Showing posts with label Gas and oil monopoly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gas and oil monopoly. Show all posts

Friday, November 13, 2015

Iran unconcerned about Saudi crude export to Europe, ready to increase its crude oil export by 500,000 B/D.


Iran unconcerned about Saudi crude export to Europe, ready to increase its crude oil export by 500,000 B/D. (Taz).

Deputy Oil Minister of Iran Roknoddin Javadi has said his country is not worried about Saudi crude exports to Europe, asserting that Iran would still find a market in European countries.
Iran has been in talks with Shale and Total and is going to secure itself a place in the European oil market, Mehr news agency quoted him as saying on Nov. 10.

As Iran gears up for relief from sanctions, Saudi Arabia has started to increase its oil exports to Europe.

The countries currently boosting their exports to Europe are able to do so only in Iran's absence, Javadi claimed, noting, however, that it would take a while for Iran to return to the European market.

He pointed out that the National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) had already held comprehensive talks with all its traditional customers, adding that there was no concern over the resumption of oil sales after the lifting of sanctions.

He hoped that Iran would achieve its goal since European countries have a policy of diversifying their oil import sources to reduce the risk of a shortage in critical times.

Mohsen Ghamsari, executive director for international affairs at the NIOC, asserted in September that Iran was fully prepared to increase its crude oil export by 500,000 barrels per day once sanctions are lifted, adding that the global oil market could easily absorb Iran’s surplus output. Iran’s current oil production stands at some 2.7 million barrels per day.


There are three main sanctions on the Iranian oil sector that the country expects to be removed. These affect transfers of petrodollars, the provision of oil tankers, and the ability to insure the tankers.

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

New Russian gas deals are "enough to make even a seasoned energy observer's head spin"


New Russian gas deals are "enough to make even a seasoned energy observer's head spin". (csis).

In the twelve months since the collapse of global oil prices and the imposition of Western economic sanctions against Russia, the number of new Russian gas export project announcements has skyrocketed.

Only last month, Gazprom signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with three European companies to build a second large gas pipeline system under the Baltic Sea called Nord Stream II.

This was preceded by the announcement in December by President Vladimir Putin himself of the cancellation of the ambitious South Stream gas pipeline under the Black Sea to be replaced by an equally grandiose project, soon to be dubbed Turkish Stream.

In Kurdish a donkey is called: 'Kerdogan'

Both Nord Stream II and Turkish Stream are designed to bypass the critical transit route through Ukraine utilized by 40 to 50 percent of Russia’s current gas exports to Europe.

Russia and Gazprom’s position on whether gas transit through Ukraine will continue after the current agreement expires in the not-too-distant future flip-flopped within a matter of weeks recently – first proclaiming that all transit will cease after 2019, then declaring that negotiation of a new deal has been ordered by President Putin.

In the past year, we have also seen the supposed conclusion of not one but two large gas deals with China. Together with numerous previously proposed liquefied natural gas (LNG) and export pipeline projects, this picture is enough to make even a seasoned energy observer’s head spin.

To make matters worse, the mainstream press tends to report each one of these announcements, no matter how fanciful, as if they are all realistic projects that will be completed by the notional target dates even as Russia’s financial position continues to deteriorate.

The total cost of these projects is somewhere between $150 and $200 billion, and it is unlikely that Russia (even together with its prospective partners) could muster the necessary capital to complete most of them amidst Russia’s low oil revenue, budget deficits, and falling GDP.

Instead, the raft of announcements, postponements, and cancellations in June and July of 2015 suggest that Russia is groping for a viable gas export strategy. Read the full comprehensive report here.

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Gazprom signs key Nord Stream-2 deal with EU companies, avoids need for gas transit through Ukraine.


Gazprom signs key Nord Stream-2 deal with EU companies, avoids need for gas transit through Ukraine. (RBTH).

Russia’s gas giant Gazprom has signed a binding shareholders’ agreement with European energy companies for the construction of the Nord Stream-2 pipeline from Russia to Germany. The landmark deal was inked at the Eastern Economic Forum, held in Russia’s far eastern city of Vladivostok on Sept. 3-5.

