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  Russia says completes gas cut-off to Ukraine   (Reuters/AFP)  Updated: 2006-01-01 14:49  
 Russia's Gazprom said on Sunday it had cut exports of 
natural gas to Ukraine over a price row, and Ukraine's gas company said exports 
via Ukraine to western Europe could be hit as a result. 
  A Gazprom 
spokesman said Russian gas shipped for Ukrainian consumption had been cut by 120 
million cubic metres a day.  Russia continued to supply 360 million cubic 
metres to western Europe via Ukrainian territory, but Ukraine's Naftogaz said 
those volumes could be affected by the Gazprom supply cut.
  Earlier on Sunday Gazprom said it had begun reducing pressure in 
the pipeline supplying Ukraine after Kiev refused to pay the increased amount Moscow was 
demanding for its gas and last-ditch efforts failed to resolve the price row. 
 
 
 
 
    Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks 
 during a meeting of the Security Council at the presidential residence in 
 Novo-Ogaryovo near Moscow December 31, 2005. Putin on Saturday told gas 
 monopoly Gazprom to supply Ukraine with gas at 2005 prices for the first 
 three months of next year if Kiev signed a new contract for market prices 
 from April. [Reuters] |   "In this situation, which 
is the fault of the Ukrainian side, we have been forced to start reducing 
pressure in the pipeline to Ukraine," Gazprom spokesman Sergei Kupriyanov told a 
news briefing. 
Gazprom supplies 25 percent of western Europe's gas -- most of it via 
Ukraine. It insisted deliveries to western Europe would not be affected but 
Italy's gas importer said Gazprom had warned it disruption was possible. 
 Though Russia says it is purely a business dispute, the gas cut-off has fed 
concern from Washington to Berlin that the Kremlin is prepared to use its 
control over its massive energy resources as a political weapon. 
 
 
 
 
    Ukraine's President Viktor Yushchenko 
 (L) and Oleksiy Ivchenko, head of state-run gas provider Naftogaz Ukrainy, 
 stand in the control centre of Ukraine's pipeline operator in Kiev 
 December 31, 2005. [Reuters] |   Ukraine's 
Western-leaning President Viktor Yushchenko has irked many in Moscow by trying 
to take his ex-Soviet state on Russia's western border into NATO and the 
European Union. 
And that, say Ukrainian officials, is why the Kremlin is punishing Kiev with 
such a huge price increase while letting more Moscow-friendly ex-Soviet states 
such as Belarus go on paying far less for Russian gas. 
 Moscow took over the rotating G8 chairmanship from Britain on New Year's Day. 
It is the first time Russia has had the role and one of the main themes of its 
tenure will be security of energy supply. 
 Russian President Vladimir Putin had offered late on Saturday to postpone the 
price increases until April if Ukraine agreed to the new terms, but Gazprom said 
that offer was rejected. 
 EUROPEAN DISRUPTIONS? 
 
 
 
 
    Chief executive of Russian gas monopoly 
 Gazprom, Alexei Miller, speaks during a meeting of the Security Council at 
 the presidential residence in Novo-Ogaryovo near Moscow December 31, 2005. 
 [Reuters] |   The reduction in pipeline pressure 
effectively means the Russian gas allotted for Ukraine's consumption is being 
taken out of the pipeline system. 
Moscow insists this will leave enough gas to continue supplying western 
Europe as normal -- provided Ukraine does not dip into supplies being pumped 
further afield. Eighty percent of Russian gas exports to western Europe pass 
through Ukraine. 
 Gazprom said if supplies to western Europe are disrupted, it will be Ukraine 
that is to blame. 
 "We were ready to meet the Ukrainian people halfway ... We received a 
refusal," Kupriyanov said. "That means the Ukrainian authorities were determined 
to have a conflict from the start, and from January 1 to ... start stealing gas 
from European consumers." 
 
 
 
 
    Graphic showing distribution of gas pipelines in 
 Ukraine.[AFP] |   Italian oil and gas firm Eni said 
it had been warned by Gazprom that supplies could be disrupted. Central European 
states set up contingency plans. Poland said it had at least a week's reserves 
of gas to guard against supply interruptions. 
The EU has called a January 4 meeting of energy officials from its member 
states to work out a common approach. 
 Moscow is seeking a rise in the price of gas it sells to Ukraine to $230 per 
1,000 cubic metres from the current $50 -- a level that reflects Soviet-era 
subsidised rates. 
 Ukraine agrees in principle but wants a transitional period. 
 Ukrainian officials accuse Moscow of using the issue to punish Kiev for 
seeking integration with the West a year after mass protests helped propel 
Yushchenko to a presidential election victory -- beating a Kremlin-backed 
candidate. 
 Putin's period in office has been marked by an increasingly assertive foreign 
policy that appears aimed at regaining some of the influence Moscow has lost in 
former Soviet republics since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. 
Ukraine not feeling gas cut-off yet: ministry 
official 
  Ukraine has not yet noticed lowered pressure in 
its gas pipeline system, a Ukrainian energy ministry spokesman said after 
Russian energy giant Gazprom announced it had started to cut off supplies to 
Ukraine.  
"We haven't felt anything yet, everything's fine here," a Ukrainian energy 
ministry official told AFP, without providing further details. 
 Ukrainian authorities have not published an official comment on Gazprom's 
announcement. 
 Officials said earlier that the country had enough reserves to ensure 
ordinary people do not suffer during the cold winter months but some companies 
could be affected.  
  
  
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