You’re next: Kremlin warns anyone not paying in
rubles also faces gas shutoff
The European Commission insists that paying for gas in
rubles ‘is a breach of our sanctions.’
The European Commission insisted on Wednesday that
payment to Russia in rubles is forbidden |
BY AMERICA
HERNANDEZ AND PAOLA TAMMA
April 27,
2022 6:50 pm
Any country
refusing to bow to the Kremlin's demands to pay for natural gas in rubles will
face the same fate as Poland and Bulgaria, Moscow warned after those two
countries saw their deliveries drop to zero on Wednesday.
"Payment
in proper form will be the basis for the continuation of supply," said
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov, referring to a March 31 decree signed by
Russian President Vladimir Putin demanding that all gas payments be made in
rubles.
The
European Commission insisted on Wednesday that payment to Russia in rubles is
forbidden as it undermines sanctions imposed after it invaded Ukraine.
"Our
guidance here is very clear," said Commission President Ursula von der
Leyen. "If this is not foreseen in the contract, to pay in rubles is a
breach of our sanctions."
She added a
warning for companies with contracts denominated in euros or dollars —
accounting for 97 percent of EU gas deals with Russia. They "should not
accede to the Russian demands, this would be a breach of the sanctions, so a
high risk for the companies.”
That sets
up a major clash between the EU, which gets 40 percent of its natural gas from
Russia, and Moscow, which depends on those sales and which can't easily shift
gas deliveries from European to Asian markets.
But six EU
diplomats countered that Brussels' instructions have been anything but clear —
and instead potentially undermine EU unity on the issue.
In guidance
issued earlier this month, the Commission said companies could open an account
with Gazprombank (as requested by Moscow) to make payments for gas in euros or
dollars (as specified in their contracts) and then issue a declaration that
their payment obligation ends with the deposit of funds. That leaves any later
conversion into rubles in Russian hands.
But the
Russian decree only considers payment obligations met once the currency
conversion is complete.
For the
Commission's payment fudge to work, Russia has to agree to play along. Putin's
decree allows for exemptions at Russia's discretion but does not detail the
process for requesting or granting such privileges — handing Putin the chance
to play favorites in issuing waivers, or to announce that companies engaging in
the workaround really are paying in rubles in defiance of EU sanctions.
One EU
diplomat described the Commission’s guidance as a “trap.”
"We
expected the Commission to deliver a clear message" that Russia's
instructions breached sanctions, said a second diplomat. "Instead we got
instructions on how companies are supposed to deal with Gazprom on their
own."
"This
is the key issue: will all European countries follow the EU indication to pay
only in Euros/Dollars as indicated in the contracts? Or will some decide to go
their own way, complying with the Russian request," said Simone
Tagliapietra, an energy expert with Bruegel, a Brussels think tank.
At a
meeting on Wednesday, "several ambassadors made critical comments about
that ambiguity and asked for more clarity,” a third EU diplomat said. "The
goal was to all have the same understanding of what’s possible and what’s not,
but there have been clear differences in interpretation.”
Four
diplomats said the Commission promised at Wednesday's meeting to provide more
clarity.
When asked
by POLITICO whether the Commission still condoned EU companies opening Russian
payment accounts in the wake of the gas shutoff to Poland and Bulgaria, a
Commission spokesperson on Wednesday said: "There has been no change to
the guidance."
Fuming
Kremlin
For now, an
angry Moscow is showing no sign of budging.
Peskov said
that the ruble measure was retaliation for Western sanctions, which froze more
than $300 billion in the Russian central bank's currency reserves. “This need
was dictated by the fact that, as you know, they blocked from us — or, to put
it plainly, stole — a fairly significant amount of our reserves."
Both Poland
and Bulgaria said they had made payments on time for their gas — but not in Russian
currency — but were still cut off.
However,
both countries are fairly resilient to an immediate shutdown of Russian gas,
especially now that home heating demand has fallen with the end of winter.
Neither one uses much Russian gas for generating electricity, and both said
they have enough in storage and supplies from other sources to ride out an
immediate crunch.
Countries
further down the line, like Germany, Italy and Austria, could be more
vulnerable.
A shutoff
due to nonpayment in rubles "would have dire consequences for the German
and European economies," said Jonathan Hackenbroich with the European
Council on Foreign Relations. "Factories would have to curb production, or
even close. Some key industries could be lost forever, and it is in fact hard
to assess the full range of consequences."
Austrian
Chancellor Karl Nehammer reiterated on Wednesday that gas company OMV
"will continue to pay for gas deliveries from Russia in euros. Austria is
sticking to the jointly agreed EU sanctions."
The German
economy and climate ministry said it will follow the Commission's guidance,
telling its companies to make payments in euros or dollars to a Gazprombank
account, and declare their payment fulfilled.
A spokesperson
for the Dutch economy and climate ministry said the Netherlands is also hewing
to the EU recommendation stating that payments can still take place in some
cases.
German
company Uniper also said that "we continue to believe that compliant
future payment processing is feasible. "
Italy's Eni
declined to comment on the matter, and France's Engie did not respond to a
request for comment.
The problem
is set to grow as more bills come due: Payments for April gas deliveries
usually must be paid in May under standard industry invoicing, according to a
report by the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies.
Ruined
relationship
Moscow
insists that ending gas deliveries to Poland and Bulgaria and threatening other
customers won't ruin its commercial reputation.
"This
is not blackmail. Russia has been and remains a reliable supplier, committed to
its obligations," Peskov said. "The conditions that have been fixed
in the presidential decree, the need for them has been caused by unprecedented
unfriendly steps against us."
But even at
the height of the Cold War, Moscow kept energy sales divorced from politics.
Russia
briefly cut off gas to Ukraine in 2006 and 2009 over payment disputes, but
what's happening now is permanently undermining Russia's relationship with its
largest gas buyers, EU leaders said.
Russia's
"suspension of the gas flow is a gross violation of contract and it is
blackmail to implement a plan for payment in rubles through third parties,
which wasn’t agreed," Bulgarian Prime Minister Kiril Petkov said
Wednesday. "We will not succumb to such a racket."
Gazprom's
contracts with Poland and Bulgaria expire at the end of this year, and neither
country planned to renew. Gazprom's move ends those links even sooner.
"Today
Poland has become gas independent from Russia. We are not threatened by any
blackmail," Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said on Wednesday.
Petkov
added that Sofia was examining all of its contracts with Gazprom, including
transit deals allowing gas to be pumped across Bulgaria to other countries.
Polish utility PGNiG said it would sue to force Gazprom to resume supplies and
seek damages.
For the
European Commission, those threats and counter-threats are strengthening the
view that the bloc can no longer rely on Russia.
"The
era of Russian fossil fuels in Europe will come to an end," said von der
Leyen. "We are determined to make this happen as soon as possible ... for
good and forever."
Barbara
Moens, Leonie Kijewski, Jacopo Barigazzi, Antonia Zimmerman and Victor Jack
contributed reporting.


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