On April 18, a week prior to the opening of the ninth annual
Russian Economic Forum in London, Gazprom CEO
Aleksei Miller addressed a Moscow gathering
of 25 EU ambassadors. After Miller's speech, Gazprom distributed a statement
that not only underscored ongoing tensions between the European Union and Russia, but
exacerbated them.
By Roman Kupchinsky
On April 18, a week prior to the opening of the ninth annual
Russian Economic Forum in London, Gazprom CEO
Aleksei Miller addressed a Moscow gathering
of 25 EU ambassadors. After Miller's speech, Gazprom distributed a statement
that not only underscored ongoing tensions between the European Union and Russia, but
exacerbated them.
Relations With EU
“It is necessary to note," the statement read,
"that attempts to limit Gazprom's activities in the European market and to
politicize questions of gas supply, which in fact are of an entirely economic
nature, will not lead to good results."
"It should not be forgotten that we are actively
familiarizing ourselves with new markets, such as North America and China,"
the statement continued. "Gas producers in Central
Asia are also paying attention to the Chinese market. This is not
by chance: competition for energy resources is growing."
The statement appeared to be an attempt to play off
potential U.S.
buyers of Gazprom's liquefied natural gas (LNG) against European clients, while
at the same time threatening to make cash-rich but energy-poor China Russia's
exclusive and limitless market for gas and oil if the Europeans refuse to play
according to Russian rules.
'We Have Other Alternatives'
Sergei Kupriyanov, a Gazprom spokesman, was explicit in his
interpretation of the statement. He told the U.K.-based "Financial
Times" on April 20: "We just want European countries to understand
that we have other alternatives in terms of gas sales. We have a fast-growing
Chinese market, and a market for liquefied natural gas in the US. If the
European Union wants our gas, it has to consider our interests as well."
The concept outlined in the Gazprom statement is not a new
one. According to "The Moscow Times," Gazprom's management presented
a strategy paper to its state-dominated board of directors in March. On March
30, the newspaper described the paper as a plan to boost Gazprom's share of the
European gas market to 30 percent from 25 percent "by buying into gas
storage, gas marketing, and power firms."
Centrica Link
Media reports have also linked the Gazprom statement to the
EU to rumors of attempts by the Russian gas monopoly to buy into the largest
British utility company, Centrica. British countermeasures to prevent this by
changing the laws on foreign ownership of strategically important British
companies apparently angered the Kremlin and it responded with the warning
statement.
The United
Kingdom is not the only country Gazprom is
setting its sights on. During a meeting in Sochi on August 29, 2005, Putin
asked Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi to allow Gazprom to invest more
heavily in his country, saying: "It is in our interest that our companies,
including Gazprom, be allowed to invest extra money in Italy's energy sector,
including in gas-distribution networks," RIA Novosti reported.
A Questionable Middleman
There was more controversy on April 21 when "The Wall
Street Journal Europe" reported that the U.S. Department of Justice's
organized-crime unit had begun an investigation into the activities of the
Swiss- and Austrian-based gas-trading company RosUkrEnergo.
RosUkrEnergo was created in July 2004 during a meeting in Yalta between Putin and
former Ukrainian President Leonid Kuchma. It took over the function of being
the middleman for gas deliveries from Turkmenistan
to Ukraine from Eural Trans
Gas, a company formed in Hungary
in December 2002.
When the new Ukrainian government of Yuliya Tymoshenko took
power in early 2005, one of the first investigations begun by the Security
Service of Ukraine (SBU) was the case of RosUkrEnergo. The investigation looked
into the hidden beneficiaries of the company, who were protected by Austrian
law from disclosure. RosUkrEnergo officials refused to name its beneficiaries,
while Gazprom officials claimed that they had no information about them.
After the Tymoshenko government was fired by Ukrainian
President Viktor Yushchenko in late summer 2005, the SBU investigation of
RosUkrEnergo was reportedly dropped.
In January this year, RosUkrEnergo, allegedly at the
insistence of the Russian government, was designated as the middleman for the
new gas agreement between Ukraine's
Naftohaz Ukrayina and Gazprom.
The company stood to make more than $2 billion from the deal
and this further incensed Tymoshenko's followers, who insisted that Yushchenko
renew the investigation and renegotiate the deal with Gazprom in such a way as
to keep RosUkrEnergo out of the picture.
The Human Rights Connection
Soon after news of the U.S. investigation of RosUkrEnergo
broke, Global Witness, a U.K.-based nongovernmental organization that works to
expose the link between natural-resource exploitation and human-rights abuses,
released a major report on the activities of Eural Trans Gas and RosUkrEnergo.
The report, titled "It's A Gas -- Funny Business
In The Turkmen-Ukraine Gas Trade," claims that offshore companies hide the
real beneficiaries of Eural Trans Gas and says there are inconsistencies in
statements by Gazprom and Naftohaz Ukrayina officials about RosUkrEnergo and
its role in the gas business. The report also claims that Turkmen President
Saparmurat Niyazov has allegedly used a German bank to hide billions of dollars
earned from the gas trade.
As tension increases between Western countries and Gazprom,
the Russian gas monopoly's shares traded on Western exchanges in ADRs (American
Depositary Receipts) continue to climb in price. Whatever happens, Western
investors are likely to still be attracted to Gazprom and other Russian energy
stocks as global oil prices soar
over $70 a barrel.