EU gas monitors head to Ukraine

Published: 12 January 2009 y., Monday

Dujotiekis
The EU is sending monitors to Ukraine to oversee the transit of Russian gas through pipelines there. The deployment is expected to clear the way for the resumption of supplies to Europe.

The team was dispatched after emergency talks in Brussels between the commission and Russian and Ukrainian fuel company executives to help resolve a price dispute between their countries that has severely disrupted natural gas deliveries.

Some 20 countries have been affected, especially in the Balkan region, where the crisis has left tens of thousands of households in the cold and forced schools, hospitals and factories to close.

Both the commission and the Czech presidency of the EU declared the situation  unacceptable and demanded that Russia and Ukraine restore gas supplies immediately.

The monitors will be checking the flow to ensure that Russia and Ukraine honour contracts to pump gas to Europe. The crisis began at the start of the year, when the two countries broke off talks over how much Ukraine should pay for Russian gas. A few days later, the gas stopped flowing.

This is not the first time tensions between Ukraine and Russia have squeezed EU gas supplies. Similar disputes in recent years have shown the need to reduce the EU’s reliance on foreign energy, one of the commission’s top priorities.

The EU gets about a quarter of its natural gas from Russia, mostly through pipelines in Ukraine. The dependence varies widely though, with some countries relying on Russia for nearly all their gas.

Moscow agreed to the monitors after talks with Czech Prime Minister Mirek Topolánek and German and Russian leaders. A special Energy Council will take place on 12 January to look at the situation, including monitoring. The Czech Republic took over the rotating EU presidency on 1 Jan., just as the crisis began.

 

Šaltinis: ec.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Chastel: “to be pragmatic and determined in accession negotiations with Croatia”

State Secretary for European Affairs Olivier Chastel met with his Croatian counterpart Mr Andrej Plenkovic on 22nd July 2010. more »

World Bank Launches New Partnership Strategy with Albania

The World Bank Group’s Board of Directors today discussed a new Country Partnership Strategy (CPS) for Albania, which provides the framework for the World Bank Group’s assistance to Albania for 2011-2014. more »

EU road safety plan for next 10 years

The EU renews its target to cut annual death rate by half. more »

Happy birthday, Belgium!

180 candles light up the cake today: Belgium is celebrating its birthday. The Royal Family and its invitees will attend the national march-past that is to take place at 4 P.M. before the Royal Palace. more »

Commission allocates € 15 million to prevent hunger, malnutrition and epidemics in Ethiopia

Today, the European Commission has adopted a € 15 million aid package to address a critical food security situation in Ethiopia where an estimated 5.2 million people will be requiring food assistance this year. more »

Europe must push for a healthy Africa

The World Cup is over and life in Africa is returning to normal, but it is anything but “fair play” with life expectancy for some 30 to 40 years less than for Europeans. more »

Drought grips Bolivia

An early dry season in Bolivia is leaving an unprepared population at risk. more »

Kitchen, food waste: MEPs want new recycling rules

The EU produced more than 100 million tonnes of garden and kitchen waste last year and most of it went to landfill or was incinerated. more »

EU aid to Palestine - MEPs question Palestinian Prime Minister on results

The EU, as the biggest donor to the Palestinian Authority, has a more important role to play now than ever before, Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad told Budgets Committee MEPs on Tuesday. more »

Middle East peace process: “EU must be a full player, not just a payer”, says Pittella

“The EU should play another role than just paying out” for the Middle East peace process, Parliament's first Vice-President Gianni Pittella told Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad at a bilateral meeting on Tuesday. more »