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Moscow not to ratify Energy Charter Treaty

Moscow not to ratify Energy Charter Treaty
22.05.2009 23:08 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ A tense summit meeting between Russia and the
European Union has failed to provide assurances Europe will not face
another mid-winter gas cutoff. Russian President Dmitri Medvedev has
also warned that stronger European ties with former Soviet republics
should not turn into an anti-Russian coalition.
Meeting in the city of Khabarovsk in the Russian Far East, Russian and
EU leaders failed to bridge differences that block assurances of
reliable gas supplies to Europe. Russian President Dmitri Medvedev
said his country has no problem supplying the fuel or honoring its
delivery commitments to Europe. He blamed the continent’s recent
energy disruptions on the inability of Ukraine to pay for its own
supplies. About 20 percent of Europe’s supply of natural gas comes
from Russia through Ukrainian pipelines.
Mr. Medvedev said assurances should be provided by those who pay for
the gas, and there is room here for cooperation.
The Russian leader noted that if Ukraine has the money, fine, though
he expresses doubt that it does.
He said partners in such circumstances help their partners. President
Medvedev said Russia is prepared to help Ukraine, but wants a
considerable part of this work to be assumed by the European Union and
countries interested in reliable and secure energy cooperation.
Russia is also seeking to replace the so-called Energy Charter Treaty,
a 1990’s agreement on integration of European and former Soviet energy
sectors. Moscow signed, but did not ratify the treaty, which would
provide foreign commercial access to Russian pipelines. The European
Union does not want the Charter scrapped, but EU Commission President
Jose Manuel Barroso said Russia has put forth interesting suggestions.
"We could consider those proposals in the process of revision of the
Energy Charter Treaty," he said, VOA News reported.

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