Tuesday, February 14, 2012


Russia

Putin Rules Out Future Job At Gazprom

Gazprom CEO Aleksei Miller (left) with Russian President Putin (file photo) (epa)

31 January 2006 -- Russian President Vladimir Putin has ruled out the possibility of taking the helm of the state-controlled natural gas company Gazprom when he stands down in 2008.

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Putin is constitutionally barred from running for a third term in presidential elections in 2008.


Speculation that he could become head of Gazprom mounted in December when it emerged that his close friend, former German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, would head a new Gazprom-controlled company building a new pipeline under the Baltic Sea to Germany.


Asked about that speculation at a press conference in the Kremlin today, Putin thanked the reporter for the "job offer" but said he did not see himself as a businessman.


(ITAR-TASS, AP, AFP)

Russia's Gas Strategy



RUNNING HOT AND COLD The crisis over Russian supplies of natural gas to Ukraine that erupted on New Year's Day has implications that spread well beyond these two countries and will impact both economic and political policymaking throughout Europe. On January 19, RFE/RL's Washington, D.C., office hosted a briefing the examined the ramifications of the natural-gas conflict.

CLIFFORD GADDY, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, outlined Russia's "grand energy strategy," in which Ukraine is perceived as merely an obstacle frustrating Russia's energy ambitions in Western Europe and therefore a nonentity in Russia's broader strategic planning. According to Gaddy, Russia's strategic goal regarding energy is to maximize the role of its own energy resources in the world energy markets, so as to increase its geopolitical influence. To do this, it must reduce competition and maximize dependency on its own energy resources, as well as ensure a stable supply.

TARAS KUZIO, a visiting assistant professor at George Washington University, rebutted Gaddy's argument, claiming that Russia's actions evidenced a complete lack of geopolitical strategy and resulted in strong denunciations by Western countries and a loss of political allies in Ukraine. According to Kuzio, Russian President Vladimir Putin's desire to have a deal signed by the January 4 European Union energy summit outweighed his hope of reinforcing opposition to Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko during the run-up to Ukraine's March 26 parliamentary elections.

RFE/RL Coordinator of Corruption Studies ROMAN KUPCHINSKY did not fully agree with Kuzio's assessments of Yushchenko or Ukraine. He outlined three major problems that are feeding the conflict between Russia and Ukraine. The biggest, he argues, is that the state-controlled Russian gas giant Gazprom holds a monopoly on natural-gas sales outside the CIS. Kupchinsky also decried Ukraine's consumption of natural gas, terming it "out of control." Corruption is also a major factor in the conflict, Kupchinsky said, although the extent to which it taints the deal struck between Russia and Ukraine remains unknown.


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Moscow's New Energy Strategy

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