Gazprom Official Reveals How Russian Energy Giant Will Make Profit in Coming Years

Earlier this month, the Russian energy giant Gazprom confirmed its readiness to maintain current exports to Europe by renegotiating long-term contracts with major customers.

With US liquefied natural gas (LNG) supplies to Europe on the rise and energy prices falling, it is safe to assume that Gazprom’s upcoming talks with its major customers will not be a piece of cake. Here’s a look into the background.

Anniversary of Gazprom-EU Friendship

The Russian energy giant is due to clinch a raft of new long-term gas contracts with its partners from Turkey as well as Hungary, the Netherlands, Serbia, Italy and elsewhere in Europe by 2024.

Some have already warned that they will seek a change in contract conditions, among them representatives of the Bulgarian Bulgartransgaz who expressed hope for a significant price reduction to be agreed before the end of February.

She pointed out Gazprom customers’ great interest in purchasing “billions of cubic meters of Russian gas” in the next four years.

Gas Instead of Coal

She said that the demand for energy in Europe remains stable, given the EU’s green strategy aimed at combating global warming and greenhouse gas emissions.

The strategy, in particular, stipulates that Germany will close all of its coal-fired power plants by 2038, with energy companies due to get compensation totalling €4.35 billion.

Power plants are expected to be converted to gas, so demand for blue fuel is most likely to grow steadily despite the German Greens’ demands to exclude more than thirty projects on the development of European gas infrastructure from the EU budget.

Flexible Pipe

In the first three quarters of last year, prices at leading gas hubs in Germany and the Netherlands were almost half that of Gazprom’s long-term supply contracts, with the company currently selling gas to Europe at an average of $203 per thousand cubic meters.

First of all, she said, Gazprom is talking about increasing sales through an electronic trading platform, where prices are determined by market demand and supply.

In long-term contracts, Gazprom is offering partners the opportunity to link current prices not to oil, but to the index of European gas exchanges, including the Dutch TTF. This may dramatically increase the attractiveness of Russian pipeline gas compared to LNG supplied by the US.

The LNG tanker “Clean Ocean” is pictured during the first US delivery of liquefied natural gas to LNG terminal in Swinoujscie, Poland June 8, 2017.

Poland currently claims to be the main supplier of US LNG to the European market, concluding four contracts for delivering 29 million tons of LNG to Ukraine, Lithuania and Latvia, as well as Estonia and Finland over the next 22 years.

American LNG, however, may prove significantly more expensive than Russian gas, given expenses related to LNG’s transportation and regasification.

Gazprom, meanwhile, remains upbeat about the positive financial results from its cooperation with European partners .

Sourse: sputniknews.com

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