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Europe
oil row drags on as talks fail
By
Nick Coleman
AFP
MOSCOW
Petroleumworld.com 01 10 07
European countries faced continued disruption to their oil supplies
after talks Tuesday failed to end an oil transit row between Russia
and Belarus that threatens relations between Moscow and the EU.
Russian President Vladimir Putin said that Western consumers must be
spared the effects of disrupted supplies after German Chancellor Angela
Merkel warned the crisis was destroying confidence in Moscow.
Russia confirmed that it had cut oil shipments through the Druzhba pipeline
to western Europe, but Putin urged government ministers to "do
everything to secure the interests of Western consumers".
He added, however, that Russia might nonetheless have to reduce oil
output owing to the crisis.
Despite the gravity of the situation, talks between Russia and Belarus
ended in Moscow Tuesday with no agreement in a dispute that was quickly
spreading well beyond the two countries' borders.
Russian news agencies quoted Economic Development Minister German Gref
as saying that "we are ready to begin talks on all questions as
soon as illegal and unprecedented measures such as the transit tax and
shutting down of petrol shipments have been lifted."
"This is our demand and we will not negotiate as long as these
conditions have not been fulfilled," Gref said after a long meeting
with Belarus' Deputy Prime Minister Andrei Kobyakov.
The row blew up Monday when Russia cut oil supplies via Belarus in response
to what Moscow said was the ex-Soviet republic's illegal demand for
a transit fee and siphoning of oil. The cut-off impacted oil supplies
to the Czech Republic, Germany, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia.
In Berlin, Merkel criticised the row between Moscow and Minsk and the
fact that European countries had not been kept informed.
"It is not acceptable when there are no consultations about such
moves," Merkel said when asked about Russia's reliability as an
energy partner.
"You cannot build cooperation based on true mutual trust in this
way," said the German leader, whose country has in recent years
been considered Russia's closest European Union partner.
About 12.5 percent of the oil consumed by the EU transits through the
Druzhba pipeline from Russia, which provides half of the 27-nation bloc's
oil imports.
The pipeline supplies about 20 percent of Germany's annual oil imports,
or 23.4 million tonnes in 2005, according to the German oil industry
federation (MWV).
Belarus and its giant neighbour Russia each accuse the other for the
disruption.
Khristenko acknowledged Russia's role in cutting off the oil, but said
it had been forced to by Minsk's "non-Slavic foul play" in
blocking oil transit on its end.
"Since the morning of January 8, Russia has not been supplying
oil through the pipeline in the direction of Belarus," Khristenko
told reporters.
"If the valve is closed to you on the other end of the pipeline,
then you have nowhere to ship that oil" without causing a "technical
failure" or re-routing the oil in Russia "not knowing where
or to whom," he said.
The row was sparked when Belarus imposed a 45-dollar-per-tonne tariff
from January 1 on Russian oil transiting through its territory. Minsk's
move was retaliation for a separate Russian tariff as well as a more
than doubling of gas prices for Belarus imposed at the New Year.
The two countries have a tradition of friendship in spite of energy
disputes that date back to the early 1990s. Russia and Belarus have
officially been building a "union state," and Moscow has seen
Belarus as a buffer against the expansion of the NATO military alliance.
In Brussels, the European Commission said there was no immediate threat
from the disruption in supplies. Affected European countries were preparing
to call on reserve supplies and were making alternative supply arrangements.
Khristenko said Russia would seek to compensate for Druzhba cuts with
increased shipments to Europe by rail and river transport.
AFP
09 2127 GMT 01 07
Copyright© 2001 AFP.All
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