Ukraine ends Russian gas transit to Europe and Slovakia clashes with Ukraine - resorting to brazen blackmail.
Happy new year and thank you for reading!
This is the end of an era - after five decades, as of January 1, 2025 the Russian gas supplied directly to Europe via pipelines is no longer a thing.
(side note: there is still an indirect pipeline route via Turkey/Turkstream pipelines to southern Europe.)
That the Ukrainian government was going to put an end to Russian gas transits was telegraphed for some time now - for months, Kyiv refused to renegotiate an extension of the deal.
(side note: yet in spite of this ample notice, some countries have been caught off guard - more on that later below.)
For Ukraine, the rationale is clear - depriving the Kremlin of additional $6.5bn a year from gas exports that transit through Ukraine.
As the war enters its third year, the Russian economy is facing a slowdown in growth, increased inflation, and declining state revenue.
Already, there are signs that the Kremlin is under a significant fiscal strain.
For example, reportedly, starting on January 1, 2025, the Kremlin will now go back on its word and end one-time enlistment bonuses for prisoners who volunteer to fight in Ukraine.
Naturally, prisoners aren’t the most favorable demographic with a strong political voice - it is easier to start with those.
But the direction is clear: as the politically palatable avenues of fiscal cuts narrow down further, the Russian government will have no choice but to introduce politically unpopular cuts affecting more ‘‘normal’’ constituents of the society.
As such, it is very reasonable for Ukraine to try to expedite this process by introducing fiscal strain wherever and however possible.
But the fact that it took three years for Kyiv to arrive at this decision reveals high costs of ending all Russian gas transits.
For Ukraine, there will be a number of political/diplomatic, financial, and strategic costs.
Three stand out:
1) Worsening relations with the EU states (like Slovakia and Hungary) reliant on Russian gas.
And these countries can use their EU/NATO membership status to impose diplomatic costs on Ukraine;
2) Practical financial costs: Ukraine itself earns $1bn a year from transit (although only around 20% of it are gross profits - so the fiscal loss is not enormous.);
3) Strategic costs: with Russian gas absent in Ukrainian pipelines, Moscow will now have even lesser incentive to not target all possible gas pipelines in Ukraine - worsening the already dire energy crisis.
This is indeed the most immediate and pressing concern.
Among the three most impacted countries, Slovakia stands out as uniquely unprepared.
The three countries most affected by this change are Austria, Slovakia and Hungary.
Out of these three, Hungary and Austria have prepared better for the eventual end of direct Russian gas supply.
Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has sought alternative solutions to maintain Russian gas imports.
His government has explored routing gas via Ukraine while simultaneously turning to Turkey's pipeline network and neighboring Romania to secure additional supplies.
Austria continued to import Russian gas throughout 2024 but has begun diversifying its energy portfolio.
In December, energy giant OMV ended its long-term contract with Gazprom due to a legal dispute.
The country is now increasingly relying on liquefied natural gas (LNG) imports as it moves away from dependence on Russian supplies.
And when it comes to LNG, the EU did work on infrastructure projects to 1)help all EU countries in general, and 2) help most affected countries like Slovakia in particular.
As we shall see Slovakia had plenty of notice and enablement - its hysterics and blackmailing of Ukraine (more on that later below) are therefore completely unfounded.
How the EU prepared for this inevitable scenario.
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