Thank
You US Taxpayers: Russia-Ukraine Agree Terms On Gas-Supply Through
March
30
October, 2014
Good
news for the cold-showering, snow-covered Ukrainians... Russia
has reached an interim agreement to supply natural gas to Ukraine
through March according
to Bloomberg. Of course, this will be paid for by more IMF
loans (thank
you US Taxpayer),
pushing Ukraine further into debt and more dependent upon the West.
- *RUSSIA CONFIRMS GAS SUPPLY RESUMPTION TERMS AGREED WITH UKRAINE
- *GAZPROM, NAFTOGAZ CEOS SIGN AMENDMENT TO CONTRACT
- *RUSSIA, UKRAINE, EU AGREEMENT TO COVER DELIVERY THROUGH MARCH
Terms...
- *OETTINGER: RUSSIA TO CHARGE UKRAINE $385/KCM THROUGH MARCH
- *UKRAINE READY TO IMMEDIATELY PAY $1.45B OF GAS DEBT: OETTINGER
- *NAFTOGAZ TO PAY $1.6B AS 2ND GAS DEBT INSTALLMENT BY YEAR-END
Paid
for by US taxpayers...
- *UKRAINE TO USE EU, IMF AID TO PAY FOR RUSSIAN GAS: OETTINGER
As
Bloomberg reports,
Ukraine and Russia reached an interim natural-gas supply deal in talks brokered by the European Union to secure flows before the heating season, a Russian Energy Ministry spokeswoman said.
The accord agreed by Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak, his Ukrainian counterpart, Yuri Prodan, and EU Energy Commissioner Guenther Oettinger will enable resumption of deliveries of gas from Russia to Ukraine after they were halted in June in a pricing and debt conflict.
Russian Energy Ministry spokeswoman Olga Golant, speaking by phone, confirmed the agreement.
The 28-nation EU was seeking to avoid a repeat of 2006 and 2009, when disputes between the former Soviet republics over gas debts and prices led to fuel transit disruptions and shortages across Europe amid freezing temperatures.
AP
reports,
Moscow
and Kiev have clinched a deal that will guarantee that Russian gas
exports flows into Ukraine throughout the winter despite their
intense rivalry over the fighting in eastern Ukraine.
In
Thursday's signing ceremony following protracted negotiations, the
two sides promised to get the gas flowing into Ukraine again after a
long and bitter dispute over payments.
EU
Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso announced the "very
important agreement" between the two sides.
Talks
to guarantee that Russian gas imports flow into Ukraine throughout
the winter appeared to be at an impasse Thursday because of doubts
over payments from Kiev.
A
European Union official says the negotiations, which were supposed to
produce an agreement Wednesday, broke up inconclusively early
Thursday, with a draft for a 'common understanding' sent to Moscow
and Kiev for consideration. The official asked not to be named
because an agreement had yet to be reached.
...
Yatsenyuk
said at a Cabinet meeting in Kiev that Ukraine could pay $365 per
1,000 cubic meters from the start of next year, down from the $385
rate agreed earlier this month. He said that figure may be adjusted
downward to $378 until the end of the year.
Russian
President Vladimir Putin and his Ukrainian counterpart, Petro
Poroshenko, agreed earlier this month on the broad outline of a deal,
but financial issues, centering on payment guarantees for Moscow,
have since bogged down talks.
...
...
The
EU has said previously that Ukraine would settle its energy debt to
Russia with a $1.45 billion payment by the end of the month and $1.65
billion more by the end of the year. It has said for new gas
deliveries, Ukraine would pay $385 per 1,000 cubic meters, which
Russia should deliver following advance payments by Ukraine.
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