Russia cuts transit gas by fifth
Mr Putin met Gazprom's chief at his residence outside Moscow |
EU states will be closely monitoring their gas imports after Russian energy giant Gazprom said it would cut exports through Ukrainian pipelines by a fifth.
Gazprom said it was reducing supplies to compensate for the amount it says Ukraine has been siphoning off.
Russia stopped supplying gas to Ukraine five days ago in a row over unpaid bills and a new pricing contract.
Ukraine has denied stealing gas, saying technical problems are disrupting the onward flow of gas to Europe.
Start reducing it from today Vladimir Putin Russian prime minister, speaking on Monday |
Pipes across Ukraine carry about one-fifth of the European Union's gas needs.
Several EU countries have reported a drop in gas deliveries since 1 January, apparently as a result of the dispute.
The move to reduce supplies going through the Ukraine by a fifth came after Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin held talks with Gazprom CEO Alexei Miller.
Mr Miller recommended that deliveries via Ukraine should be reduced "by the amount stolen by Ukraine, that is 65.3 million cu/m of gas".
Future deliveries should be reduced on a daily basis by the amount of gas stolen, he added.
"Start reducing it from today," Mr Putin told Mr Miller on Monday.
Gazprom, in which the Russian state owns a majority stake, said it would compensate by sending more gas to Europe via other routes.
Divisions
Earlier, EU Commission spokesman Ferran Tarradellas said there was no immediate danger to EU consumers or industry.
Europe's gas pipeline network |
The cut-off had produced "some irregularities" but "no substantial disruption of supply to any member state", he said.
Among the countries to have reported falling pressure in their pipelines are Poland, Hungary, Bulgaria, Romania, the Czech Republic and Greece.
In some cases supplies dropped by as much as 30% but countries are compensating by using their own reserves or increasing deliveries from other sources.
The row between Russia and Ukraine has been simmering for weeks. Gazprom says Ukraine owes it money; Ukraine says it has paid its debt. The two sides have also failed to agree on the price Ukraine should pay for gas in 2009.
A similar row between Gazprom and Ukraine at the beginning of 2006 led to gas shortages in several EU countries.
EU leaders have been meeting in Brussels to discuss the dispute and a delegation has also been sent for talks with both Ukrainian and Gazprom officials.
But, say correspondents, the EU is reluctant to get involved in what it describes as a commercial dispute - reflecting Europe's own deep divisions on how to respond to Russia.
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