Gazprom
has Europe’s natural gas market in a stranglehold and Europe is attempting to fight back, first with a
raid last year on the Russian giant’s offices and then with a probe launched
earlier this week against its allegedly illicit efforts to control the EU’s
natural gas supplies.
The
bottom line is that the same natural gas revolution in the US, which was
enabled by hydraulic fracturing (fracking), is now threatening to loosen
Gazprom’s noose on the EU, and Gazprom
simply won’t have it.
To
head off a potential natural gas revolution in the EU, Gazprom is pulling out
all the stops, and EU officials say that the company has been illegally
throwing obstacles in the way of European gas diversification.
Poland’s
situation is a case in point. Last year, a US Department of
Energy report estimated Poland’s shale gas reserves at 171 trillion cubic feet.
Gazprom got nervous. In March this year, the Polish Geological Institute
suddenly felt compelled to contradict that report, saying reserves were only
around 24.8 trillion cubic feet. In June, Exxon announced it would pull out of
its shale gas projects in Poland. Investors started getting cold feet and
shares began to drop. Chevron and
ConocoPhillips are plodding along with their shale gas operations, for now.
Still,
24.8 trillion cubic feet is no paltry volume and enough to ensure that Gazprom
remains nervous. And then there is Ukraine, which also has sizable shale gas
reserves and where the Russian noose is even tighter.
Right
now, the only thing keeping the shale gas revolution from hitting Europe as it
has in the US is technology: the shale reserves in Europe are on land
that is more inaccessible, there is a lack of necessary infrastructure and
fracking equipment, and protests against the environmental impact of fracking
are more serious. But the biggest problem is Gazprom.
EU
governments are both desperate to break the Russian stranglehold by developing
shale gas reserves and wary of going up against a gas giant on whom they depend
for supplies. It’s a tough position and the outcome will depend on how the EU
hedges its bets: Can it develop enough shale gas reserves quickly enough to
take on Gazprom?
Poland is still a long way off from
being able to fully develop its shale gas reserves. It will take time to conduct
the necessary environmental impact studies and infrastructure would require a
major overhaul.
The
EU publics are divided between those who fear fracking and those who fear
Gazprom and so far, the former fear is trumping the latter. France and Bulgaria
have both banned fracking under pressure from the public, but Poland is
marching on, its officials relentlessly insisting that fracking is safe.
Earlier
this week, Germany’s Environmental Ministry urged a ban on fracking near drinking water reservoirs and mineral
springs and called for environmental impact studies from developers, prompting
concerns that Germany will tighten fracking regulations. Germany has massive
natural gas potential, but environmental concerns are keeping a tight rein on
development for now.
The
end victory for Gazprom would come in the form of a European Commission ruling
banning fracking—a ruling which would be applied to all EU countries,
including Poland which has shown more political will to stand up to the Gazprom
boogey man than others.
In
the meantime, the EU is
investigating Gazprom’s actions in eight countries—Bulgaria,
Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Slovakia, Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic.
In Bulgaria, where fracking has been banned, Gazprom is the only supplier of
gas. It is also the sole supplier to the Baltic states and Slovenia. It
supplies over 80% of gas needs to Poland and Hungary, and nearly 70% of the
Czech Republic’s.
It
has strengthened its grip on Europe further due to the fact that it owns the
one-way gas pipelines into the region and forces buyers into long-term
contracts in which prices are tied to oil.
The EU has tried numerous tactics to loosen the Gazprom grip,
including the implementation of new energy policies designed to separate supply
from delivery and by seeking new pipelines that could deliver gas from
elsewhere. While the EU’s alternative pipeline dreams have largely failed so
far, it is eyeing developments now in Northern Iraq, where Turkey is courting
the Kurds to build a new pipeline that could eventually deliver gas to EU
markets. But this is a long way, and possibly a war, off.
Having failed so far in the area of alternative suppliers, the EU is now
moving the front lines of the battle to the legal field, targeting unfair
competition, which it stands a better, but still only minimal,
chance of changing the rules of the game. The probe into Gazprom is looking at
three things: Gazprom’s attempts to hinder the free flow of gas across the EU;
its purposeful blocking of diversification efforts; unfair pricing and
contractual arrangements.
Specifically,
the EU says
Gazprom has implemented a strategy to segment national markets by preventing
gas exports and limiting delivery options, as well as by
obligating buyers to use Gazprom infrastructure. Most significantly to the
consumer, Gazprom’s pricing policies, which fix gas prices to oil prices, mean
that European consumers see no benefit from the natural gas revolution in the
US, which has increased global supplies and reduced prices on the open market.
Will
the EU be able to actually levy fines for unfair competition and unravel the
monopoly? Not unless it plays as dirty
as Gazprom, which will simply cut off supplies and the circulation of those
European countries that used to be in its back yard. Eastern and Central Europe
will be the ones to pay the price for the European Union’s battle.
Let’s
not pretend that energy companies are clean and that governments aren’t using
them to forward nefarious geopolitical objectives (US multinationals in
Northern Iraq, for instance). The point is not to paint
Gazprom as the ultimate evil in energy. This is about Europe, and the EU’s
“Mommy Dearest” struggle with Gazprom, which is undoubtedly playing an
underhanded energy-politics game worthy of the most sinister of accolades.
One
would not be surprised to discover that Gazprom has gone environmental and has
had a hand in shaping the environmental concerns of the EU publics. As such, it is highly
convenient that Gazprom has recently come under very public attack by our leading international environmental
group. Everyone plays dirty, any means to an end.
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