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Russia says South Stream gas pipeline would help EU
by Daniel J. Graeber
Moscow (UPI) Apr 10, 2013


Gazprom, CNPC mull gas pipeline options
Beijing (UPI) Apr 10, 2013 - A contract to send Russian natural gas to the Chinese market should be signed by the end of the year, the chairman of Russian energy company Gazprom said.

Chairman Alexei Miller met in Beijing with Zhou Jiping, chairman of China National Petroleum Corp., to discuss piping natural gas to China.

"The parties agreed that the contract would come into force before the end of 2014 and that the next round of talks would take place in Moscow in late April," Miller said in a statement Wednesday.

CNPC said both sides "spoke highly" of the importance of sending natural gas through a pipeline from Russia, which Gazprom said could be online by 2018.

The Chinese company said both sides agreed to the terms of the technical aspects of the pipeline, though business negotiations were ongoing.

Gazprom before tensions emerged over Ukraine's tilt toward the European Union had expressed interest in moving deeper into Asian markets, where expanding economies are taking on more natural gas to keep up with demand.

Gazprom said a 2009 framework agreement with CNPC calls for up to 2.4 trillion cubic feet worth of natural gas exports per year.

The planned South Stream natural gas pipeline for Europe is more important than ever given ongoing crises in Ukraine, the Russian envoy to the EU said.

Ukrainian and Russian officials have warned European natural gas supplies are at risk because of lingering contractual disputes that grew out of the political upheaval in Ukraine.

European consumers get about a quarter of their gas needs met by Russia, though the bulk of those supplies run through the Soviet-era gas transit system in Ukraine.

Russian Ambassador to the European Union Vladimir Chizhov told Russia's state news agency RIA Novosti the South Stream pipeline, which avoids Ukrainian territory, was more important than ever.

"I believe the relevance of the South Stream project has risen amid the Ukrainian crisis, because we have already heard not threats, but hints from Ukrainian authorities, including interim Prime Minister [Arseniy] Yatsenyuk, of yet another attempt to disrupt the transit of Russian gas," he said Wednesday.

Yatsenyuk is working with European neighbors to reverse the flow of natural gas in order to protect Ukraine's economy from possible supply disruptions and the price hike for supplies from Russian gas company Gazprom.

European leaders have said they're reluctant to embrace Gazprom's South Stream pipeline given the already heavy role the company plays in the region.

[RIA Novosti]

.


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