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Russia’s natural-gas transit deal with Ukraine is set to expire soon, which would cut billions in revenue.
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The deal’s possible end affects European countries relying on Russian gas via Ukraine.
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Russia has shifted much of its energy exports to India and China amid Western sanctions.
Russia is set to lose yet another source of income for its war chest in days — and it’s Ukraine calling the shots.
An agreement to let piped Russian natural gas transit via Ukraine to Europe is set to expire at the end of the year, depriving Moscow of billions of dollars in income for its wartime economy.
European countries receiving gas from the pipeline have voiced concerns about the end of the supply, but Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has repeatedly said that the five-year agreement will not be renewed.
Russia has meanwhile said it’s ready to extend the agreement — though President Vladimir Putin said last week that it was “clear” there wouldn’t be a new contract.
Still, the situation could change.
Zelenskyy said last week that Ukraine could consider continuing the arrangement if Russia doesn’t receive payments for the fuel until the war ends.
On Monday, the Kremlin’s spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, said the gas transit was complicated.
“The situation here is very difficult, requiring greater attention,” Peskov said, according to the TASS state news agency.
The end of the five-year transit deal would be a blow for Russia, which could make about $5 billion from gas sales via Ukraine this year alone, according to Reuters’ calculations based on Moscow’s gas price forecast.
It would also impact several European countries that still depend on Russia for gas, including Slovakia, the Czech Republic, and Austria. There are alternative energy sources and pipelines available, but they could be pricier.
Ukraine could lose hundreds of millions of dollars a year in transit fees — a Kyiv consulting firm told Bloomberg in September that this amounted to about $800 million.
But Ukraine’s $800 million revenue from transit would just be a “paltry 0.5% of the country’s annual GDP,” analysts at the Center for European Policy Analysis, a think tank, wrote in a report last week.
They argued that it was “simply preposterous” to think that continuing the transit deal would offer Ukraine a security guarantee as Russia would want to preserve its gas flows to Europe.
This is because “Russia always put itself first,” the analysts added.