Thursday, April 23, 2015

Margrethe and the bear

GAZPROM revelled in its untouchability. It was the main supplier of imported gas to the European Union, benefiting both from close Kremlin patronage (the Russian state is its largest shareholder) and from a web of business and political relationships in countries it sold gas to, notably Germany. Alternatives to Russian gas were scant, as was customers’ willingness to resist Gazprom’s dominance.

Now the EU is taking on the Russian gas beast. The first blow fell on April 22nd when the EU’s competition commissioner, Margrethe Vestager, sent the company a long-expected “statement of objections” (Euro-parlance for a charge-sheet) alleging market abuses. The unpublished document runs to hundreds of pages. They detail the murky world of Russian gas exports, featuring lucrative intermediary companies with unknown beneficial ownership, deals struck by politicians not businessmen, and a hefty dose of geopolitical favouritism.

The EU claims Gazprom is “pursuing an overall strategy to partition central and eastern European gas markets.” It curbs customers’ ability to resell gas, which allows it to charge “unfair prices” in five countries:...



from The Economist: Business http://ift.tt/1K9eZ0m

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