BusinessMirror

Russia wants to protect planet and Gazprom at climate summit

- Bloomberg News

RUSSIA will seek sanctions relief on green investment projects for state-run energy giants such as Gazprom at next month’s COP26 climate summit, as it comes under growing pressure to join a commitment to slash methane emissions. “We are being urged to reduce methane leakages and yet we have Gazprom under sanctions,” Russian President Vladimir Putin’s climate envoy, Ruslan Edelgeriye­v, said in an interview Wednesday at the annual Valdai Club meeting in Sochi. “Let’s take climate projects out of sanctions, so that Gazprom has access to green financing, access to technologi­es.”

Amid surging Covid-19 infections at home, Putin has opted not to travel to Glasgow for the summit. Edelgeriye­v said he had pursued the sanctions exemption proposal with US Climate Envoy John Kerry, as well as at a pre-cop ministeria­l meeting earlier this month. “If we want to reduce emissions, then climate projects should not be sanctioned wherever they are—in Russia, Iran, Turkey, in America, in Britain,” he said.

Edelgeriye­v didn’t elaborate on what specific sanctions he was referring to. Gazprom itself isn’t subject to the kind of sweeping financial restrictio­ns that some other Russian energy giants are, though it does face limits on access to technology, goods and services related to oil production in some areas.

He indicated Russia could accept more ambitious climate goals if it gets what it wants at the summit. Its position underlines the difficulty of isolating climate change negotiatio­ns from wider geopolitic­al disputes, something the US has repeatedly said it wants to do. Gazprom was among entities sanctioned by the US and the European Union after Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea and support for separatist­s in eastern Ukraine.

Still, the worsening impacts of climate change are now “so obvious that even the most careless people can no longer dismiss them,” Putin told the Valdai meeting late Thursday. Geopolitic­al and ideologica­l rivalries become “pointless in this context, if the winners won’t have air to breathe or anything to quench their thirst.”

Europe is looking to Gazprom to help ease an energy crunch that’s sent prices soaring, a crisis Putin has blamed in part on what he called a hasty EU switch to renewable sources. Russia’s now pressing for regulators to rapidly certify operation of its Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline to Germany to boost supplies, a project the US has relentless­ly opposed.

Edelgeriye­v said he isn’t calling for a wholesale lifting of sanctions, and that a special working group would decide what projects qualify. But if climate initiative­s were exempted, he said, nations that find it difficult and expensive to meet their climate obligation­s could do so by investing in emissions reduction projects in Russia.

“We have had conflicts, we have conflicts and we will go on having conflicts, but the climate doesn’t care,” Edelgeriye­v said, accusing Western states of double standards, including on Nord Stream 2 which he said would help Germany burn less coal and cut methane emissions as a new pipeline that’s less leaky than existing transit routes. Opponents say the pipeline is a political project designed to make the current transit route via Ukraine obsolete.

“Until there is an equal partnershi­p Russia will not move, because we were deceived many times,” Edelgeriye­v said. “And it cost us a lot.”

Methane pledge

THE US and the EU are pushing for nations to join a Global Methane Pledge at COP26 to cut emissions of a component of natural gas that has more than 80 times the global-warming power of carbon dioxide. Russia hasn’t indicated if it will sign.

Edelgeriye­v, a former prime minister of Russia’s Chechnya republic, said a suggestion Putin made in April for an internatio­nal satellite system to create commonly agreed data on methane emissions has gone without response. Without transparen­t accounting methods, Moscow will be reluctant to sign up to the initiative to cut global methane emissions 30 percent by 2030.

What’s seen in the West as a cheap and easy way to cut greenhouse gas emissions would be extremely difficult for Russia, requiring the reversal of an energy strategy for production growth that implies higher, rather than lower methane emissions, he said.

Russia has shifted its position on global climate talks from deep skepticism to engagement in the past year. That’s largely because an EU plan to establish a carbon border tax threatened to damage the competitiv­eness of Russian exports, according to Konstantin Simonov, who heads the National Energy Security Fund, a state-funded think tank in Moscow.

A once marginal domestic climate change debate also has begun to grow. Russian climate scientists addressing the Sochi conference painted a bleak picture of the likely impact global warming will have, melting the permafrost covering 65 percent of Russian territory, moving arable lands north, collapsing buildings and infrastruc­ture, reducing soil fertility and increasing the danger period for forest fires by up to 50 days per year in some regions.

Yet as the world’s largest energy exporter, Russia also remains suspicious of efforts to force the pace on a green transition that it sees as stacked to benefit others, according to Simonov. “We are going to have to have a very honest debate with the West about the terms of the fight against climate change,” he said.

That includes the potential use by Russian companies of carbon credits from the nation’s vast forests to pay carbon border taxes, something the EU’S current plans would rule out. Similarly the inclusion of nuclear energy, hydroelect­ric power and so-called blue hydrogen—made using natural gas—as green sources of energy, a question with broad implicatio­ns for Russian companies and export revenues.

Putin has set a goal for Russia to achieve carbon neutrality by 2060 and further commitment­s at COP26 “will depend on the internatio­nal situation,” said Edelgeriye­v. “These two things don’t get along, sanctions and climate.”

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