Posted on 04/27/2022 2:01:14 PM PDT by JonPreston
Photo by Egor Filin on Unsplash
It appears that Putin's gambit is working.
One day after Russia halted natgas supplies to Poland and Bulgaria due to "nonpayment in rubles", confirming that the country is willing to go ahead with its bluff and shut down supplies to "unfriendly" nations and sending European nat gas prices soaring, Bloomberg reports citing a person close to Russian gas giant Gazprom, that already Europe's fake united front is cracking as four European gas buyers have already paid for supplies in rubles as Russia demanded even as further cutoffs if others refuse the Kremlin’s requirement aren’t likely until the second half of May, when the next payments are due.
While it was unclear which are the four companies violating EU directives and paying directly in rubles, according to Reuters Germany' Uniper and Austrian OMV are among the companies that have folded to Kremlin' demands:
GERMAN UNIPER CO SAYS PAYMENT SCHEME FOR RUSSIAN GAS IN RUBLES DOES NOT CONTRADICT THE SANCTIONS AND IT IS POSSIBLE TO PAY IN RUBLES - OFFICIAL
AUSTRIA AND THE AUSTRIAN OMV HAS ACCEPTED THE TERMS OF PAYMENT FOR RUSSIAN GAS IN RUBLES - AUSTRIAN CHANCELLOR
Pro-Russian EU member Hungary, meanwhile, has struck a deal to pay into a euro-denominated account with Gazprombank, which in turn will deposit the amount in roubles to Gazprom Export, foreign minister Peter Szijjarto said in a video posted to Facebook. Its next payment is due on May 22, he said. Slovakia has reached the same agreement, he added as more of Europe realizes that it is impossible to live without Russian energy sources.
Separately, to facilitate their compliance with Russian demands (and ostensibly in breach of European sanctions), ten European companies have already opened the accounts at Gazprombank needed to meet President Vladimir Putin’s payment demands, the person said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss confidential matters.
As we reported yesterday, Russia halted gat supplies to Poland and Bulgaria on Wednesday after they refused Gazprom’s proposed mechanism for ruble payments, which the gas giant says does not violate European Union sanctions. Russia supplies gas via pipelines to 23 European countries. Moscow demanded that it be paid in rubles for nat gas shipments after the EU imposed sanctions on Russia over its invasion of Ukraine. However, the EU told member states that the mechanism the Kremlin proposed, which required opening euro and ruble accounts with state-controlled Gazprombank, would violate the sanctions. It appears that to at least 10 energy companies, complying with Russian demands to keep the gas flowing is more important than potentially pissing off some Eurocrats.
According to the FT, Gazprom Export notified Bulgargaz and PGNiG of the suspension of gas supplies from April 27 until payment is made in accordance with the decreed procedure, the company said. It warned that the unauthorised withdrawal of gas volumes transiting through Poland and Bulgaria to other European countries such as Germany would result in a reduction of transit supplies.
“Bulgaria and Poland are transit states,” Gazprom said. “In the event of unauthorized withdrawal of Russian gas from transit volumes to third countries, supplies for transit will be reduced by this volume.”
In response to the "unexpected" supply halts, which infuriated EU president Ursula von der Leyen, who today tweeted that "Gazprom's announcement is another attempt by Russia to blackmail us with gas" adding that Europe is "prepared for this scenario" although judging by the scramble by several energy companies to pay in rubles that is not really true...
Gazprom's announcement is another attempt by Russia to blackmail us with gas.
We are prepared for this scenario. We are mapping out our coordinated EU response.
Europeans can trust that we stand united and in solidarity with the Member States impacted. — Ursula von der Leyen (@vonderleyen) April 27, 2022
... European gas prices rose by 20% on Wednesday. Futures contracts tracking Europe’s wholesale gas price advanced almost by a fifth at €117 per megawatt hour in early trading. Prices are almost seven times higher than a year ago.
“Gazprom has completely suspended gas supplies to Bulgargaz (Bulgaria) and PGNiG (Poland) due to non-payment in roubles,” Gazprom said in a statement on Wednesday.
While we already know that at least a handful of European energy buyers folded to Russian demands, multiple European buyers have refused to pay in roubles (for now), saying it contradicted contract terms and would be a way to bypass EU sanctions on the Russian central bank.
“Politically, this raises the stakes for the EU Commission’s decision on whether the new payment system would violate sanctions and, hence, will probably keep market volatility elevated,” said Goldman Sachs analyst Samantha Dart in a note to clients. She also added that it is Goldman's "view that it is in the interest of both the EU and Russia to work out a solution that brings gas payments in compliance with the EU's legal requirements, consistent with recent comments from Brussels."
Today's events can work as an added incentive for the EU, and especially Germany, to find a way to work out a RUB payment mechanism given the significant economic toll a halt in gas flows would have in the region, which would be much greater than that of Poland or Bulgaria.
Well, it appears that in lieu of a political resolution, at least some companies are taking matters into their own hands, a development which will either escalate tensions further and lead to even more draconian measures, as the following Reuters quotes suggests:
... or force Europe to realize that full sanctions of Russian energy are impossible and force politicians to find loopholes, as this next Reuters headline signals:
To be sure, in a worst case scenario, Goldman warns that "a full interruption of Russian flows to Germany would potentially lift European gas prices to over 200 EUR/MWh this summer."
Given all of this, it appears the Ruble is no longer "rubble" after all, trading at 6-month highs versus the dollar...
(Click on image to enlarge)

And near two-year highs against the euro...
(Click on image to enlarge)

Drill, baby, drill. Joe and the Ho gotta go. We need to get back to energy independence. This is all globalist, Prius-driving BS. Let’s take America back, so we can leave the sand-scratchers and the Russkies to their own devices. How many wake-up calls do we need!
ALL Utility Companies in Red States should take notice and formally DEMAND all Federal Properties they service pay their Bill in Gold and Silver Coin like Article 1, section 10 of the US Constitution Demands. CUT THEM OFF until they Follow the Written words of the Constitution
I do not understand.
Where do they go to get them a bunch of Rubles?
If my yard guy demanded I pay him in Pesos,
where would I go to get me some Pesos?
If my Chinese restaurant demanded I pay them in Yen,
where do I go to get me some Yen?
and where does one get said rubbles...
Well, that's easy. Go to your bank, but it might take a day or two to get them.
Where do they go to get them a bunch of Rubles?
For THAT question, I haven't a clue. I guess you could start at the bank but since the sanctions blocked the Russians from accessing most currency it might be hard. You might have to first buy Chinese money and then buy Rubles. ???
More than ever, and now in his own currency! I guess “sanctions” were part of the deal, too.
One thing you’ve got to admit, Joe is earning his 10%.
Putin is smarter than Joe.
I may hate Putin but I’m not going to underestimate him like so many other morons have.
WION, 4/22/22, Gravitas:
Is the West trying to hide Russian oil imports?
“Recently, U.S. lectured India to not increase the purchase of Russian oil. Turns out, the West itself is secretly buying Russian oil. Russian tankers have begun disappearing from radar.”
Pay in Rubles or no gas for you.
LOL.
Go to Moscow with rather large suitcases full of Euros and buy the Rubles then pay for the natural gas.
Let them eat rubles!
First, open an account at Gazprom bank...
Can’t they be bought from a foreign bank, via internet?
I thought that most any kind of banking transaction could be done by internet nowadays?
You answered my question.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.