Russian gas supplies to EU dive overnight

PHILIPPA RUNNER

Today @ 09:16 CET

Russian supplies of gas to the EU via Ukraine dived by 70 percent overnight 
from Monday (5 January) to Tuesday Ukraine says, with Bulgarian consumers told 
to turn off gas stoves after an emergency government meeting.

Gazprom has begun pumping gas to the EU via Ukraine at just 92 million cubic 
metres a day compared to 270 million cubic metres the day before, Ukraine state 
gas firm Naftogaz said. 

Bulgarian consumers have been told to switch to alternative heating supplies 
(Photo: wikipedia)

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"We do not understand how we will deliver gas to Europe," Naftogaz spokesman 
Valentin Zemlyansky told newswires. "This means that in a few hours, problems 
with supplies to Europe will begin."

Russian gas stopped flowing to Bulgaria, Greece, Macedonia and Turkey at around 
3:30 am Sofia time on Tuesday, with the Bulgarian government holding an 
emergency meeting at 7:00 am and urging people to switch to alternative heating 
sources.

Bulgaria - where temperatures stood at minus seven degrees Celsius on Tuesday 
and are forecast to hit minus 15 this week - relies on Russia for almost all 
its gas, while running coal and nuclear power plants as well.

"We are in a crisis situation," Bulgaria's economy ministry said in a statement.

The sudden supply drop marks a sharp escalation in the 2009 gas crisis, putting 
it on an equal footing with the 2006 gas crunch when Russian levels also dived 
by 200 million cubic metres overnight.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin had on Monday instructed Gazprom to cut 
Ukraine's EU-bound gas by a smaller amount - 65 million cubic metres - to cover 
volumes allegedly stolen by Ukraine.

"Cut it now," Mr Putin told Gazprom CEO Alexei Miller live on Russian TV, amid 
promises to boost EU supplies via smaller pipelines in Belarus and Turkey 
instead.

A delegation of European Commission and Czech EU presidency officials is in 
Kiev on a fact-finding mission on Tuesday, with EU officials to also meet 
Gazprom staff in Berlin the same day.

A meeting of the Gas Co-ordination Group - bringing together EU member states, 
Russian and Ukrainian energy experts - has also been tabled for Friday in 
Brussels.

The commission has so far said it would not intervene in the dispute unless it 
affected EU consumers, calling it a "commercial" and "bilateral" matter for 
Russia and Ukraine.

Most EU states at a meeting of EU deputy ambassadors in Brussels on Monday took 
the same line, despite Lithuanian calls for the EU to help Ukraine in what 
Vilnius sees as Russian political bullying.

"It was repeated many times that this is a purely commercial dispute," Czech EU 
presidency spokesman Radek Honzak told EUobserver. "Lithuania does not speak 
for the European Union."

The gas row erupted on 1 January after Gazprom accused Naftogaz of not paying 
its 2008 bill and after Ukraine rejected a 150 percent price increase for 2009 
gas deliveries.

The EU gets about one fifth of its daily gas needs from Russia via Ukraine.

http://euobserver.com/9/27349/?rk=1

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