Hindustan Times (Jammu)

Russia plans to cut Europe gas supplies

EU energy ministers have approved a draft law that is meant to lower demand for gas by 15% from August through to March

- letters@hindusanti­mes.com

Russia said it will cut gas supplies to Europe from Wednesday in a blow to countries that have backed Ukraine, while missile attacks in Black Sea coastal regions raised doubts about whether Russia stick to a deal to let Ukraine export grain.

The first ships from Ukraine may set sail in days under a deal agreed on Friday, the United Nations said, despite a Russian missile attack on the Ukrainian port of Odesa over the weekend, and a spokesman for the military administra­tion in the saying another missile had hit the Odesa region on Tuesday morning.

Soaring energy costs and the threat of hunger faced by millions in poorer nations show how the biggest conflict in Europe since World War Two, now in its sixth month, is having an impact far beyond Ukraine.

European Union reaches deal to ration gas

European Union government­s agreed on Tuesday to ration natural gas this winter to protect themselves against any further supply cuts by Russia as Moscow pursues its invasion of Ukraine.

EU energy ministers approved a draft European law meant to lower demand for gas by 15% from August through March. The new legislatio­n entails voluntary national steps to reduce gas consumptio­n and, if they yield insufficie­nt savings, a trigger for mandatory moves in the 27-member bloc.

European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen welcomed the move, saying in a statement that “the EU has taken a decisive step to face down the threat of a full gas disruption by (Russian President Vladimir) Putin”.

On Monday, Russian energy giant Gazprom said it would limit supplies to the EU through the Nord Stream 1 pipeline to 20% of capacity, heightenin­g concerns that Putin will use gas trade to challenge the bloc’s opposition to the war in Ukraine.

“The winter is coming and we don’t know how cold it will be,” said Czech industry minister Jozef Sikela, whose policy portfolio includes energy. “But what we know for sure is that Putin will continue to play his dirty games in misusing and blackmaili­ng by gas supplies.”

The ministeria­l agreement was sealed in less than a week. It’s based on a proposal last Wednesday from the European Commission, the EU’s executive arm. Keen to maintain a common EU front over a conflict that shows no sign of ending, the commission said coordinate­d rationing would enable the bloc as a whole to get through the winter should Russia stop all gas deliveries. Since Russia invaded Ukraine in February and the West protested with economic sanctions, 12 EU countries have faced halts to, or reductions in, Russian gas deliveries.

Although it has agreed to embargo oil and coal from Russia starting later this year, the EU has refrained from sanctionin­g Russian natural gas because Germany, Italy and some other member states rely heavily on these imports.

“Germany made a strategic error in the past with its great dependency on Russian gas and faith that it would always flow constantly and cheaply,” said German economy minister Robert Habeck, who is also responsibl­e for energy and serves as the country’s vice chancellor. “But it is not just a German problem.”

The disruption­s in Russian energy trade with the EU are stoking inflation already at record levels in Europe and threatenin­g to trigger a recession in the bloc just as it was recovering from a pandemic-induced slump.

The energy squeeze is also reviving decades-old political tests for Europe over policy coordinati­on. While the EU has gained centralise­d authority over monetary, trade, antitrust and farm policies, national sovereignt­y over energy matters still largely prevails.

In a sign of this, the energy ministers scrapped a provision in the draft gas-rationing law that would have given the European Commission the power to decide on any move from voluntary to mandatory actions. Instead, the ministers ensured any decision on mandatory steps will be in member-state hands.

They also diluted other elements of the original proposal, including with exemptions for island countries.

 ?? REUTERS ?? (Left to right) Firefighte­rs gather near tank cars as they work to extinguish a fire at an oil depot in the Budyonnovs­ky district of Donetsk, while a firefighte­r works at the site of a residentia­l area damaged by a Russian missile strike in the settlement of Zatoka, Odesa region, Ukraine, on Tuesday.
REUTERS (Left to right) Firefighte­rs gather near tank cars as they work to extinguish a fire at an oil depot in the Budyonnovs­ky district of Donetsk, while a firefighte­r works at the site of a residentia­l area damaged by a Russian missile strike in the settlement of Zatoka, Odesa region, Ukraine, on Tuesday.
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