The Case for a Gas Transit Consortium in Ukraine: A Cost-Benefit Analysis
The Case for a Gas Transit Consortium in Ukraine: A Cost-Benefit Analysis
Author(s): Michael Emerson, Elena GnedinaSubject(s): Politics / Political Sciences
Published by: CEPS Centre for European Policy Studies
Keywords: Gas Transit Consortium ; Ukraine; Cost-Benefit Analysis ; 2009 ; European industry and households ; commercial and political relations ; agreed tri-partite ; (EU, Russia, Ukraine) ;
Summary/Abstract: The January 2009 interruptions of gas supplies from Russia to the EU via Ukraine, following the earlier 2006 crisis, has confirmed the absolutely intolerable situation in which a commodity of strategic importance for European industry and households has become uncertain and erratic, in breach of long-term supply contracts, as a result of disorderly commercial and political relations between Russia and Ukraine.The recently agreed tri-partite (EU, Russia, Ukraine) monitoring system is a positive step, even if at the time of writing supplies have not yet resumed. But in any case this can be viewed as no more than a stop-gap measure. A more fundamental and permanent solution is required. For this purpose the authors propose that the EU, Russia and Ukraine negotiate the creation of a new business consortium to be granted a long-term concession to operate the Ukraine trunk gas transit pipeline.
Journal: CEPS Policy Briefs
- Issue Year: 2009
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 001-013
- Page Count: 13
- Language: English