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  • Bush questions Russia willingness to use energy as political weapon

    Environment and Energy Publishing, LLC
    Greenwire
    May 8, 2006 Monday

    OIL AND GAS: Bush questions Russia's willingness to use energy as
    political weapon


    President Bush questioned Russia's energy policy today, rebuking
    President Vladimir Putin for using oil as a political weapon.

    In an interview published today in the German newspaper Bild, Bush
    said: "One of our concerns is economic nationalism, to a certain
    extent, where [Putin] is using his oil companies to achieve what
    appears to be political objectives." He added: "And we make our
    concerns known when someone uses natural gas, for example, to send
    signals to government."

    Bush also said there is full agreement between Moscow and Washington
    about nuclear non-proliferation. "It is very important that the
    United States and Russia work closely to make sure that nuclear
    materials are stored as safely as possible," he said (Agence
    France-Presse, May 8). Russia responds to Cheney's accusations

    The comments came after Vice President Dick Cheney last week accused
    Russia of betraying democracy by using oil and gas supplies to bully
    its neighbors, speaking at a summit in Vilnius, Lithuania.

    "No legitimate interest is served when oil and gas become tools of
    intimidation or blackmail, either by supply manipulation or attempts
    to monopolize transportation," he said.

    Cheney said Russia must return to democratic reform soon, rather than
    trying to harness its position as an energy giant. Russia drew
    worldwide criticism for turning off natural gas supplies to Ukraine
    earlier this year (Greenwire, May 4).

    Today, Russian officials responded to the criticism, saying it is
    time the West came to terms with Russia's progress as a market
    economy.

    "We are deeply puzzled by recent commentary in the West that distorts
    Russian energy policies," Russian Energy and Industry Minister Viktor
    Khristenko wrote in the Financial Times. "The truth of the matter is
    that Russia has moved away from Soviet-era arrangements of subsiding
    the energy prices of our neighbors and turned to market-based pricing
    mechanisms."

    Khristenko said Russia's policies on energy and market and democratic
    reform were "consistently misinterpreted."

    "We are aware that old impressions fade slowly, but it is time for
    the West to recognize and acknowledge the maturing role and state of
    progress that Russia has achieved," he wrote. "At a time when Russia
    has embarked on a speedy transition to market principles, we are
    accused of politicizing the energy issue" (Agence France-Presse, May
    8). Natural gas price hikes spurring efficiencies

    While former Soviet republics now pay substantially more for their
    natural gas after Russia started raising prices, the jolt is starting
    to force fundamental change on some of the most energy-wasteful
    economies in the world.

    Georgia scrapped plans to build new gas-fired power stations. It is
    going to build a hydroelectric plant instead. Armenia also has
    ordered a plan targeting gas consumption.

    Maxim Burtovy, director of an energy savings company called Energy
    Alliance, is trying to put together a project to capture more waste
    heat from an electricity-generating station and pump it into the
    city's heating system. He estimates that doing so could cut gas
    consumption by 500 million cubic meters per year, worth about $47.5
    million at the price Ukraine currently pays for gas from Gazprom, and
    twice that on world gas markets (Marc Champion, Wall Street Journal
    [subscription required], May 8). -- LK
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