BELARUS NEWS AND ANALYSIS

DATE:

29/12/2006

Belarus, Russia locked in gas price battle as clock ticks down

MOSCOW (AFP) - Talks between Belarus and Russia over the future price of the gas Moscow will supply to Minsk are to continue after the two sides failed to reach agreement, an official said.

"The meeting is over for today, it will continue tomorrow," Gazprom spokesman Sergei Kipryanov told Russian television Friday night.

"Our aim is to sign this contract" before January 1, he said, adding that the conditions put forward by Moscow were "the best".

Talks Friday took place amid accusations by both sides of blackmail and threats by Minsk to cut supplies to European Union states.

"Belarus has no intention of yielding to Russia's gas blackmail," President Alexander Lukashenko said on national radio, less than three days before the expiry of an ultimatum to accept higher prices or see supplies cut off.

"If this blackmail continues, we will take shelter in bunkers but we will not give in."

He said that Belarus should pay the same price as Russian consumers, warning that a price rise would damage the nation's economy.

"We concluded with Russia an agreement on the union of the two states and we signed several documents guaranteeing this union," he said.

"These documents provide for equal conditions for the economic actors (of the two countries.

"We want the prices to be the same for us and for them. Whether it is 200, 300 or 500 dollars per 1,000 cubic metres, the conditions should be the same," he said, arguing that a gas price rise would make Belarussian exports to Russia uneconomic.

Currently, Belarus pays 46.68 dollars per 1,000 cubic meters of gas. Gazprom originally demanded an increase to 200 dollars, which is closer to western European prices, unless Belarus agreed to sell 50 percent of its domestic pipeline operator Beltransgaz.

Gazprom has since reduced that demand to 105 dollars per 1,000 cubic meters -- 75 dollars per 1,000 cubic meters in cash payments, plus the equivalent of another 30 dollars in shares of Beltransgaz.

Sandwiched between Russia and the European Union, Belarus has threatened to retaliate to the gas hike by refusing to allow the transit of Russian gas to Europe, potentially hitting supplies to Germany, Lithuania and Poland.

Without a contract for its own supplies, Minsk argues, there can be no contract on transit, while Gazprom claims Belarus is preparing to dip into transiting gas should its domestic supply be cut off.

"We are in the final phase of negotiations. But we cannot drag (the decision) out any more," Kypryanov said, warning Minsk of the "serious consequences" for the Belarussian economy of a cut in supplies.

In an interview Friday with the French newspaper Le Figaro, Gazprom vice-president Alexander Medvedev accused Minsk of "grotesque blackmail" in threatening a cut in supplies to Europe and spoke of a possible "rationing" leading to "shortages" in the EU. About five percent of gas consumed in the EU transits through Belarus.

The conflict echoes last year's winter price war between Russia and Ukraine over the supply and cost of gas which led to shortages in western Europe.

But then the West supported pro-Western President Viktor Yushschenko, while Lukashenko has been accused by Washington of running the "last dictatorship in Europe".

The EU has limited itself to calling on the two parties to reach a deal that does not threaten gas transiting to the west and French and German authorities have said they are not worried by the prospect of a shortage.

Ukraine announced on Thursday its readiness to increase the transit of Russian gas through its territory in case of possible disruptions on the Belarus route.

Source:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20061229/bs_afp/belarusrussiaenergy_061229210421

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