingham, Great Britain) from the American Fund Sun Capital [10]. The main product of LDV is the light commercial vehicle Maxus. In less than a year after the Group had gained control of LDV the factory returned to profitability.[15] [16]

In April 2007, Deripaska acquired 25 percent (€1.05 billion) of the Austrian construction company STRABAG SE, which is owned by Hans-Peter Haselsteiner. STRABAG SE is the 6th largest construction business in Europe. He also bought 9.99 percent big stakes in the German construction company HOCHTIEF.[17]

In May 2007, Magna International chairman Frank Stronach announced that Deripaska was becoming a strategic partner in Magna. [18]

On 25 July, 2008 GAZ Group launched the serial production of [19] sedan, which is based on a platform acquired from the American corporation Chrysler and was designed by the leading British studio UltraMotive. Engineers and specialists from Magna International played an active role in the installation and fine tuning of the assembly line, as well as in the training of the Group employees. GAZ Group plans to add other models to the production at the assembly line. [20]

On October 3, 2008 Magna International announced that Russian Machines terminated its participation as a shareholder of the Canadian auto parts maker [11]. However the companies said that development of autocomponents business in Russia, as well as other joint projects, would continue.

It was reported in May 2008 that Deripaska had shown an interest in purchasing an English Premier League Football Club, and was strongly linked to purchasing West Bromwich Albion. In June 2008, Albion announced that they are looking for serious investors and/or buyer and The Daily Mirror stated that the move of Oleg Deripaska taking over is a possibility. However, Deripaska has made no indication that he is interested in buying West Brom. Earlier he had even denied having any commercial interest in English football industry in an interview with The Guardian newspaper [21].

Lawsuits

In 2005, David and Simon Reuben pursued legal action against Deripaska for alleged breach of contract. The dispute was settled out of court.

A law suit against Deripaska was filed in the Commercial Court of the High Court in London on November 24, 2006 by Michael Cherney. Cherney is seeking $3 billion, which he claims represents 20 percent of Rusal's stock. In May 2007 Judge Langley refused to hear the case, because Deripaska is not domiciled in England and the claim form had not been duly served upon him. [12]

On July 3, 2008, British High Court Judge Christopher Clarke ruled that Cherney had the right to sue Deripaska for $4 billion (£2 billion). A spokesman for Deripaska stressed that the ruling was "not on the substance of the case...[R]ather, it is a procedural judgment about where that case should be heard" adding "We disagree with the pejorative claims made about Russian courts in the judgment"[22]. "On the substance of the case, we vehemently reject the vexatious claims made by Mr Cherney, and look forward to setting out our case on these claims", he said in the statement [13]

On July 22, 2008, Clarke granted leave to appeal to Deripaska[23].

References

  1. ^ Forbes lists, World's Billionaires
  2. ^ [1]
  3. ^ Russian Aluminium Company website
  4. ^ Eurosib Power Company
  5. ^ [2]
  6. ^ World Economic Forum; Climate Change; CEO Climate Policy Recommendations to G8 Leaders
  7. ^ Expert magazine; "Zero Waste"; interview
  8. ^ Basic Element website
  9. ^ Guardian; "How metals and a ruthless streak put Russian patriot at top of the rich list", by Luke Harding
  10. ^ Kramer, Andrew E. "Out of Siberia, A Russian Way to Wealth." New York Times, August 20 2006.
  11. ^ Forbes lists, World's Billionaires
  12. ^ [3]
  13. ^ Gunners' takeover bid | News | Guardian Unlimited Football
  14. ^ [4]
  15. ^ [5]
  16. ^ LDV back in profit one year after GAZ purchase; press-release.
  17. ^ [6]
  18. ^ Keenan, Greg (2007-05-10). "Russian billionaire buying Magna stake". Globe and Mail. Retrieved 2007-05-10.
  19. ^ Volga Siber
  20. ^ [7]
  21. ^ [8]
  22. ^ Statement from a Spokesman for Mr Deripaska - MarketWatch
  23. ^ Statement from a Spokesman for Mr Deripaska on the Decision to Grant Him Leave to Appeal in His Case Against Michael Cherney