China Daily

Gazprom defiant on pipeline fine

- By REN QI in Moscow renqi@chinadaily.com.cn ‘Invalid’ request

Russian gas giant Gazprom has vowed to appeal against a fine imposed by Polish authoritie­s in relation to the Nord Stream 2 pipeline project, though the Poles’ action is likely to be welcomed by the United States.

The Polish Office of Competitio­n and Consumer Protection, or UOKiK, earlier on Monday said it had fined Gazprom 213 million zloty ($57 million) for its lack of cooperatio­n with an investigat­ion.

The Polish antimonopo­ly watchdog said the reason for the fine stemmed from the refusal of Gazprom to furnish informatio­n about contracts made by Nord Stream 2 AG with European companies funding the constructi­on of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline.

The pipeline is one of the most important projects for Russia in recent years, and it will double Gazprom’s capacity to ferry gas directly from Russia to Germany. By doing away with the need for a routing through central Europe, Poland and several other states in the region fear the pipeline could undermine their energy security.

“At the beginning of the year, we requested Gazprom provide us with contracts concluded by its subsidiary with other companies financing the constructi­on of Nord Stream 2,” UOKiK President Tomasz Chrostny said on Monday. “The company failed to provide such informatio­n.”

Gazprom, a Russian state-controlled company, responded by saying it will take measures to defend its interests, including an appeal against the watchdog’s decision in court, where the UOKiK would need to justify its position.

Gazprom said it will not pay the fine because the informatio­n request was invalid. The company said it had asked the UOKiK to provide a legal justificat­ion for the request, but was none was received.

The Polish regulator has been examining the project for years. In 2018, it launched a probe under competitio­n rules against Gazprom and the five Western companies that are co-financing the project on suspicion that they were going ahead without Warsaw’s approval.

According to the Financial

Times, under European Union rules, companies involved in a transactio­n that has an impact on a particular market are obliged to report the transactio­n to the national antitrust authority and respond to its requests. The Polish regulator insisted Gazprom should follow the rules.

The Nord Stream 2 pipeline has become a lightning rod of contention in US-Russian relations, with the White House concerned it would dangerousl­y expand the region’s energy dependence on Moscow, Reuters reported.

The news agency on Tuesday cited government filings and quoted US officials on the extent to which US lawmakers have been trying to stop the pipeline project.

US President Donald Trump last year signed off on sanctions in relation to the pipeline, and US senators Ted Cruz and Jeanne Shaheen are pushing for added sanctions in Congress that target Gazprom.

Nord Stream 2’s backers say Germany and other European countries need Russian gas, and Germany has threatened retaliator­y action if US sanctions stop the project, Reuters said.

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