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Cold Ultimatum

DW staff (jen)January 8, 2009

The EU has given Russia and Ukraine an ultimatum to solve the gas crisis, but hasn't defined the consequences of non-compliance. Thursday, Russian and Ukrainian officials held a surprise meeting before talks in Brussels.

https://p.dw.com/p/GTq3
Russian flag and gas guage
Low pressure: European countries are getting little, or no, gas via UkraineImage: picture-alliance/ dpa/ DW Montage

The unexpected meeting in Moscow of the heads of the Russian and Ukrainian gas companies at the heart of the dispute was called to discuss the gas crisis. No details have been released of the meeting's outcomes.

The meeting was unexpected because Russian gas supplier Gazprom's Alexei Miller and Ukraine's Naftogaz's Oleh Dubina were expected to meet EU officials Thursday in Brussels for talks.

Miller earlier repeated his company's accusation that Ukraine was stealing some of the Russian gas transiting its pipelines for delivery to the rest of Europe.

"The volume of theft of Russian gas on Ukrainian territory rises every day," Miller told AFP news agency.

Delivery suspension

"According to the latest estimates, Ukraine is stealing nearly 15 percent of gas delivered to the border between Russia and Ukraine," he said.

On Jan. 1, Russia suspended delivery of gas for use by Ukraine after the two countries failed to agree a rate for 2009 and on the amount Kyiv owed for previous deliveries.

The subsequent gas supply problems, which each country has blamed on the other, have begun to be felt in several European Union countries, reaching as far west as Italy and France.

Gazprom's Alexei Miller walking to a podium
Gazprom CEO Miller says Ukraine has been siphoningImage: AP

Approximately 80 percent of Russia's gas exports to Europe pass through Ukraine.

Ultimatum from EU

On Wednesday, Jan. 7, the EU gave Russia and Ukraine 24 hours to resolve their commercial dispute and resume gas deliveries to Europe or face unspecified political consequences.

"If supplies are not restored tomorrow, we will have to see a strong intervention by the EU," said Czech Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek, whose country holds the bloc's rotating presidency.

"Obviously there is a political dimension to this problem," Topolanek said in Prague ahead of a meeting with the EU's executive, the European Commission.

Officials in Brussels declined to elaborate on the substance of the EU threat, but experts believe some leverage may lie in the fact that Ukraine has expressed strong interest in joining the EU, while both countries trade heavily with the bloc.

Damaged reputations?

Prior to his arrival in Prague, EU Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso accused the sides of holding the EU's gas supply "hostage" because of their dispute over unpaid bills.

"Now the two countries' reputation as reliable partners to the EU is at stake," Barroso told Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko over the phone.

Technician Steffen Weigand works at a valve in the Natural Gas Compress Station in Sayda, eastern Germany, Wednesday, March 12, 2008.
Gas enters Germany through a pipeline at the Czech borderImage: AP

Much of Europe was forced to tap into its gas reserves while some countries began taking emergency steps after Russia cut all supplies to the continent via Ukraine early Wednesday.

Hungary, Germany, Italy, Austria, Slovakia, Greece, Turkey and most of the Balkan nations were among the hardest hit by the drop in Russian gas, which has coincided with one of the coldest winters in decades, heightening fears of possible shortages over the coming days or weeks.

In Brussels, the European Commission proposed sending observers to monitor Russian gas flows through the Ukraine as a way of helping resolve the standoff. The offer was immediately taken up by Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko.

Pain across Europe

In a letter to Barroso, Yushchenko suggested EU technicians could independently evaluate the volume of Russian natural gas entering Ukraine. Moscow has repeatedly accused Kyiv of siphoning off gas destined to Europe -- a claim strongly denied by the Ukrainians.

Meanwhile, Hungary became one of the first European countries to impose restrictions on industrial gas use as underground reserves were being tapped at maximum capacity.

Serbia's reserves were virtually depleted while Bulgaria, which is 100 percent dependant on Russian gas, was considering re-opening one of its Soviet-era nuclear reactors -- shut down for safety reasons when it joined the EU -- in order to meet its energy needs.

Emergency measures were also triggered in Slovakia, while Poland was compensating for a complete cut-off by boosting supplies via neighboring Belarus.

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