Gazprom will own a controlling stake, while Germany’s E.ON and BASF/Wintershall, Austria’s OMV and Royal Dutch Shell will receive 10 percent each, while France’s Engie will receive 9 percent.

Economic interests take priority

In itself, the signing of the shareholders’ agreement for Nord Stream-2 is already evidence that the EU, as before, has no common position either on relations with Gazprom as a whole or on today’s most pressing issue – that of gas transit through Ukraine.

The largest power companies in the UK, France, Germany and Austria signed the project, whose implementation will minimize the transit of gas through Ukraine, which all these states continue to support politically. However, the agreement is contrary to the position of Brussels; according to Vice-President of the European Commission Maroš Šefčovič, there is no need for any gas pipelines bypassing Ukraine.

“Germany believes that Ukraine should be supported, but the path to democracy and reform is very long, and we are losing time; the Ukrainian gas transportation system must be modernized, but no one is ready to invest,” said Alexander Rahr, research director of the German-Russian Forum, adding that plans for Nord Stream-2 do not violate EU law, including the Third Energy Package.

Southern Europe left high and dry

The shareholders’ agreement is a serious blow to the south-eastern countries of the EU, which were prevented by the United States and the European Commission last year from building the South Stream pipeline, intended to supply Russian gas to Southeast Europe via an undersea pipeline and a distribution hub in Turkey.

Now it is proposed to build a gas pipeline which, with a capacity of 55 billion cubic meters a year, which will bring billions of dollars in transit fees not to Bulgaria and Hungary, but to Germany and the Czech Republic. In addition, virtually all Russian gas will reach Europe through Germany, providing German gas pipeline companies with stable income for decades.

“The participants of South Stream – Bulgaria, Greece and Italy – are the countries that do not have enough weight to make decisions contrary to the general political line, but Germany will be able to,” said Fyodor Lukyanov, head of the Council for Foreign and Defense Policy, an independent Moscow-based think tank. Hmmm.......Guesss the Turkish stream will remain a 'Turkish dream'? Read the full story here.

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Minority shareholding: The shares which gives potentially power to Gazprom and Rosneft over the EU energy market.


Minority shareholding: The shares which gives potentially power to Gazprom and Rosneft over the EU energy market.(delfi). A Must read! Read the full story here.


Monday, June 8, 2015

Russians like Belarus and China, have aversion to U.S., EU and Ukraine - poll.


Russians like Belarus and China, have aversion to U.S., EU and Ukraine - poll. (RBTH).

Most Russians speak ill of the United States, the European Union and Ukraine and see Belarus, China and Kazakhstan as friends, the Levada Center has told Interfax.

Seventy-three percent of 1,700 respondents polled in 134 populated localities on May 22-25 expressed negative feelings for the U.S., 15 percent said the opposite, and 12 percent were undecided.

Russians have similar sentiments about the European Union and Ukraine: 26 percent have a positive attitude and 59 percent feel negative. A total of 16 percent and 14 percent, respectively, were undecided.

Thirty-nine percent of the respondents assessed Russia-Germany relations as normal, 33 percent said the relations were passing through a period of cooling, 12 percent claimed tensions and 2 percent animosity. Nine percent said the relations were good.

Russians traditionally like Belarus and China (83 percent and 80 percent, respectively), and 7 percent feel the opposite.

Opinions about Georgia differed: 42 percent of the respondents like the country and 36 percent do not. Almost a quarter of the respondents (22 percent) could not answer the question.

In the opinion of the respondents, the top five friends of Russia are Belarus (55 percent), China (43 percent), Kazakhstan (41 percent), India and Armenia (18 percent each).

The 'anti-rating' leaders are the United States (73 percent), Ukraine (37 percent), Latvia and Lithuania (25 percent each) and Poland (22 percent).

Hmmm.....Guess that's not a prob for the Obama 'Admin' their BFF Turkey has also 75% negative view of the U.S.


Source.

Sunday, June 7, 2015

Russia to sell Obama's new BFF Iran’s oil.


