WORLD> Europe
Russia stops all gas supply to Europe via Ukraine
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-01-08 09:25

MOSCOW -- Russia cut off all gas supplies to Europe through Ukraine on Wednesday, playing hardball in a weeklong standoff that has left more than a dozen countries struggling to cope with dwindling energy supplies in the depths of winter.


A Bosnian worker cuts wood by the roadside at the northern entrance to Sarajevo on Wednesday January 7, 2009. Small entrepreneurs have started selling wood and coal after deliveries of Russian natural gas to Bosnia were stopped on Tuesday evening. Bosnian officials say over 72,000 Sarajevo households have been left without heating. With temperature hitting minus 10 and Bosnia having no reserves, the city's gas operator Sarajevogas warns that the situation could become a humanitarian disaster. Bosnia imports all of its gas from Russia through Ukraine, Hungary and Serbia. [Agencies]
 

The US put the blame squarely on Russia, accusing Moscow of using its energy resources to threaten its neighbors.

But Prime Minister Vladimir Putin endorsed the move, even as factories shut down in eastern Europe, schools closed and tens of thousands of people scrambled to find other ways of keeping warm.

Insisting that Ukraine was responsible for the crisis, Putin appeared determined to force Kiev to back down and accept increased prices for natural gas. The two sides were to meet Thursday in the first face-to-face talks since negotiations broke down on New Year's Eve.

The effects of the gas cutoff reverberated across the continent, with Bulgaria, the EU's poorest member, among the worst hit. Croatia declared a state of emergency and Hungary instituted gas rationing for industries. The situation in Bosnia was so dire that woodcutters revved up their chain saws to cut wood for fireplaces.

"It is a shame that in the last two decades our rulers did not look for alternative sources of energy supplies. It's again up to Moscow," retired teacher Anelia Petrova said in Sofia, the Bulgarian capital.

Hundreds stormed shops in Sofia looking for electric heaters. Tsvyatko Peev got the last one in a downtown shop.

"I'm glad I got one, although I fear that the additional electricity costs will ruin the family budget," Peev said.

In Hungary, voluntary rationing for the country's largest consumers went into immediate effect.

Japanese carmaker Suzuki closed its plant in the northern city of Esztergom, while a brick factory belonging to Austria's Wienerberger, the world's largest brick manufacturer, in the eastern city of Bekescsaba and a tire factory in Racalmas, central Hungary, owned by South Korea's Hankook also shut down due to gas shortages.

The Hungarian subsidiary of General Electric and famed salami maker Pick were among the companies cutting output.

The EU accused both Russia and Ukraine of using consumers as pawns in their dispute.

"It is unacceptable that the EU gas supply security is taken hostage to negotiations between Russia and Ukraine," EU spokeswoman Pia Ahrenkilde Hansen said.

In Washington, US officials criticized Russia for the energy crisis.

"Cutting off these supplies during winter to a vulnerable population is just something that is unacceptable to us," State Department spokesman Robert Wood said.

US national security adviser Stephen Hadley warned Moscow if it continues to threaten its neighbors and manipulate their access to energy it will "compromise any aspirations for greater global influence."

Russia supplies one-quarter of Europe's natural gas, and about 80 percent of that is shipped through pipelines crossing Ukraine. Other smaller pipelines run through Belarus and Turkey.

Bulgaria, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Greece, Italy, Macedonia, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia and Turkey all reported a halt in Russian gas shipments by Wednesday. Others — including Austria, France, Germany, Hungary and Poland — reported substantial drops in supplies.

Russia's gas monopoly Gazprom stopped all gas shipments to Ukraine on Jan. 1 after the two countries failed to agree on prices and transit fees for 2009, but kept supplies flowing to Europe over Ukraine's pipelines.

Russia reduced supplies Tuesday, accusing Ukraine of siphoning off gas meant for Europe. But Putin ordered Gazprom to stop all shipments Wednesday.

"This should be done publicly and in the presence of international observers," he told Gazprom CEO Alexei Miller.

EU Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso pressed Putin and his Ukrainian counterpart Yulia Tymoshenko for a quick resolution to the standoff.

"If this matter is not solved, it will raise very serious doubts about the reliability of Russia as a supplier of gas to Europe and Ukraine as a transit country," Barroso said.

He said both countries agreed Wednesday to accept international monitors that could verify the flow of gas once it resumes.

Andrew Neff, an energy analyst with Global Insight, said Gazprom's cutoff aimed to pressure Ukraine to settle quickly.

"While the Russian gas giant risks further sullying its already-poor reputation in Europe with its tactics, Gazprom is effectively seeking to force this dispute to an end sooner rather than later," he wrote in an analysis.

Talks had been expected Thursday in Moscow, but Ukraine said it was sending its delegation instead to Brussels, where Gazprom's Miller is to speak before the European Parliament.

In 2008, Russia charged Ukraine about half what it charged its European customers for gas — a Soviet-era practice it has long sought to change. Ukraine, however, says if it pays more for natural gas, Russia should pay more for shipping that gas across Ukraine.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev told Ukraine's President Viktor Yushchenko on Wednesday that Moscow would insist that Kiev pay European prices "without discount." Medvedev also demanded full payment of Ukraine's $600 million debt to Gazprom, which Ukraine has said it will not pay until the issue is settled in arbitration courts.

Ukraine, which has a vast underground storage system full of natural gas, says it can weather the dispute until early April.

Gazprom, however, is losing substantial income during a peak season for gas consumption. It also will soon see an excess of gas in its system, which will create a costly storage problem.