Saturday, January 4, 2025

Russia and Ukraine End Five Decades of Gas Transit to Europe

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(Bloomberg) — Russia stopped sending gas to Europe via Ukraine, shutting off a route that’s operated for five decades after Kyiv refused to allow any transit that funds Moscow’s war machine.

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Both sides confirmed the halt on Wednesday after a key transit deal expired. The stoppage means a number of central European countries that have relied on the flows will be forced to source more expensive gas elsewhere, adding to pressure on supplies at a time when the region is depleting winter storage at the fastest pace in years.

Ukraine has been a key avenue for gas deliveries into Europe, even during the past three years of war. While the route accounts for just 5% of the region’s needs, countries are still reeling from the aftershocks of an energy crisis triggered by Russia’s invasion of its neighbor. The looming cutoff recently helped drive up gas prices in a market that’s up more than 50% year-on-year.

Russia’s Gazprom PJSC halted supplies on New Year’s Day after the five-year transit deal expired, citing a lack of “technical and legal opportunities” for shipments amid “repeated and explicit refusal of the Ukrainian side to extend these agreements.”

The stop was confirmed by the Energy Ministry in Kyiv, which said Russian flows across its territory ceased as of 7 a.m. local time. Slovakia’s network operator also confirmed it wasn’t receiving gas.

The end of the deal has highlighted the European Union’s continued reliance on Russian piped gas and shipments of liquefied fuel, despite a plan to wean itself off supplies from Moscow. Several countries have sought an alternative arrangement, but months of political wrangling have failed to produce an agreement.

Slovakia, Hungary

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has set a political objective to phase out Russian fossil fuels by 2027, and has said the end of transit will have little impact on regional energy markets. Still, countries such as Slovakia and Hungary have waged an increasingly bitter campaign to keep the fuel flowing.

“We knew that the transit agreement would not be renewed,” said Jonathan Stern, a distinguished research fellow at the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies. “The question is whether anybody in Europe — but especially the Slovaks, who will be hit the hardest by this — will be successful in making an agreement” to continue receiving some gas.

Europe is also facing an increasingly tight global gas market. Benchmark prices closed 2024 at the highest price in more than a year.

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