Germany sticks with Putin for its oil and gas
Chancellor Olaf Scholz brushes off pressure from
Ukraine and the US to stop pouring money into the Kremlin’s war coffers.
BY HANS VON
DER BURCHARD AND MERLIN SUGUE
March 7,
2022 8:35 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/germany-putin-oil-gas/
BERLIN —
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Monday pushed back hard against calls from the
U.S. and Ukraine for a ban on imports of Russian gas and oil as part of
international sanctions on Moscow.
One of the
darkest ironies of Russian President Vladimir Putin's war in Ukraine is that
Europe is helping fund the Kremlin's war machine through energy payments.
Despite repeated pledges to reduce dependence on Russia after the invasion of
Crimea in 2014, the EU has failed to combat its hydrocarbon addiction.
Dismissing fears that Putin was a serious threat, Germany was long the main
proponent of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline pumping gas from Russian export
monopoly Gazprom straight to Germany.
Although
Berlin finally had to freeze the Nord Stream 2 project after the invasion of
Ukraine, Scholz made clear that Europe's biggest economy would not make any
further energy sacrifices and would keep buying from Russia.
“Europe has
deliberately exempted energy supplies from Russia from sanctions," Scholz
said in a statement. "At the moment, Europe's supply of energy for heat
generation, mobility, power supply and industry cannot be secured in any other
way. It is therefore of essential importance for the provision of public
services and the daily lives of our citizens," he added.
The
Ukrainian government, with the backing of a number of U.S. and European
politicians, has argued that the West must take action and cut this core
revenue stream for the Russian budget.
Glossing
over Germany's role in undermining EU diversification plans for years, Scholz
said that his government and European partners have been "working hard for
months" to develop alternatives to Russian energy supplies, but stressed
that “this cannot be done overnight.”
"That
is why it is a conscious decision on our part to continue the activities of
business enterprises in the area of energy supply with Russia," Scholz
added.
The
chancellor's intervention followed comments by U.S. Secretary of State Antony
Blinken, who said on Sunday that the United States and European Union are in
"very active discussions" to ban imports of Russian oil. Japanese
media reported that Tokyo has joined those discussions.
Ukrainian
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Monday also called for “a boycott of Russian
exports, in particular, the rejection of oil and oil products from Russia.”
“Someone would call it embargo, others can
call it morality, when you reject giving money to a terrorist,” he added.
Addressing
a potential ban on Russian energy, European Trade Commissioner Valdis
Dombrovskis said: “Nothing should be off the table ... We should do more,
because this aggression unfortunately is not stopping so we should see a way —
in a sense —to stop Putin’s ability to finance this war.” U.K. Prime Minister
Boris Johnson has also said that an oil import ban should be "very much on
the table."
The problem
is that it would be almost impossible for the EU to impose an import ban on
Russian oil without support from Germany, the bloc's kingpin.
Broad
backing
Within
Germany, support for Scholz seemed wide.
German
Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock, ironically from the Greens, is also in
favor of keeping the hydrocarbons running.
"We
are prepared, as I have repeatedly made clear, to pay a very very high economic
price," Baerbock told the "Anne Will" talkshow on Sunday.
"But if tomorrow the lights go out in Germany, in Europe, that doesn't
mean that the tanks will stop. As I said, if that were the case, we would do
that," she said.
Michael
Kellner, a parliamentary state secretary in the German economy ministry, argued
on Monday that it is far easier for the U.S. to block oil imports than for
Germany. He note Russian oil makes up 7 to 8 percent of U.S. imports, while
about 30 percent of Germany's imports come from Russia. This is a "very
different starting position," Kellner told public broadcaster ZDF.
Norbert
Röttgen, a foreign policy-focused lawmaker from the center-right Christian
Democratic Union (CDU) opposition, struck a rare note of dissent.
“Putin is
trying to bring Ukraine to its knees by criminally bombing entire streets,
residential areas and hospitals. We can not permit that to continue by
financing his war through oil and gas. My appeal to the German government:
Please stop our imports,” he said.
Germany's
reluctance to impose these sanctions now poses a big strategic problems for
international attempts to tighten an economic noose around Putin. Even the fear
of potential sanctions against Russia has placed an unexpectedly broad de facto
embargo on Russia oil in past days. As of Friday, 70 percent of Russian oil is
struggling to find buyers, according to JPMorgan.
This is a
serious temporary headache for Putin. He can ultimately diversify to other
markets such as China but will be liable to face heavy discounts on his crude
in the meantime.
It remains
to be seen whether the traders will cease their self-imposed embargo in the
days ahead, reckoning that Germany will have seen off the immediate threat of a
European crackdown against Russian crude.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário