Ukraine rebuffs Russian gas as friction festers

A worker attends to a valve at a Ukrainian gas plant in October. Russia’s Gazprom said Wednesday that it halted natural-gas sales to Ukraine, while Ukraine said it made the decision to stop buying the fuel.
A worker attends to a valve at a Ukrainian gas plant in October. Russia’s Gazprom said Wednesday that it halted natural-gas sales to Ukraine, while Ukraine said it made the decision to stop buying the fuel.

MOSCOW -- Tensions between Russia and Ukraine escalated Wednesday as Ukraine stopped buying Russian natural gas and closed its airspace to its eastern neighbor.

Russia's annexation of Crimea from Ukraine in March 2014 and its support for separatist rebels in the east has resulted in a post-Soviet low point in relations between the two countries. The fighting between Russia-backed rebels and government forces in eastern Ukraine killed more than 8,000 people and left parts of Ukraine's industrial heartland in ruins. Ukraine still has no access to the territories under rebel control as well as hundreds of miles of the Ukrainian border with Russia.

Ukraine has since been trying to cut its dependence on Russian gas, buying from European nations that had bought it from Russia at a lower price.

Russia's state-controlled gas company, Gazprom, said it stopped sending gas to Ukraine on Wednesday morning and will supply no more because Ukraine has not paid in advance for more deliveries.

Ukraine said the decision was its own to stop buying gas from Russia after it was offered better prices from other European countries. Those other countries import gas from Russia but can pipe it back to Ukraine.

The stoppage comes less than two months after the two countries signed a European Union-brokered deal ensuring supplies through March. Under the deal, Russia lowered the price it charged Ukraine to the same level granted to neighboring countries, from $251 per 1,000 cubic meters to about $230.

Gazprom CEO Alexei Miller on Wednesday warned Ukraine and Europe of possible gas disruptions after the cutoff. Russia uses Ukraine's pipelines to transport a part of its gas deliveries to other European countries.

Ukraine's "refusal to buy Russian gas threatens a safe gas transit to Europe through Ukraine and gas supplies to Ukraine consumers in the coming winter," Miller said.

The Gazprom chief said Ukraine had been buying up gas to store for the winter in the past two months but claimed it was not enough to get it through the winter.

On the other hand, the EU's executive arm, the European Commission which has been mediating the gas row between the sides, noted that Ukraine's gas reserves are well stocked and that the mild recent weather means that consumption has been below average.

"We are not particularly concerned about the gas flows from Russia to Ukraine at the moment," said commission spokesman Anna-Kaisa Itkonen.

Past gas disputes between Russia and Ukraine have led to cutoffs. One standoff in 2009 caused serious disruptions in shipments to EU countries in the dead of winter.

Temperatures in Ukraine, where most homes rely on gas for central heating, were below freezing Wednesday morning.

Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseny Yatsenyuk also announced that his government has decided to close the country's airspace to all Russian planes as "an issue of the national security as well as a response to Russia's aggressive actions."

Ukraine last month banned all Russian airlines from flying into Ukraine, but Russian planes have been allowed to fly over its territory.

A Section on 11/26/2015

Upcoming Events