Search on Ifri.org

About Ifri

Frequent searches

Suggestions

Gazprom and the EU: Raiding the Gas Companies

Editorials
|
Date de publication
|
Référence taxonomie collections
Édito Énergie
Image de couverture de la publication
Gazprom and the EU: Raiding the Gas Companies
Accroche

It was a matter of time before the Commission competition authorities looked into the business arrangements between Gazprom and its European partners. Some would ask why it took so long. 

Corps analyses

For years Gazprom has used its capital budgets to take ownership positions downstream in client states in gas transmission, distribution and storage. While Europeans for decades have paid high oil-linked gas prices to Gazprom to encourage upstream investment in harsh Russian frontier gas for European markets, Gazprom has been re-establishing its old Soviet gas network primarily in former Comecon countries and beyond - in Europe’s major markets. Some western companies even swapped their Eastern European gas assets to Gazprom for positions in Russia’s upstream. Why these companies want to be a minority shareholder with Gazprom - you would have to ask their Boards of Directors.

The Commission has launched an effort to get a look at the inner workings of the Gazprom - European gas trade. The experiences of the Ukrainian cut-offs gave plenty of evidence that there were rigidities in some supply arrangements that stood in the way of an efficient market response to supply stress. Sure, the gas community did better in the last cutoff, but that is relative to what?

Why would the Commission worry about Gazprom comportment in European markets? Basically, it is because Gazprom is not just a company. Gazprom is clearly an extension of the Kremlin’s economic and security strategies - it is a foreign policy tool. The world watched disinterestedly as the Kremlin used Gazprom in the 90s in its near abroad, against Armenia, the Baltics and in the conflict in Bosnia and Herzegovina. No one paid much attention to that until the gas pressure fell for the first time in western European pipelines. Like any national oil or gas company, Gazprom managers probably wish the Kremlin would find other tools to conduct its foreign policy. But that has not happened yet and recent developments in Russia’s Presidential race would suggest it won’t change for a while.

So far the Commission has not accused Gazprom of anything. Nor has the Commission accused the European companies of any wrongdoings. But there is far less transparency in the gas sector than elsewhere and Europe is relying ever increasingly on gas. Germany’s recent decision to get out of nuclear will have major implications for German gas demand - which they will meet in part through Nordstream and greater reliance on Gazprom. The third package envisages international investors in European energy infrastructure just as European companies expect to be able to invest in other countries" energy sectors. Commission action now should contribute to preserving that intent - but on Community terms.

The “Third Package” provides a well-informed roadmap to guide the integration of the European market. It is not a geopolitical roadmap. It is designed to create a stable, predictable environment for investors to have the confidence to invest and consumers to be satisfied of the security and affordability of their supply. Hopefully this exercise can put to rest lingering doubts and provide a higher degree of transparency to European gas markets.

But the Commission needs to play this card carefully. Gazprom is an important supplier of gas to Europe and has been (with minor exception) an excellent partner. There are vast resources of oil and gas in Russia as yet not mobilized. The logical customer for these fossil fuels is Europe. The only real test for the Commission to apply is whether European companies and Gazprom are playing the game according to the rules. That will be hard enough to interpret as the rules are changing. The Commission will be judged on its evenhandedness. No one has an interest in unduly raising tensions in energy markets where the challenges are great enough as they are.

Decoration

Available in:

Regions and themes

Thématiques analyses
Régions

Share

Decoration
Author(s)
Photo
photowr3_modifie-1.jpg

William C. RAMSAY

Intitulé du poste

Directeur du Centre Energie de l'Ifri de 2008 à 2011, Conseiller de 2012 à 2016

Image principale
Climate & Energy
Center for Energy & Climate
Accroche centre

Ifri's Energy and Climate Center carries out activities and research on the geopolitical and geoeconomic issues of energy transitions such as energy security, competitiveness, control of value chains, and acceptability. Specialized in the study of European energy/climate policies as well as energy markets in Europe and around the world, its work also focuses on the energy and climate strategies of major powers such as the United States, China or India. It offers recognized expertise, enriched by international collaborations and events, particularly in Paris and Brussels.

Image principale

Can carbon markets make a breakthrough at COP29?

Date de publication
30 October 2024
Accroche

Voluntary carbon markets (VCMs) have a strong potential, notably to help bridge the climate finance gap, especially for Africa.

Image principale

Taiwan's Energy Supply: The Achilles Heel of National Security

Date de publication
22 October 2024
Accroche

Making Taiwan a “dead island” through “a blockade” and “disruption of energy supplies” leading to an “economic collapse.” This is how Colonel Zhang Chi of the People’s Liberation Army and professor at the National Defense University in Beijing described the objective of the Chinese military exercises in May 2024, following the inauguration of Taiwan’s new president, Lai Ching-te. Similar to the exercises that took place after Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taipei in August 2022, China designated exercise zones facing Taiwan’s main ports, effectively simulating a military embargo on Taiwan. These maneuvers illustrate Beijing’s growing pressure on the island, which it aims to conquer, and push Taiwan to question its resilience capacity.

Image principale

India’s Broken Power Economics : Addressing DISCOM Challenges

Date de publication
15 October 2024
Accroche

India’s electricity demand is rising at an impressive annual rate of 9%. From 2014 to 2023, the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) surged from 1.95 trillion dollars ($) to $3.2 trillion (constant 2015 US$), and the nation is poised to maintain this upward trajectory, with projected growth rates exceeding 7% in 2024 and 2025.  Correspondingly, peak power demand has soared from 136 gigawatts (GW) in 2014 to 243 GW in 2024, positioning India as the world’s third-largest energy consumer. In the past decade, the country has increased its power generation capacity by a remarkable 190 GW, pushing its total installed capacity beyond 400 GW. 

Image principale

The Troubled Reorganization of Critical Raw Materials Value Chains: An Assessment of European De-risking Policies

Date de publication
30 September 2024
Accroche

With the demand for critical raw materials set to, at a minimum, double by 2030 in the context of the current energy transition policies, the concentration of critical raw materials (CRM) supplies and, even more, of refining capacities in a handful of countries has become one of the paramount issues in international, bilateral and national discussions. China’s dominant position and successive export controls on critical raw materials (lately, germanium, gallium, rare earths processing technology, graphite, antimony) point to a trend of weaponizing critical dependencies.

How can this study be cited?

Image de couverture de la publication
Gazprom and the EU: Raiding the Gas Companies
Gazprom and the EU: Raiding the Gas Companies, from Ifri by
Copy