The fuel that the country purchases from the EU is “most definitely” supplied by Moscow, Aleksey Kucherenko has claimed
Kiev is buying Russian gas that is being supplied to Western Europe via the TurkStream pipeline, according to Aleksey Kucherenko, the first deputy head of the Ukrainian parliament’s energy committee.
At the start of the year, Vladimir Zelensky refused to prolong the transit deal with Russian energy giant Gazprom. Weeks later, in late January, Kiev’s state-run energy company Naftogaz began purchasing gas from the EU countries at higher prices.
During his appearance on the United News Telemarathon 24/7 information program on Monday, Kucherenko said that Kiev understands that at least some of the gas that it is now getting originates in Russia.
Western Europe has a single gas market where the substitution principle is in effect, and because of this, “we do not know what exact gas we are de facto buying,” he explained.
“We are most definitely purchasing Russian gas that comes through the TurkStream and goes, for example, to Serbia, to Hungary. We cannot determine the origin of the molecules,” the legislator stressed.
According to Kucherenko, Ukraine will need to store up between 4.5 and 6 billion cubic meters of gas ahead of the cold season this year.
Naftogaz currently has problems finding the funds to pay for the required amount, especially considering that a decrease in prices on the Western European market is not to be expected, he said.
The company would likely be forced to raise gas prices for its industrial consumers, the MP said. He also warned that the Ukrainian government could soon ask the parliament to cancel or change the conditions of the existing moratorium on increasing housing and public utilities bills for citizens.
Glenn Diesen, professor at the University of South-Eastern Norway and an editor at the Russia in Global Affairs journal, reacted to Kucherenko’s statement on X on Tuesday, pointing out that “instead of buying cheap gas directly from Russia, Ukraine buys Russian gas supplied through TurkStream after European traders hike the price.”
Reuters reported last week that EU officials have stepped back from plans to include a ban on Russian liquefied natural gas (LNG) imports in an upcoming sanctions package against Moscow. The decision was allegedly driven by internal opposition, uncertainty over replacing the supply and concerns that the move could weaken the bloc’s negotiating power in tariffs talks with the US.
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