Russia to sell Obama's new BFF Iran’s oil. (Taz).

Tehran and Moscow achieved a final agreement for export of Iran’s crude oil by Russia, Mohsen Qamsari, the director of the International Affairs Department at National Iranian Oil Company said.

Qamsari underlined that the agreement is not a sort of bartering.

Russia will export Iran’s oil and the revenues will be transferred to a joint fund, Qamsari said, Iran’s Mehr news agency reported June 7.

He further said that the Islamic Republic will be able to buy goods and equipments using the fund’s assets.

There is no ceiling for the sale of the Iranian oil by Russia, Qamsari said, adding however while Iran has commitments to sell oil to other destinations as well, exports to Russia will not include all of Iran’s crude output.

Iran’s oil minister, Bijan Namdar Zanganeh said on June 5 that Russia may start importing crude from Iran next week as part of an oil-for-goods agreement.

Much of this will be for cash and we will be using this money to buy commodities from the Russians,” Zanganeh said.

He explained that Russia plans to buy much lower than 500,000 barrels per day in exchange for cash, which Iran will then spend on Russian goods including steel, wheat and oil byproducts.

Kazakhstan and Belarus will be able to purchase Iranian crude shipments from Russia under the agreement because they are part of the Eurasian Customs Union, Zanganeh added.

By holding 157 billion barrels of recoverable crude oil reserves, Iran possesses the world's fourth largest reserves of crude oil.


Iranian oil exports have dropped by 50 percent since international sanctions against the country were tightened in 2011 amid a dispute over its nuclear program. Iran’s current oil production is estimated to be around 2.8 million barrels per day of which about one million barrels are exported.

Saturday, June 6, 2015

Video - Rostov Russia - Echelon military equipment & Howitzers transport in direction of Ukraine. June 6, 2015





Obama 'Admin' Threat of US Missile Deployment in Europe Should Be Taken Seriously.


Obama 'Admin' Threat of US Missile Deployment in Europe Should Be Taken Seriously. (SP).

The possibility of US missile deployment in Europe to counter alleged Russian violations of the Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces (INF) arms control treaty should not be underestimated, former Pentagon official and vice president of the Lexington Institute think tank Dan Goure told Sputnik on Friday.

This is not a threat the [US President Barack] Obama administration would make lightly,” Goure said. Goure noted the discussion of a possible US counterforce response “is remarkable considering the Obama Administration's efforts to develop a positive relationship with Moscow.”

On Thursday, the Associated Press reported the Obama administration is considering deploying missile capable of striking targets inside Russia, as a counter force measure to alleged Russian violations of the INF Treaty.

The United States is weighing the option of improving “the ability of US nuclear weapons to destroy military targets on Russian territory,” according to the report.

Goure, who served as an analyst and advisor in the Pentagon, noted that US counterforce options “are likely to be the nearest-term and the most effective conventional counter to the growing Russian threat.”

In the past six months, US officials, including Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter, have presented three possible US responses to alleged INF violations: counterforce, active defensive or deterrent measures and fully withdrawing from the INF Treaty. Goure commented that the INF Treaty “is dying.”

He added, “We are rapidly returning to the Cold War days of escalation ladders, nuclear umbrellas and limited options.” Washington has accused Russia of testing a ground-based cruise missile in violation of the bilateral arms control treaty. Russia has repeatedly denied violating the INF Treaty, and has accused the United States of deploying defense systems in Romania and Poland with capabilities that violate the Treaty. Hmmmm....I think Putin is thinking 'just make my day'. He'll use the US Deployment to install way more nukes.

Monday, June 1, 2015

Video - Russian Army moving towards the Ukrainian border.



Friday, May 29, 2015

Gazprom to demand more than $8bn from Ukraine in ‘take-or-pay’ contract penalties, total gas debt almost $29.5 billion.


Gazprom to demand more than $8bn from Ukraine in ‘take-or-pay’ contract penalties, total gas debt almost $29.5 billion.(RT).

