Arab Times

Russia, Ukraine begin talks to avoid gas wars

Kiev anxious on planned Nord Stream 2 pipeline

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BERLIN, July 17, (AFP): Moscow and Kiev envoys met Tuesday in Berlin for EU-backed talks on future Russian gas shipments through Ukraine, which fears being left out in the cold by a major new pipeline.

Ukraine is anxious that the planned Nord Stream 2 Baltic Sea pipeline from Russia to Germany that will bypass it geographic­ally will also leave it politicall­y isolated and deprive it of crucial transit fees.

US President Donald Trump has weighed in on the dispute, charging the pipeline would increasing­ly make Germany a “captive of Russia” while vowing the United States will compete in Europe with tankerload­s of liquified natural gas (LNG).

Russia’s state-controlled gas giant Gazprom has already dramatical­ly cut the volume of gas transiting via Ukraine, where an armed conflict has simmered against pro-Moscow rebels since Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea.

Gazprom and its partners plan to complete by late next year Nord Stream 2 — effectivel­y doubling Russian shipments now flowing through the existing Nord Stream 1 line.

Another project set for completion by late 2019, the Turkish Stream pipeline, threatens to further reduce the traditiona­l role of Ukraine as a major gateway into Europe for Russian gas.

The Nord Stream 2 plan has raised fears in the EU, and especially in eastern Europe, of excessive reliance on gas from a hostile Russia that could use energy exports for political leverage.

In past disputes, Russian supplies to European markets were temporaril­y shut off in 2006 and 2009, at times in midwinter. The Berlin talks brought together Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Pavlo Klimkin and the European Commission vice president for energy Maros Sefcovic, as well as executives from Gazprom and its Ukrainian counterpar­t Naftogaz.

“The clock is ticking, the end of 2019 is around the corner, and we need to answer this question,” said Sefcovic. “Will we have a meaningful agreement on Jan 1, 2020 for transit through Ukraine that is commercial­ly viable?”

Trump last week weighed into the dispute and attacked Chancellor Angela Merkel by charging that NATO ally “Germany is captive of Russia because it is getting so much of its energy from Russia”. During his Helsinki meeting Monday with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Trump reiterated that the US, thanks to its fracking energy boom, could increasing­ly compete in Europe by selling LNG.

Although LNG shipped across the Atlantic is less economical­ly viable, Trump voiced hope that “we’ll compete successful­ly,” while conceding that Russia had “a little advantage location-wise”.

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