
Ukraine gas crisis spurs EU energy policy
10:17am EST, By Paul Taylor
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– Paul Taylor is a Reuters
columnist. The opinions expressed are his own –
The gas dispute between Russia and Ukraine that has left hundreds
of thousands of Europeans shivering in the winter cold is bound to
accelerate plodding European Union efforts to build a common
energy policy.
The cut-off of Russian gas supplies to Europe via Ukraine
highlighted how little progress the 27-nation EU has made in
connecting national energy networks and diversifying supplies
since the first such crisis three years ago. |
“A similar situation occurred in 2006
and we Europeans now feel guilty about not having done what we said we
would do,” said an EU energy official, who declined to be identified
because of the sensitivity of his position.
Unlike 2006, when the Europeans broadly sided with Ukraine’s
pro-Western, democratic government, the EU has remained strictly
neutral this time in what it regards as mostly a commercial dispute
over gas pricing and unpaid bills.
Both sides broke undertakings to Brussels on continuity of supply. The
lack of transparency on contracts, the role of murky intermediaries
and coalition feuding in Kiev all made it harder to sympathise with
Ukraine this time, the EU official said.
“The Russians were having a good gas war until they overreacted by
cutting supplies to the EU. As in the war with Georgia last year, they
could not resist the urge to teach former Soviet republics a lesson,”
he said.
Russian giant Gazprom’s demand for Ukraine to pay market prices is not
unreasonable, but television images of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin
ordering the company to turn off the taps to Europe belies talk of a
purely commercial issue.
Several EU states have increased gas stocks since 2006 and avoided
major disruption. But Bulgaria, the poorest EU newcomer, and western
Balkans states Croatia and Bosnia were caught with no stocks at all.
Supplies to 18 countries have been affected.
That prompted the EU to intervene. Czech Prime Minister Mirek
Topolanek, the EU presidency holder, persuaded Moscow and Kiev to sign
a deal allowing EU monitors to check the transit of gas across Ukraine
to get supplies to Europe flowing again.
MUTUAL MISTRUST
Progress on integrating the European gas market by linking up national
pipeline systems has been very slow, partly due to mutual mistrust
among EU nations, as well as divergent business interests and
political differences on relations with Moscow.
Member states still do not share information with each other about the
price their energy companies pay Gazprom for gas. The executive
European Commission and the EU Council secretariat have been
struggling to collate such data since 2006.
“We preach transparency but we do not practice it among ourselves,”
the EU energy official said.
Poland has led a chorus of new members from central and eastern Europe
calling for energy “solidarity” within the EU to reduce the former
Soviet satellites’ dependency on Moscow, which provides a quarter of
the EU’s gas.
But Germany, Europe’s biggest gas consumer, opposes any emergency EU
pooling arrangement for gas stocks, arguing that this is a commercial
matter for utility companies.
Berlin is keen to manage its energy relationship with Russia without
the involvement of Brussels. It resisted any EU involvement in the
Ukraine dispute until the leaders of Bulgaria and Croatia appealed
personally to Chancellor Angela Merkel.
EU officials say the crisis should spur European leaders at a March
summit to put political momentum and public money behind plans to
build cross-border energy interconnectors in Europe.
They may also agree on minimum requirements for gas storage as the EU
has for national oil stocks.
And they will likely give higher priority to diversifying gas
suppliers, supply routes and delivery mechanisms in particular to
develop liquefied natural gas (LNG) facilities.
Among suppliers, the EU is eyeing Qatar and Nigeria for LNG as well as
Algeria, Norway, Azerbaijan, Iraq and Central Asian countries for
piped gas.
Russia is using the crisis to underline the cost for its NordStream
and South Stream projects to carry Russian gas directly to European
consumers via pipelines under the Baltic and Black seas, bypassing
Ukraine, Belarus and Poland.
The dispute will also add political weight to the Nabucco project,
backed by both the EU and the United States, to pipe Caspian and
Middle East gas to central Europe via Turkey, but there are doubts
about finding enough gas to fill the pipeline.
None of these projects offers an early solution, given the long lead
times and high cost. EU officials say they are not an “either/or”.
There will be enough demand and enough gas to justify all three extra
pipelines, they say.
In the shorter term, the capacity of existing pipelines can be
expanded. But the main quick gains for European gas security would
come from linking national networks into a single market and improving
energy efficiency, especially in central Europe.
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