Russia’s Gazprom wants Ukraine’s Naftogaz to pay penalties for taking less than the agreed upon amount of gas in 2014, considering the so-called “take-or-pay” contract signed by the companies.
Gazprom would require Naftogaz of Ukraine to pay $8.197 billion in “take-or-pay” contract penalties, said company head Aleksey Miller at the European Business Congress on Thursday.
Russian natural gas producer also put Ukraine's total gas debt at almost $29.5 billion.
At the end of 2014 Russia, Ukraine and the EU agreed to put a freeze on the “take-or-pay” principle for five months which means that in the period spanning 1 November 2014 to 31 March 2015, Russia would not impose fines on Ukraine.

However, Gazprom has every right under the contract to fine Naftogaz for failing to provide payments from January 1 to October 31, 2014; there was no such freeze for the period of time spanning January 1 to October 31, 2014.

Naftogaz has reacted by saying it has never paid penalties arising from the “take-or-pay” rule and does not intend to do it in the future. The Ukrainian company claims the “take or pay” condition is not part of the contract.


At the same time the company welcomes the intention of Gazprom to submit their claims to an arbitration court. “Arbitration is the most civilized way to resolve commercial disputes when the parties cannot find a consensus through negotiations,” said the head of Naftogaz Andrei Kobolev, commenting on the statement of his Russian counterpart Aleksey Miller.

 The corresponding claim will be addressed to Naftogaz of Ukraine today, the same claim will be directed to the Stockholm arbitration,” said Miller, quoted by RIA.

Miller estimated the total debt of Naftogaz to Gazprom at more than $29 billion. He said $200 million are owed to Gazprom for gas deliveries to the Donetsk and the Lugansk regions in Eastern Ukraine.

Earlier Gazprom filed an action to the Stockholm arbitration against Naftogaz, demanding $18.5 billion for the gas volumes in 2012-2013 that weren’t delivered by Gazprom but had to be paid for by Ukraine under the “take-or-pay” agreement. Hmmm.....Come Winter Ukraine will have No Gas reserves and no money.....get ready for war. 

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Massive Air Force Drill Under Way In Russia

Left Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin

Massive Air Force Drill Under Way In Russia.(rferl).

The Russian Defense Ministry says that its air forces have begun a massive exercise involving hundreds of aircraft and thousands of service personnel.

In a May 25 statement, the ministry described the four-day drill as a "massive surprise inspection," to check combat readiness.

"The inspection involves about 12,000 military service personnel, as well as up to 250 planes and helicopters and 689 various weapons and pieces of military hardware," the statement said.

The manoeuvers began on the same day as NATO and some of its partners started an Arctic training exercise.

Russia's involvement in Ukraine and incursions into Western airspace have led to rising tensions with the West.

A ministry spokesperson said that, during the inspection, "Long-range aviation aircraft will carry out cruise missile strikes against a mock enemy's ground targets at the Pemboi test and training area (in the Komi Republic)."

Asked about Russia's assertiveness in a television interview, Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin joked that "tanks don't need visas." Read the full story here.

Saturday, May 23, 2015

Russia To Adopt 'Tough' Position If Ukraine Defaults on end of the year debts.


Russia To Adopt 'Tough' Position If Ukraine Defaults on end of the year debts. (rferl).

Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev says Russia would adopt what he calls a tough position if Ukraine decides not to repay debts owed by its previous government.

Speaking to Russian TV in an interview broadcast May 23, Medvedev says if Ukraine were to default on its obligations, Russia would "defend its national interests."

Earlier this week, Ukraine's parliament approved a law that would give the government the right to miss payments to its international creditors as it renegotiates payment terms.

Russia holds a $3 billion Ukrainian eurobond whose full repayment is due by the end of the year.

Medvedev also says the Russian government was right to allow its currency, the ruble, to float and that it was "optimal" to achieve a balance in the foreign-currency market.

The ruble has lost about a third of its value with respect to the U.S. dollar in the past year. Hmmmm.....By Winter Ukraine has no gas reserves and no money......welcome to WWIII

Sunday, May 10, 2015

OPEC members unlikely allow Iran to regain market share.


