Putin wants 'unfriendly' countries to pay for
Russian gas in roubles
By Nina
Chestney
LONDON,
March 23 (Reuters) - Russia will seek payment in roubles for gas sold to
"unfriendly" countries, President Vladimir Putin said on Wednesday,
and European gas prices soared on concerns the move would exacerbate the
region's energy crunch.
European nations
and the United States have imposed heavy sanctions on Russia since Moscow sent
troops into Ukraine on Feb. 24. But Europe depends heavily on Russian gas for
heating and power generation, and the European Union is split on whether to
sanction Russia's energy sector.
Putin's
message was clear: If you want our gas, buy our currency. It remained unclear
whether Russia has the power to unilaterally change existing contracts agreed
upon in euros.
The rouble
briefly leapt after the shock announcement to a three-week high past 95 against
the dollar. It pared gains but stayed well below 100, closing at 97.7 against
the dollar, down more than 22% since Feb. 24.
Some
European wholesale gas prices up to 30% higher on Wednesday. British and Dutch
wholesale gas prices jumped.
Russian gas
accounts for some 40% of Europe's total consumption. EU gas imports from Russia
this year have fluctuated between 200 million to 800 million euros ($880
million) a day.
"Russia
will continue, of course, to supply natural gas in accordance with volumes and
prices ... fixed in previously concluded contracts," Putin said at a
televised meeting with government ministers.
"The
changes will only affect the currency of payment, which will be changed to
Russian roubles," he said.
German
Economy Minister Robert Habeck called Putin's demand a breach of contract and
other buyers of Russian gas echoed the point.
"This
would constitute a breach to payment rules included in the current
contracts," said a senior Polish government source, adding Poland has no
intention of signing new contracts with Gazprom after their existing deal
expires at the end of this year.
Major banks
are reluctant to trade in Russian assets, further complicating Putin's demand.
A
spokesperson for Dutch gas supplier Eneco, which buys 15% of its gas from
Russian gas giant Gazprom's German subsidiary Wingas GmbH, said it had a
long-term contract denominated in euros.
"I
can't imagine we will agree to change the terms of that."
According
to Gazprom (GAZP.MM), 58% of its sales of natural gas to Europe and other
countries as of Jan. 27 were settled in euros. U.S. dollars accounted for about
39% of gross sales and sterling around 3%. Commodities traded worldwide are
largely transacted in the U.S. dollar or the euro, which make up roughly 80% of
worldwide currency reserves.
"There
is no danger for the (gas) supply, we have checked, there is a financial
counterparty in Bulgaria that can realize the transaction also in
roubles," Energy Minister Alexander Nikolov told reporters in Sofia.
"We expect all kinds of actions on the verge of the unusual but this
scenario has been discussed, so there is no risk for the payments under the
existing contract."
Several
firms, including oil and gas majors Eni, Shell and BP, RWE and Uniper -
Germany's biggest importer of Russian gas - declined to comment.
"It is
unclear how easy it would be for European clients to switch their payments to
roubles given the scale of these purchases," said Leon Izbicki, associate
at consultancy Energy Aspects. He said, however, that Russia's central bank
could provide additional liquidity to foreign exchange markets that would
enable European clients and banks to source needed roubles.
Moscow
calls its actions in Ukraine a "special military operation." Ukraine
and Western allies call this a baseless pretext.
ONE WEEK
DEADLINE
Putin said
the government and central bank had one week to come up with a solution on
moving operations into the Russian currency and that Gazprom would be ordered
to make the corresponding changes to contracts.
In gas
markets on Wednesday, eastbound gas flows via the Yamal-Europe pipeline from
Germany to Poland declined sharply, data from the Gascade pipeline operator
showed.
"The
measures taken by Russia may also be interpreted as provocative and may
increase the possibility that Western nations tighten sanctions on Russian
energy," said Liam Peach, emerging Europe economist at Capital Economics.
The
European Commission has said it plans to cut EU dependency on Russian gas by
two-thirds this year and end its reliance on Russian supplies "well before
2030."
But unlike
the United States and Britain, EU states have not sanctioned Russia's energy
sector. The Commission, the 27-country EU's executive, did not respond to a
request for comment.
Habeck said
he would discuss with European partners a possible answer to Moscow's
announcement. Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said more time was needed to
clarify Russia's demand.
"In
their contracts it's usually specified in what currency it has to be paid, so
it's not something you can change just like that," Rutte said during a
debate with parliament.
Russia has
drawn up a list of "unfriendly" countries corresponding to those that
have imposed sanctions. Deals with companies and individuals from those
countries must be approved by a government commission.
The
countries include the United States, European Union member states, Britain,
Japan, Canada, Norway, Singapore, South Korea, Switzerland and Ukraine. Some,
including the United States and Norway, do not purchase Russian gas.
The United
States is consulting with allies on the issue and each country will make its
own decision, a White House official told Reuters. The United States has
already banned imports of Russian energy.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário