Gold9472
01-08-2007, 08:05 PM
Russia Shuts Oil Pipeline to Parts of Europe
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/01/08/AR2007010800872.html?nav=rss_email/components
By Peter Finn
Washington Post Foreign Service
Monday, January 8, 2007; 3:34 PM
MOSCOW, Jan. 8 -- Relations between erstwhile allies Russia and Belarus continued to unravel Monday after Russia shut off a pipeline that carries crude oil through Belarus to Germany, Poland and other parts of Eastern Europe, charging that its neighbor was illegally siphoning off oil meant for other countries.
The dispute over subsidized energy will have little immediate effect because the end-customer countries have strategic reserves for at least two months. But it is already re-kindling discussion about the reliability of Russian supplies.
"This shows us once again that arguments among various countries of the former Soviet Union, between suppliers and transit countries, mean that these deliveries are unreliable from our perspective," said Poland's deputy economy minister Piotr Naimski in a television interview. Poland has long been suspicious of Russia's dominance of energy supplies on the continent.
Belarus, led by authoritarian president Alexander Lukashenko, has poor relations with the United States and Western Europe. It is unlikely to garner the kind of international sympathy that Ukraine, for example, enjoyed when Russia cut off its natural gas in another pricing dispute last January.
The convulsions over Russia's pricing of energy supplies to its neighbors also extend to Azerbaijan, which announced Monday that it had halted the export of oil to Russia. Officials in the Caspian Sea nation said they planned to divert the oil to power stations in their country to replace Russian natural gas.
Russia doubled the price of natural gas for Azerbaijan on Jan. 1, but the country refused to accept the rate of $230 per 1,309 cubic yards.
The disputes are likely to give new urgency to efforts in parts of Europe to diversify the supply chain and reduce dependence on Russia, one of the continent's most important suppliers.
For years, Russia and Belarus have been bound together by Moscow's provision of cheap energy in return for political loyalty. But the Kremlin appears to have tired of subsidizing Lukashenko, whose government could now face an economic crisis brought on by higher energy costs.
The two countries have flirted with the idea of forming a political union, but Russia is interested only in absorbing Belarus as just another province while Lukashenko has insisted on a union of equal states, an idea the Kremlin finds ludicrous. The idea appears finished, at least under the current leadership of both countries, according to Irina Kobrinskaya, an analyst at the Institute of World Economy and International Relations in Moscow. "The union state is a myth," she said in an interview.
The European Union's energy commissioner, Andris Piebalgs, said he wanted an "urgent and detailed explanation" from both Belarus and Russia as why the pipeline carrying Russian crude was closed. European officials said Germany has enough reserves to last 130 days and Poland has enough for 70 days.
Each year, approximately 100 million tons of Russian oil crosses Belarusan territory in pipelines. Russian officials said they were examining ways of rerouting oil. The pipeline network crossing Belarus also supplies the Czech Republic, Hungary, Lithuania and Slovakia.
Belarus' command economy has been heavily dependent on subsidized natural gas and crude oil from Russia, which is now insisting that the government in Minsk pay more.
On New Year's Eve, Belarus reluctantly agreed to the doubling of natural gas prices and a gradual shift to market prices by 2011. The Russian state-controlled energy giant Gazprom also acquired a 50 percent stake in the gas pipeline system owned by Belarus.
But the two countries continued to spar over cheap crude oil. Belarus earned billions of dollars from processing cheap Russian oil and then re-exporting it to Western Europe. Last month, Russia imposed an export duty of $180 on each ton of oil sold to Belarus, a severe blow to the country's reprocessing industry and government revenues. Belarus responded by imposing an import duty of $45 on each ton of Russian oil that crossed its territory.
Russia accused Belarus of siphoning off 79,000 tons of crude oil since Saturday and threatened retaliation.
"This looks like a trade war," said Andrei Sharonov, Russia's deputy economic development and trade minister, on Ekho Moskvy radio. "One should not forget that Russia is the biggest market and number one economic partner for Belarus. Therefore we have the possibility to apply measures to Belarus and get the duty cancelled."
A Belarusan delegation flew to Moscow Monday evening for emergency talks.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/01/08/AR2007010800872.html?nav=rss_email/components
By Peter Finn
Washington Post Foreign Service
Monday, January 8, 2007; 3:34 PM
MOSCOW, Jan. 8 -- Relations between erstwhile allies Russia and Belarus continued to unravel Monday after Russia shut off a pipeline that carries crude oil through Belarus to Germany, Poland and other parts of Eastern Europe, charging that its neighbor was illegally siphoning off oil meant for other countries.
The dispute over subsidized energy will have little immediate effect because the end-customer countries have strategic reserves for at least two months. But it is already re-kindling discussion about the reliability of Russian supplies.
"This shows us once again that arguments among various countries of the former Soviet Union, between suppliers and transit countries, mean that these deliveries are unreliable from our perspective," said Poland's deputy economy minister Piotr Naimski in a television interview. Poland has long been suspicious of Russia's dominance of energy supplies on the continent.
Belarus, led by authoritarian president Alexander Lukashenko, has poor relations with the United States and Western Europe. It is unlikely to garner the kind of international sympathy that Ukraine, for example, enjoyed when Russia cut off its natural gas in another pricing dispute last January.
The convulsions over Russia's pricing of energy supplies to its neighbors also extend to Azerbaijan, which announced Monday that it had halted the export of oil to Russia. Officials in the Caspian Sea nation said they planned to divert the oil to power stations in their country to replace Russian natural gas.
Russia doubled the price of natural gas for Azerbaijan on Jan. 1, but the country refused to accept the rate of $230 per 1,309 cubic yards.
The disputes are likely to give new urgency to efforts in parts of Europe to diversify the supply chain and reduce dependence on Russia, one of the continent's most important suppliers.
For years, Russia and Belarus have been bound together by Moscow's provision of cheap energy in return for political loyalty. But the Kremlin appears to have tired of subsidizing Lukashenko, whose government could now face an economic crisis brought on by higher energy costs.
The two countries have flirted with the idea of forming a political union, but Russia is interested only in absorbing Belarus as just another province while Lukashenko has insisted on a union of equal states, an idea the Kremlin finds ludicrous. The idea appears finished, at least under the current leadership of both countries, according to Irina Kobrinskaya, an analyst at the Institute of World Economy and International Relations in Moscow. "The union state is a myth," she said in an interview.
The European Union's energy commissioner, Andris Piebalgs, said he wanted an "urgent and detailed explanation" from both Belarus and Russia as why the pipeline carrying Russian crude was closed. European officials said Germany has enough reserves to last 130 days and Poland has enough for 70 days.
Each year, approximately 100 million tons of Russian oil crosses Belarusan territory in pipelines. Russian officials said they were examining ways of rerouting oil. The pipeline network crossing Belarus also supplies the Czech Republic, Hungary, Lithuania and Slovakia.
Belarus' command economy has been heavily dependent on subsidized natural gas and crude oil from Russia, which is now insisting that the government in Minsk pay more.
On New Year's Eve, Belarus reluctantly agreed to the doubling of natural gas prices and a gradual shift to market prices by 2011. The Russian state-controlled energy giant Gazprom also acquired a 50 percent stake in the gas pipeline system owned by Belarus.
But the two countries continued to spar over cheap crude oil. Belarus earned billions of dollars from processing cheap Russian oil and then re-exporting it to Western Europe. Last month, Russia imposed an export duty of $180 on each ton of oil sold to Belarus, a severe blow to the country's reprocessing industry and government revenues. Belarus responded by imposing an import duty of $45 on each ton of Russian oil that crossed its territory.
Russia accused Belarus of siphoning off 79,000 tons of crude oil since Saturday and threatened retaliation.
"This looks like a trade war," said Andrei Sharonov, Russia's deputy economic development and trade minister, on Ekho Moskvy radio. "One should not forget that Russia is the biggest market and number one economic partner for Belarus. Therefore we have the possibility to apply measures to Belarus and get the duty cancelled."
A Belarusan delegation flew to Moscow Monday evening for emergency talks.