OPEC members unlikely allow Iran to regain market share. (Taz).

OPEC member countries unlikely to allow Iran to regain market share, Thomas Pugh, commodities economist at British economic research and consulting company Capital Economics believes.
Iran’s oil minister, Bijan Zanganeh this week said the country will increase oil exports by more than one million barrels per day and urged other oil-producing countries "to pave the way for the return of Iranian oil to the world market" after the removal of international sanctions.
Zanganeh said Iran's oil export has decreased by 60 percent since "crucial international sanctions" against the country were imposed (in mid-2012), adding that oil producers should make room for Iranian oil export resumption after sanctions are removed, Shana news agency reported.

We think it is highly unlikely that other OPEC members would cut back their own output to allow Tehran to regain market share, so any increase in supply from Iran should put downward pressure on oil prices,” Pugh said in a report obtained by Trend.

Expert added that “despite more flare-ups in tensions in the Middle East, supply from OPEC has continued to climb, even before the potential boost from the easing of Western sanctions on Iran”.

Iran currently exports around one million barrels per day (bpd) of oil, less than half the 2.2-2.3 million bpd it exported before the sanctions on the country were imposed in 2012.

OPEC’s oil production quota stands at 30 million barrels per day.

During a meeting, held in November 2014, the cartel decided not to change the quota, despite the falling oil prices at the time and the persuasions of some countries to cut production to stabilize prices. The next meeting of OPEC member countries will be held June 4, following which it is scheduled to take a final decision on the issue of quotas for oil production.  Hmmmm.....They really want to push Iran to close the strait of Hormuz.

Friday, April 17, 2015

Oil prices rise amid doubts on ability of Iranian oil export.


Oil prices rise amid doubts on ability of Iranian oil export. (Taz).

Oil prices rise amid the doubts on the ability of Iran to export oil until 2016, British economic research and consulting company Capital Economics said in a report obtained by Trend.

Analysts mentioned that oil prices have rebounded since the middle of March after having fallen in the first two weeks of last month. They have been especially strong this week.

Prices were volatile in March as fighting in Yemen escalated causing prices to rise and details of a deal between Iran and the West were released, which then caused prices to drop sharply. However, they quickly rose again as it became apparent that Iran would be unable to export oil until 2016 at the earliest,” analysts said.

Tehran and P5+1 (the US, UK, France, Russia, China, and Germany) reached a political framework for the ongoing nuclear talks on April 2.

Oil prices initially fell by around 5 percent on the announcement but have since recovered all of their losses.

Crude oil prices jumped to fresh 2015 peaks on April 16. Brent crude for June delivery rose 66 cents to settle at $63.98 a barrel, rallying from a $62.00 low and reaching a 2015 peak for front-month Brent of $64.95.

U.S. May crude rose 32 cents to settle at $56.71, hitting a 2015 high of $57.42 after recovering from a $55.07 intraday low.

Brent's premium to U.S. crude was back above $5 a barrel, now comparing June contracts, after the spread narrowed to $3.34 intraday on Wednesday, the day Brent's May crude contract expired, Reuters reported.

Capital Economics’ analysts forecast Brent prices at $60 per barrel in 2015 and $65 per barrel in 2016. WTI price is forecasted at $55 per barrel in 2015 and $65 per barrel in 2016.


OPEC basket crude price is forecasted by British analysts at $57 per barrel in 2015 and $62 per barrel in 2016.

Friday, March 6, 2015

Turkish PM urges UN sec-gen Ban to come up with Cyprus plan....Why not end illegal occupation?


Turkish PM urges UN sec-gen Ban to come up with Cyprus plan....Why not end illegal occupation? (CM).

Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu has urged the United Nations Secretary-General to come up with a plan to solve the Cyprus problem before his term ends in 2016.

Speaking after a meeting with Ban Ki-moon in New York on Thursday, Davutoglu said he had reminded the UNSG that the Turkish side had supported the Annan plan in 2004, which was rejected by the Greek Cypriot side.

