EU accuses Russia of inventing excuses to cut gas

05 Aug 2022 10:10pm
Russian energy giant Gazprom said on Wednesday that the delivery of a turbine needed to keep gas flowing to Europe via the Nord Stream 1 pipeline was "impossible" due to international sanctions
Russian energy giant Gazprom said on Wednesday that the delivery of a turbine needed to keep gas flowing to Europe via the Nord Stream 1 pipeline was "impossible" due to international sanctions
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BRUSSELS - EU sanctions against Russia do nothing to prevent the delivery of pipeline turbine, an EU spokesman said Friday, accusing Moscow of fabricating an excuse to cut off gas supplies.

Russian energy giant Gazprom said on Wednesday that the delivery of a turbine needed to keep gas flowing to Europe via the Nord Stream 1 pipeline was "impossible" due to international sanctions

But Eric Mamer, spokesman for the European Commission, dismissed this and accused Moscow of using energy supplies as a lever to blackmail Europe over its opposition to the invasion of Ukraine.

"There is nothing in the sanctions that prohibits the turbine, the Siemens turbine that is currently meant to go to Russia, to go there," Mamer told reporters.

"Anything else that is being said on the issue is purely and simply wrong ... and anything that the Russians are saying on this is basically an excuse not to not to provide gas to the European Union."

Earlier this week, Germany's Chancellor Olaf Scholz accused Russia of blocking the delivery of the key turbine to throttle gas supplies to Europe.

But Gazprom said the delivery was impossible, because of "sanctions regimes in Canada, in the European Union and in Britain".

Gazprom has already blamed an initial reduction in gas deliveries via the Nord Stream 1 gas pipeline in June, on a delayed return of the turbine from Canada, where the unit was being serviced.

It is now in Germany, but the firm is still insisting it needs a sanctions waiver to accept its return.
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Mamer, citing previous comments by European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen, said "of course there is blackmail on the side of Russia when it comes to the supply of energy to the European Union."

The European economy, and in particular Germany's energy and chemicals industries, is highly dependent on deliveries of natural gas from Russian fields.

Many other Russian exports and imports have fallen foul of EU sanctions since Moscow launched its invasion of Ukraine in February.

But Berlin and Brussels are keen to keep Russian gas flowing, even if EU capitals have spent hundreds of millions of euros per week on Russian energy since the start of fighting.

Gazprom, however, has slashed supplies of gas, arguing that its Nord Stream 1 pipeline to Germany can not run at full capacity until the refurbished turbine is returned.

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