politics

Putin Says Russia Is Not Using Gas as a Weapon, Claims U.S. Added to Energy Crisis

Sergei Ilnitsky | Reuters
  • Russian President Vladimir Putin said Russia stands ready to help Europe as its energy crisis continues.
  • He denied that Russia was using energy as a "weapon" against its neighbor.
  • Putin said Europe's gas crisis was largely its own fault and that other suppliers, including the U.S., had reduced supplies to the region.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said Wednesday that his country is not using energy as a weapon against Europe and that Russia stands ready to help the region as its energy crisis continues.

"We are not using any weapons," Putin told CNBC in Moscow on Wednesday, according to a translation. "Even during the hardest parts of the Cold War Russia regularly has fulfilled its contractual obligations and supplies gas to Europe," he said.

Describing reports that Russia has withheld gas supplies to Europe, Putin called such accusations "politically motivated blather" and there was "nothing to support it [the idea] that we use energy as a kind of weapon." On the contrary, he said, Russia was "expanding its supplies to Europe."

Putin's comments came as he participated in a panel moderated by CNBC's Hadley Gamble at Russian Energy Week, an annual event in Moscow which is now in its 20th year. Speaking ahead of the panel, which included the CEOs of ExxonMobil, BP, TotalEnergies and Mercedez-Benz, Putin said that Europe should "not deal in blame-shifting" over the energy crisis in the region and that European countries had not done enough to replenish gas reserves in the summer.

"Higher gas prices in Europe are a consequence of a deficit of energy and not vice versa and that's why we should not deal in blame shifting, this is what our partners are trying to do," he told delegates at the event.

"The European gas market does not look to be well-balanced and predictable" he said, with the main reason being, he added "that not everything in this market depends on the producers, no lesser role is played by the consumers of gas."

'Need requests'

Nonetheless, Russia said it was ready to meet its contractual supply obligations and to discuss additional actions and cooperation with its European partners, Putin said, stating that Russia had already increased its gas supplies to Europe by 15% so far this year.

Putin laid the blame for Europe's gas shortages at its own door, as well as blaming a lack of renewable energy generation this summer and reduced supplies from other partners, including the U.S.

"You see the problem does not consist in us, it consists in the European side, because, first, we know that the wind farms did not work during summer because of the weather, everyone knows that. Moreover, the Europeans did not pump enough gas into their underground gas facilities ... and the supplies to Europe have decreased from other regions of the world."

"So we have increased our supplies but others, including the U.S., have reduced their supplies and this is the cause of the panic." Russia can supply more, he said, "but we need requests to do that."

Russian Energy Week is known to be where the president lays out his energy agenda for the Russian economy and features experts discussing politics, pipelines, investment and climate change as well as risks to global growth and security.

His comments come as Europe continues to grapple with a natural gas crisis following weeks of rising prices and concerns ahead of the winter season.

Undersupplied the market?

Last week, Putin offered to increase gas supplies to the region, a move that helped to stabilize prices. However, critics of the Kremlin said Russia had purposefully undersupplied the market in order to manufacture the crisis in order to accentuate and highlight Europe's dependence on its supplies, an accusation Russia denies.

Experts believe Russia has been restricting gas supplies to Europe in an attempt to put pressure on Germany to speed up the certification of the now-completed Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline, which will boost gas supplies to Europe via the Baltic Sea.

The pipeline has a number of prominent critics, including the U.S. as well as Eastern European countries Poland and Ukraine, who say the pipeline increases Europe's dependence on Russian energy supplies and weakens the region in terms of energy security.

Fast forward to today, and Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Wednesday that Russia was supplying gas to Europe at maximum levels under existing contracts, according to the Tass news agency. He noted Moscow was ready to increase gas transit through Ukraine if the EU boosted its purchases.

Russia is the third-largest producer of fossil fuels globally and it accounts for just more than 40% of the EU's gas imports every year, according to the latest data from Eurostat.

Given Russia's role as one of the world's main energy exporters, it is in a position of both strength and weakness. While Russia can (and does) use its resources to bolster government revenue, the global transition away from fossil fuels to greener energies and technologies means that it could find increasingly smaller demand for its resources in future.

Putin, who has been in power in Russia for more than 20 years, alternating between the role of president and prime minister, finds himself at the helm amid this wider global transition.

Copyright CNBC
Contact Us