Russia Denies Withholding Gas Supplies to Europe
Russian energy giant Gazprom has rejected accusations that
Moscow is limiting gas deliveries to Europe and denounced Germany's resale of
gas to Poland amid soaring prices.
Poland this week accused Moscow of having stopped its
deliveries via the Yamal-Europe pipeline that sends Russian gas to Western
Europe, accusing Gazprom of "manipulation".
The pipeline was operating in reverse mode this week,
sending gas from Germany to Poland, public data showed, as European gas prices
ticked up.
President Vladimir Putin on Friday denied that the flow
direction was a political move and said that Poland had "sidelined"
Russia in managing the pipeline.
"All accusations against Russia and Gazprom that we are
not supplying enough gas to the European market are absolutely groundless and
unacceptable and untrue," Gazprom spokesman Sergei Kupriyanov said late
Saturday, calling the accusations "lies".
He said some buyers of Russian gas, in particular Germany
and France, have not made additional orders, and slammed the reverse flow of
gas that came as "winter is just beginning" as "not the most
rational decision."
"I don't even want to talk about the price of such
reverse supplies. These prices are significantly higher than the prices for
contract volumes set by Gazprom, he said in an interview on state television.
"All problems in Western Europe have been created by
themselves and there is no need to blame Gazprom for this. It is better to look
in the mirror."
Western countries have for weeks accused Russia of limiting
gas deliveries to put pressure on Europe amid tensions over the Ukraine
conflict and to push through the controversial Nord Stream 2 pipeline set to
ship Russian gas to Germany.
Germany's energy ministry, for its part, on Sunday poured
cold water on accusations of Russia withholding deliveries.
"Long-term supply contracts, including the Russian ones,
are being adhered to and the long-term quantities of gas are arriving in
Germany," the ministry told AFP.
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