EU seeks gas supply return after deal

Europe sought a swift restoration of gas supplies after striking a deal with Moscow on tracking gas shipments via Ukraine halted by a pricing dispute with Kiev.

Izvor: Reuters

Friday, 09.01.2009.

09:49

Default images

Europe sought a swift restoration of gas supplies after striking a deal with Moscow on tracking gas shipments via Ukraine halted by a pricing dispute with Kiev. A spokesman for Prime Minister Vladimir Putin confirmed on Friday that Russia had agreed that the monitors -- including representatives from the European Commission, Russia and Ukraine -- should be deployed to ensure the smooth flow of gas. EU seeks gas supply return after deal "Yesterday Putin and (Czech Prime Minister Mirek) Topolanek spoke and in the course of that discussion they came to a common view that a monitoring mission will be formed and dispatched," the spokesman said. Diplomats in Prague said the European monitors would be sent to Ukraine on Friday to be deployed at the main metering stations for gas arriving from Russia. The monitors agreement "should lead to the Russian supplies of gas to EU member states being restored," the Czech EU presidency said in a statement late on Thursday. The apparent breakthrough came after talks between Topolanek, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Putin. But Russian officials have said even once the monitors are in place, it could take many hours and possibly days before gas Russian gas shipped via Ukraine starts reaching Europe again. The gas is likely to be delivered only to European customers, not Ukraine itself, since Moscow and Kiev have yet to agree a price for Russian gas, subsidized since Soviet times. Putin on Thursday again demanded Ukraine pay the going market rate. But the presence of monitoring missions at points along the transit routes for Russian gas will reassure Moscow that the gas it is pumping across Ukraine to European customers is not being siphoned off by Kiev. Moscow cited this allegation -- denied by Kiev -- as its reason for completely shutting off gas flowing across Ukraine to European customers earlier this week. Hundreds of thousands without gas The nine-day gas crisis has left hundreds of thousands of people in the Balkans without gas, forced factories to shut down and disrupted deliveries as far west as France and Germany, while the continent faced freezing mid-winter temperatures. The dispute between Kiev and its former Soviet master also follows tensions over Ukraine's efforts to join NATO, a move bitterly opposed by Moscow and viewed with wariness even by European members of the alliance and by investors. In typically forthright comments to Western reporters at his residence outside Moscow, Putin blamed the gas crisis in part on a "collapse" of the authorities in Kiev and high-level corruption in Ukraine. "In order to restore normal flows, (Ukraine) needs to come to Moscow and sign a contract for gas supplies to Ukraine," he said. "And they need to pay for the product they receive. At the market price ... our Ukrainian partners don't want to sign and don't want to pay. That's it."

EU seeks gas supply return after deal

"Yesterday Putin and (Czech Prime Minister Mirek) Topolanek spoke and in the course of that discussion they came to a common view that a monitoring mission will be formed and dispatched," the spokesman said.

Diplomats in Prague said the European monitors would be sent to Ukraine on Friday to be deployed at the main metering stations for gas arriving from Russia.

The monitors agreement "should lead to the Russian supplies of gas to EU member states being restored," the Czech EU presidency said in a statement late on Thursday.

The apparent breakthrough came after talks between Topolanek, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Putin.

But Russian officials have said even once the monitors are in place, it could take many hours and possibly days before gas Russian gas shipped via Ukraine starts reaching Europe again.

The gas is likely to be delivered only to European customers, not Ukraine itself, since Moscow and Kiev have yet to agree a price for Russian gas, subsidized since Soviet times. Putin on Thursday again demanded Ukraine pay the going market rate.

But the presence of monitoring missions at points along the transit routes for Russian gas will reassure Moscow that the gas it is pumping across Ukraine to European customers is not being siphoned off by Kiev.

Moscow cited this allegation -- denied by Kiev -- as its reason for completely shutting off gas flowing across Ukraine to European customers earlier this week.

Hundreds of thousands without gas

The nine-day gas crisis has left hundreds of thousands of people in the Balkans without gas, forced factories to shut down and disrupted deliveries as far west as France and Germany, while the continent faced freezing mid-winter temperatures.

The dispute between Kiev and its former Soviet master also follows tensions over Ukraine's efforts to join NATO, a move bitterly opposed by Moscow and viewed with wariness even by European members of the alliance and by investors.

In typically forthright comments to Western reporters at his residence outside Moscow, Putin blamed the gas crisis in part on a "collapse" of the authorities in Kiev and high-level corruption in Ukraine.

"In order to restore normal flows, (Ukraine) needs to come to Moscow and sign a contract for gas supplies to Ukraine," he said. "And they need to pay for the product they receive. At the market price ... our Ukrainian partners don't want to sign and don't want to pay. That's it."

Komentari 2

Pogledaj komentare

2 Komentari

Možda vas zanima

Svet

Ukrajina je "pukla"?

Rusija udvostručila svoju ofanzivu u Donbasu tokom prošlog meseca, postižući značajan napredak dok Ukrajina čeka pojačanje u snabdevanju oružjem sa Zapada, navodi AFP.

12:03

7.5.2024.

8 h

Podeli: