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Gazprom warns Europe of gas shortage without increased Russian imports

Published 09/02/2018, 10:21
Updated 09/02/2018, 10:50
© Reuters. The logo of Russian gas giant Gazprom is seen on a board at the SPIEF 2017 in St. Petersburg
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By Dmitry Zhdannikov

LONDON (Reuters) - Europe will soon experience a gas shortage and price spike if it tries to rely on U.S. gas imports to cover rising demand instead of increasing purchases from Russia, Kremlin energy giant Gazprom (MCX:GAZP) told Reuters.

The Trump administration has said it intends to level the playing field in energy markets by offering U.S. gas to Europe and Asia, citing a need to reduce what it calls the market-distorting power of actors such as Russia and OPEC.

Russian gas supplies to Europe have become increasingly politicised since Moscow cut supplies to Ukraine in the last decade amid pricing disputes and after Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine in 2014.

The West has accused Russia of using gas as a political weapon. Moscow has responded by blaming the West for blocking its new pipeline projects for political rather than economic reasons.

The warning about a possible supply crunch comes as Gazprom prepares to start large-scale deliveries to China in a move reminiscent of Russia's oil strategy, under which Moscow became a major supplier to Beijing at the expense of Europe.

Gazprom's deputy head Alexander Medvedev said the company would have enough supplies for both Europe and Asia but that it was time for Europe to decide from where it should source gas.

"Europe completely miscalculated when they assumed that they won't need much additional gas and if they need some it can be supplied from outside Russia," Medvedev, who looks after exports for the world's top gas producer and exporter, said.

Gazprom's exports jumped 8 percent last year to an all-time high of 194 billion cubic metres on higher demand and lower prices, giving it a record share in Europe of 35 percent.

Medvedev said the share could rise above 40 percent over time as Europe's gas demand rises, production in the Netherlands and Britain falls and Norway's output growth should slow after 2025. U.S. supplies will remain modest, expensive and would mainly go to Asia.

"Many serious analysts will come up with a model for you showing that Europe will soon face a major gas crunch and, what is worse - a steep rise in prices," Medvedev said.

"Regarding calls about the need to cut reliance on Russian gas, should we in Russia be speaking about an over-reliance on money from one continent? Like from the dollar or euro? What it all means in fact is that we are mutually dependent".

Gazprom will begin pipeline supplies to China next year. The company wants to take at least a one-tenth market share there by 2025, when it builds another major route.

"We can supply as much gas as needed to Europe even though we are entering a new market in China. But Europe needs to decide now. They need to start thinking right now about who will cover additional demand after 2025. Unfortunately there is no energy dialogue between Russia and the EU," Medvedev said.

He added that even if Gazprom builds its two new pipelines to Europe on time - Nord Stream 2 under the Baltic Sea and Turkish Stream for Europe's south - it will not be enough to balance rising demand and shrinking supply.

© Reuters. The logo of Russian gas giant Gazprom is seen on a board at the SPIEF 2017 in St. Petersburg

"And LNG will not be able to cover that gap," he said, adding that U.S. supplies would remain modest and Qatar would probably send large volumes to premium Asian markets.

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