In 2004 we supported the Annan plan and I suggested to Mr Ban Ki-moon that we need now a Ban Ki-moon plan before the end of his term to end this long-standing crisis,” he said.

The UNSG’s term ends on December 31, 2016. Hmmm......'Neo Ottoman conquerors' ...a.k.a. 'Bullies'. Cyprus best chances are with Russia, since the US and EU won't do anything to prevent Cheap gas flowing through Turkey to Europe.  Read the full story here.

Wednesday, March 4, 2015

Over 4,500 Russian Military Servicemen Begin Month long Drills in Western Siberia.


Over 4,500 Russian Military Servicemen Begin Month long Drills in Western Siberia. (SP).

More than 4,500 Russian military personnel have begun exercises in three regions of the Urals, the Russian Defense Ministry said Wednesday.

"The exercises will continue for a month… Artillery units will hold more than 30 controlled exercises with rocket strikes and firing artillery," the ministry said in a press release.

The exercises will be held in the Kemerovo, Chelyabinsk, and Orenburg regions in western Siberia, half of them to be conducted at night, the ministry said. The drills will include Grad and Uragan rocket complexes.

The large-scale Center 2015 exercises are also expected to be held from summer through fall 2015 in several Russian regions as well as some areas abroad, with the participation of tens of thousands of military personnel, the Russian Defense Ministry said last December.

In total, Russia has planned at least 4,000 drills for 2015, according to the deference ministry. Hmmm......Preparing for coming Winter?


Related:    Russian Jets Penetrate NATO Ships' Air Defenses in Black Sea.

Friday, February 27, 2015

Gazprom Confirms Ukraine Pays $15 Million, Enough For One Day Gas.


Gazprom Confirms Ukraine Pays $15 Million, Enough For One Day Gas. (Rferl).

The Russian state-controlled energy company Gazprom says it has received a $15-million advance payment for gas from Ukrainian energy company Naftogaz, sufficient funds to provide Ukraine with one more day of gas supplies.

Gazprom spokesman Sergei Kupriyanov confirmed on February 17 that "today at 9:20 a.m. Gazprom received a $15-million payment from Naftogaz Ukrainy. At the current level of shipments, this prepayment is enough for only about one day."

Kupriyanov said the amount of gas Ukraine has now paid for should be sufficient to last until March 2 when the energy ministers of Russia and Ukraine are due to meet in Brussels with officials from the European Union in an attempt to reach a new gas agreement.

Gazprom had threatened to cut off supplies to Ukraine at the end of this month claiming Ukraine had used all the gas it paid for in advance.

Under a deal brokered in October by the EU, Ukraine would continue to receive Russian gas but must pay in advance.

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Putin: Gas supplies to Europe could suffer in 3-4 days if Kiev doesn't pay for future deliveries.


Putin: Gas supplies to Europe could suffer in 3-4 days if Kiev doesn't pay for future deliveries.(RT).

Russia will cut off gas supplies to Ukraine if Kiev fails to pay in “three or four days,” President Vladimir Putin said, adding that this "will create a problem" for gas transit to Europe.


Russia will completely cut Ukraine off gas supplies in two days if Kiev fails to pay for deliveries, which will create transit risks for Europe, Gazprom has said.

Ukraine has not paid for March deliveries and is extracting all it can from the current paid supply, seriously risking an early termination of the advance settlement and a supply cutoff, Gazprom's CEO Alexey Miller told journalists. The prepaid gas volumes now stand at 219 million cubic meters.

"It takes about two days to get payment from Naftogaz deposited to a Gazprom account. That's why a delivery to Ukraine of 114 million cubic meters will lead to a complete termination of Russian gas supplies as early as in two days, which creates serious risks for the transit to Europe,” Miller said.

Earlier this month, Russian Energy Minister Aleksandr Novak estimated Ukraine's debt to Russian energy giant Gazprom at $2.3 billion.

In the end of 2014, Kiev's massive gas debt that stood above $5 billion, forced Moscow to suspend gas deliveries to Ukraine for nearly six months. On December 9, Russia resumed its supplies under the so-called winter package deal, which expires on April 1, 2015.

