Russian gas export monopoly Gazprom said
Friday that its dispute with Ukraine over payments could cause disruptions in
deliveries to Western Europe, dpa reported.
Gazprom spokesman Sergei Kupriyanov said that Gazprom head Alexei Miller had
notified Europe's largest clients that it could not rule out the possibility of
a cut off, according to Itar-Tass.
At issue is the lack of progress in reaching agreement with Ukraine's Naftogaz over 2 billion dollars in non-payments for imports by Kiev, with a New Year's
deadline looming with threatened cut-offs by Gazprom.
Gazprom supplies about one-quarter of the European Union's gas needs, 80 per
cent of which is shipped through Ukraine.
In its letter, Gazprom said it doubted it could uphold its obligations to
deliver gas to western Europe without resolution of the disagreements with
Naftogaz. But Gazprom pledged to do all it could to resolve the dispute.
In a similar dispute in 2006, Russia blamed Kiev for siphoning off gas to
European customers - sparking fuel shortages and a price spike as far as Paris.
Gazprom claims Ukraine has paid only 800 million in arrears of its total debt,
and analysts say the country's crushing economic problems make reimbursing of
more of the debt difficult.
Ukraine has begged a 16.4-billion-dollar loan from the International Monetary
Fund, but conditions applied to the money means it cannot directly be used pay
for Russian gas arrears.