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End of Russian gas via Ukraine sparks unease in eastern Europe

Emma Reilly by Emma Reilly
January 1, 2025
in Economy
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Ukraine has refused to renew a deal on gas transit as a result of Russia's invasion. ©AFP

Chisinau (AFP) – Ukraine’s decision to turn off the taps keeping Russian gas flowing via its territory to Europe has already sown trouble in the continent’s east, with Moldova declaring a state of emergency and Slovakia threatening Kyiv with retaliation. Under a five-year deal signed in 2019, Ukraine had allowed Russia to pipe gas to Europe via its territory. But that agreement is set to expire in the new year, with Kyiv unwilling to extend it as a result of Moscow’s invasion.

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Although Europe has fought to wean itself off dependence on Russian gas since President Vladimir Putin sent troops into Ukraine in February 2022, several eastern European states still look to Moscow for much of their energy needs. That represents an ongoing income stream for the Kremlin, which Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky wishes to dry up. Almost a third of the Russian gas sold to Europe is transported via Kyiv’s territory, said Phuc-Vinh Nguyen, head of the Jacques Delors Institute’s Energy Centre. The remainder is transported via a pipeline under the Black Sea to Bulgaria, Serbia, and Hungary, or else by shipments of liquefied natural gas (LNG). But Tuesday’s data from Ukrainian operator OGTSU showed deliveries via the only entry point for Russian gas into Ukraine dropping to zero as of January 1, 2025.

The situation is at its most critical in Moldova, which borders Ukraine and has to contend with Russian-backed separatists at home. The tiny nation had already introduced a 60-day state of emergency earlier this month in anticipation of Kyiv’s expected cut. Then on Saturday, Russia’s Gazprom announced it too would halt gas deliveries due to a dispute over debt, sparking furious accusations of “oppressive tactics” from Moldova’s prime minister. In the capital Chisinau, where most of the festive light displays will be snuffed out, some residents voiced their fear of what comes next. “It’s terrible, nobody knows what’s going to happen. I’ve bought some candles and a generator,” Cristina, a 21-year-old student who refused to give her surname, told AFP.

Gazprom had already reduced its deliveries to Moldova since the beginning of the invasion, with the Russian company solely supplying the unrecognised breakaway state of Transnistria. But the Moscow-backed region’s power station still provides some two-thirds of the electricity consumed across the country. “The Kremlin has once again resorted to energy blackmail in order to influence the 2025 parliamentary elections and undermine our European path,” said Moldova’s President Maia Sandu. The pro-European politician was reelected in November after a vote marred by accusations of Russian interference. Sandu offered humanitarian aid for the residents of breakaway Transnistria, who would otherwise find themselves without heating in the depths of midwinter. But the local authorities refused, said Alexandru Flenchea, a former government official and conflict resolution expert specializing in the region.

In Russia’s destabilization strategy, “Transnistria is nothing more than collateral damage,” Flenchea argued. Phuc-Vinh agreed, charging that Putin was using gas as a “geopolitical weapon” to “undermine the region, feed the resentments of the population to influence support for Ukraine, and sow the seeds of discord across Europe.” Moldova’s government has responded with drastic measures to limit energy consumption, notably limits on lighting in public buildings and the use of lifts. It also intends to make up the shortfall by buying electricity from neighboring Romania.

With 14 billion cubic meters transported per year via Ukraine making up just five percent of the European Union’s total gas imports, the bloc said it was “prepared” for the flow’s cut. In a report published in mid-December, the EU judged the impact to be limited. “The Commission…has been working for more than a year specifically on preparing for a scenario without Russian gas transiting via Ukraine,” it told AFP on Tuesday. It said that the bloc’s gas infrastructure had been strengthened in the past few years and pointed to work on making “alternative supplies” available to affected countries.

After Austria’s decision in December to terminate its long-term contract with Gazprom, only Slovakia is affected. Slovakia’s leader Robert Fico—one of the Kremlin’s few allies within the EU—has cried foul over Kyiv’s decision, traveling to Moscow to meet Putin in response. “Accepting the unilateral decision of the Ukrainian president is totally irrational and wrong,” Fico pleaded in a letter to Brussels, decrying “a major financial impact in a complicated economic period.” By way of response, the Slovak prime minister threatened to cut off the supplies of electricity Ukraine desperately needs, with Kyiv’s own energy infrastructure battered by nearly three years of systematic Russian bombardment.

On the other hand, neighboring Hungary— which like Slovakia has remained friendly to Moscow—receives most of its Russian gas imports via the Black Sea pipeline. As a result, Budapest will remain largely unaffected by Ukraine’s decision.

© 2024 AFP

Tags: energyRussiaUkraine
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Moscow, Kyiv end Russian gas transit to Europe via Ukraine

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