Welcome! Log In Create A New Profile Recent Messages

Deep Creek Hot Springs

The Moon is Waning Gibbous (75% of Full)


Advanced

Re: SC41

All posts are those of the individual authors and the owner of this site does not endorse them. Content should be considered opinion and not fact until verified independently.

April 19, 2007 07:13PM
http://www.economist.com/world/europe/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9009041

A bear at the throat

The European Union is belatedly grasping the riskiness of its dependence on Russian gas, but it is disunited and short of ideas for how to reduce it

Vladimir Putin, must be feeling smug. His strategy of using the country's vast natural resources to restore the greatness lost after the break-up of the Soviet Union seems to be paying off. If power is measured by the fear instilled in others—as many Russians believe—he is certainly winning.

The Soviet Union relied on its military machine for geopolitical power: its oil and gas were just a way to pay for it. In today's Russia, energy is itself the tool of influence. To use it the Kremlin needs three things: control over Russian energy reserves and production, control over the pipelines snaking across its territory and that of its neighbours, and long-term contracts with European customers that are hard to break. All three are in place. For all the talk of a common strategy towards Russia, the EU is divided and stuck for an answer.

Gazprom, Russia's energy giant, cherished by Mr Putin as a “powerful lever of economic and political influence in the world”, has long-term supply contracts with most European countries, including France, Germany, Italy and Austria. It also has direct access to these countries' domestic markets. The EU reckons that half its gas imports now come from Russia. Newer EU members, such as Hungary and the Czech Republic, are almost entirely dependent on Russian gas. Moreover, a pipeline network that it inherited from the Soviet Union gives Russia control over gas imported from Central Asia.

The EU has few ideas for how to deal with its chief energy supplier. “We know we should do something about Russia, but we don't know what,”...............
SubjectAuthorViewsPosted

SC41

Wizard 1243April 19, 2007 06:04PM

Re: SC41

Wizard 808April 19, 2007 06:21PM

Re: SC41

Wizard 702April 19, 2007 06:43PM

Re: SC41

Wizard 695April 19, 2007 07:13PM

Re: SC41

Wizard 671April 19, 2007 09:23PM

Re: SC41

Wizard 731April 23, 2007 12:43PM

Re: SC41

Wizard 651April 23, 2007 02:09PM

Re: SC41

Wizard 703April 24, 2007 05:14PM

Re: SC41

Wizard 628April 26, 2007 08:11PM

Re: SC41

Wizard 740May 01, 2007 07:41PM

Re: SC41

Rick 940May 02, 2007 12:35PM

Re: SC41

Wizard 814May 02, 2007 07:46PM

Re: SC41

Rick 632May 03, 2007 12:20AM

Re: SC41

Wizard 656May 04, 2007 05:24PM

Re: SC41

Wizard 711May 04, 2007 08:21PM

Re: SC41

Wizard 617May 04, 2007 08:58PM

Re: SC41

Wizard 745May 05, 2007 10:09PM

Re: SC41

Wizard 757May 09, 2007 02:06PM

Re: SC41

mojavegreen 1309May 11, 2007 11:50AM

Re: SC41

Wizard 711May 09, 2007 04:06PM



Sorry, only registered users may post in this forum.

Click here to login