Response to Russia’s war in Ukraine dominates G7
summit
Analysis: Talks close with pledge to support Kyiv for
‘as long as it takes’ but price caps on Kremlin oil and gas remain sticking
point
Patrick
Wintour Diplomatic editor
Tue 28 Jun
2022 14.28 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/jun/28/g7-summit-talks-russia-war-ukraine
Western
leaders ended the three-day G7 summit in Germany promising to increase the
economic and political costs to Vladimir Putin and his regime of Russia’s war
in Ukraine.
The German
chancellor and chair of the G7, Olaf Scholz, made the vow at a closing press
conference in which he said the group were united and unbreakable, adding: “It
is important to stand together for this over the long distance, which will
certainly be necessary.”
With the
summit taking place at the same time as an attack on a kindergarten in the
Ukrainian capital, Kyiv, and a missile strike on a shopping centre in
Kremenchuk that killed at least 18 people, the leaders will hope the summit
demonstrated the resolve, unity and practicality required to weaken the Russian
president’s war machine. Scholz said the rest of the world was watching Putin’s
brutal assault on the civilian population of Ukraine.
However,
disagreements at the summit continued right until the end on the issue of
finding a way to reduce the flow of cash into the Kremlin from western
consumption of Russian energy. Germany fears that a cap on the price of oil or
gas would lead to a complete cut-off of Russian energy supplies and European
industrial meltdown. Others, especially the Americans, say the plan is
workable.
The G7 said
it would “take immediate action to secure energy supply and reduce price surges
driven by extraordinary market conditions, including by exploring additional
measures such as price caps”.
The wording
allows further work to be undertaken on complementary US ideas for an oil price
cap and an Italian plan for a gas price cap. Russia has already warned of
retaliation if the west tries to manipulate energy prices to below the market
level.
The G7
leaders said they were moved by the video discussion with the Ukrainian
president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, in which he called on the group to help end the
war by the winter, reflecting the attrition that Ukrainian soldiers are facing
and a belief that heavier weaponry can help regain the ground that is steadily
being lost in the Donbas. One G7 leader said: “Zelenskiy showed courage and
realism about what lies ahead.”
Boris
Johnson, who entered the summit warning that Russia is poised to annex more
Ukrainian land if the status quo in the balance of forces continues, emerged
slightly more optimistic that those who had been calling for an early
settlement have been quietened, and that it has been accepted a sustained
battle lies ahead.
The French
president, Emmanuel Macron – sometimes seen as the man most committed to a
future long-term relationship with Russia – said the G7 would support Ukraine
for as long as necessary. He was unconstrained in his criticism of Russian
attacks on civilians, saying the strike on the Kremenchuk shopping centre was a
war crime and that Russia must not win the war.
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The final
communique said: “We will stand with Ukraine for as long as it takes, providing
the needed financial, humanitarian, military and diplomatic support in its
courageous defence of its sovereignty and territorial integrity.”
It also
stressed that the G7 has pledged and given $29.5bn (£24.1bn) in budget aid this
year.
The
confirmation that the US will provide a state-of-the-art surface-to-air missile
defence system was probably the single biggest tangible development in terms of
practical help.
At a summit
normally dominated by the topics of the climate crisis, food security, global
debt and pandemics, it was striking how little of the top-line discussion
focused on these issues, even if the 28-page communique did address Scholz’s
personal project of forming a “climate club” by the end of the year dedicated
to achieving climate neutrality by 2050.
The other
stated climate goals were “a highly decarbonised road sector by 2030, a fully
or predominantly decarbonised power sector by 2035, and prioritising concrete
and timely steps towards the goal of accelerating the phase-out of domestic
unabated coal power”.
The wording
gives Japan wriggle room regarding the date by which it reaches the
emission-free vehicles target, and also allows some flexibility for overseas
investment in fossil fuels.
On food
security, the G7 offered an additional $4.5bn (£3.7bn) – way short of the UN
World Food Programme target.
Max Lawson,
the head of inequality policy at Oxfam, said the funding was a fraction of the
necessary minimum of $28.5bn (£23.3bn) extra: “Faced with the worst hunger
crisis in a generation, the G7 have simply failed to take the action that is
needed. Many millions will face terrible hunger and starvation as a result.
“Instead of
doing what is needed, the G7 are leaving millions to starve and cooking the
planet.”
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