Russia’s Gazprom warns Ukraine of mounting energy bill

State-controlled energy giant says Kiev will owe Moscow $5.2bn for natural gas as of June 7th

A worker walks past pipes at an underground gas storage facility near Striy. Russia has said state-controlled exporter Gazprom will not supply transit nation Ukraine with gas for its own use in June if Kiev fails to pay in advance and has warned a cut-off could affect supplies to European consumer nations via Ukraine. Photograph: Gleb Garanich/Reuters
A worker walks past pipes at an underground gas storage facility near Striy. Russia has said state-controlled exporter Gazprom will not supply transit nation Ukraine with gas for its own use in June if Kiev fails to pay in advance and has warned a cut-off could affect supplies to European consumer nations via Ukraine. Photograph: Gleb Garanich/Reuters

Ukraine will owe Russia about $5.2 billion for natural gas as of June 7th if it makes no payments by that date, the chief executive of state-controlled Russian gas exporter Gazprom, Alexei Miller, said today.

Gazprom says Ukraine now owes more than $3.5 billion, and has threatened to stop supplying the neighbouring former Soviet republic with gas if it fails to make a pre-payment for June supplies by June 2nd.

Mr Miller told president Vladimir Putin that Ukraine would consume a total of 3.5 billion cubic metres of Russian gas in May worth around $1.7 billion, increasing Kiev's gas debt. "Thus, by June 7th, Ukraine's obligations for gas payments will top $5.2 billion," Mr Miller told Mr Putin, repeating Gazprom's position that it will supply as much gas as Ukraine pays for.

Mr Putin responded by saying he hoped "we will not reach a situation when we will have to switch to prepayment". Russia and Ukraine are fighting over gas prices, with Kiev wanting to change a 2009 contract that locked it into buying a set volume of gas, whether it needs it or not, at $485 per 1,000 cubic metres - the highest price paid by any client in Europe.

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Moscow dropped the price to $268.50 after Ukraine's then-president Viktor Yanukovich turned his back on a trade and association agreement with the European Union last year, but reinstated the original price after he was ousted in February.

Reuters