Naftogaz said it would not make advance payments for Russian gas without knowing Gazprom will implement its side of the contract, and the EU - brokered 'winter plan.'

Europe currently is the main source of gas supplied to Ukraine, that’s why the flawless implementation of our liabilities to transport gas to the EU is our major strategy,” the head of Naftogaz, Andrey Kobolev said.

On Monday, Ukrainian state energy company Naftogaz accused Gazprom of failing to deliver gas that Kiev had paid for in advance. Naftogaz says Russia has broken an agreement to deliver 114 million of cubic meters of natural gas to Ukraine by delivering only 47 million cubic meters.

During a meeting with President Vladimir Putin on February 20, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev expressed concern about an increase in daily applications by Ukraine for the supply of gas, TASS reports.

He noted that "Ukraine's consumers have requested a larger supply; the volume has increased by 2.5 times. This means that the prepaid volumes left are enough for no more than two to three days.

Last week, Medvedev ordered the energy minister and the head of Gazprom to prepare proposals on fuel deliveries to the self-proclaimed Republics of Donetsk and Lugansk (DPR and LPR) after Kiev had cut off the delivery pipeline into the southeastern regions. Hmmm......The problem of Ukraine their 'Gas Reserves' is way bigger then what the story mentions.

Related:  Ukraine gas-supply agreement end in two months, Gas storage at all time low.

With less than two months before Ukraine’s Russian gas-supply agreement ends, analysts are warning of critically low storage that would threaten all of Europe.

There’s been little progress on a new deal before the March 31 expiry, with Russia saying it will revert to a standard contract based on disputed prices that won’t be reviewed by international arbitrators until 2016. If the supply stops, then Ukraine’s inventories may shrink to the smallest in a decade by Oct. 1, says Eclipse Energy Group, a consultant in Norway.

That raises the risk that Ukraine will need to use Russian gas destined for the European Union next winter, according to Energy Aspects Ltd., a London-based consultant. The 28-nation EU is seeking to help broker a new deal because Russia supplies a third of its gas, with 40 percent flowing through pipelines across Ukraine. Flows to Europe via Ukraine were disrupted during pricing disputes in 2006 and 2009.

If they cannot re-inject enough gas, the risks for Europe will be greater next winter than this winter,” May Mannes, head of gas and liquefied natural gas analysis at Stavanger, Norway-based Eclipse, said by phone Jan. 22. “Ukraine’s need for storage re-injection has been overlooked by many.

Ukraine will have 10 billion cubic meters in storage in October if it only gets fuel from the EU and its own production, said Mannes, who has tracked the industry for two decades. That compares with 16.6 billion last October and 23.1 billion on average in the past 10 years. Read the full story here.

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Video - Possible War Crimes evidence in East Ukraine: Frozen corpses with hands tied seen at Donetsk Airport



Video - Possible evidence of War Crimes in East Ukraine: Frozen corpses with hands tied seen at Donetsk Airport.(UANews).

Footage was shot during press tour organized by militants of the destroyed complex.

Disturbing video filmed amid the ruins of the airport showed dead prisoners of war purported to be Ukrainian soldiers, with their hands tied together.

The footage shot on Monday sparked online speculation that war crimes, illegal under the Geneva Convention, had been committed by Russian-backed militants at the destroyed complex.

One correspondent on the tour organized by militants in Donetsk was Alex Thomson, a reporter from UK broadcaster Channel Four. In an online blog, Thomson recounts he saw six bodies - with their hands tied with white electric cable, lying next to two burnt out vehicles and several live shells.

Militant leaders claimed those dead were Ukrainian soldiers. However, Thomson insisted the video is not conclusive evidence of a cold-blooded execution and questioned whether the dead soldiers were placed at Donetsk Airport for the world's media.

Social media users also speculated the soldiers' hands were tied to make transportation easier. This is not the first time militants have been accused of committing war crimes. Read the full story here.

Video - Ukraine - Large contingent of pro-Russian infantry moving in towards central Debaltseve



Source:
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