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![]() by Daniel J. Graeber Washington DC (UPI) Jun 05, 2018
The strong bilateral energy relationship between Russia and Austria can only serve to improve energy security in Europe, an Austrian leader said. Russian President Vladimir Putin is on an official visit to Austria this week. Ahead of the meeting, Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz told Russian news agency Tass that work on the energy sector had regional implications. "I would like to note that fruitful cooperation of the two very important companies -- Austria's OMV and Russia's Gazprom, which seems to me extremely beneficial for both sides," he was quoted as saying. Putin's visit caps at least a week of diplomatic outreach between the two countries. Last week, Russian energy company Gazprom and OMV marked 50 years of collaboration. Last month, both sides met in Moscow, noting Russian gas shipments to Austria are already up more than 70 percent from last year. Kurz told the Russian news agency the Austrian gas market was diverse, though Russian gas was an important component. "That seems to me positive not only for Russia, but also for the countries of Europe, and in spite of all the difficulties that had often emerged over the past decades, our cooperation in the energy sector has never been disputed, it has been stable and uninterrupted," he said. Most of the Russian gas headed to the European market runs through Soviet-era pipelines in Ukraine. Political turmoil between Kiev and Moscow over gas arrears and later military conflict that followed Ukraine's pivot toward Europe exposed vulnerabilities to European energy security. Gazprom and OMV are partners in the Nord Stream natural gas pipeline, which avoids Ukrainian territory by running through the Baltic Sea to Germany. Plans to double the network have been meet with concerns from the United States and Europe, who worry about Gazprom's anti-trust behavior and Russia's tacit strategy of using energy for political leverage. Washington, for its part, has countered that strategy by trying to get more U.S. gas into the European market. Sanctions pressures, meanwhile, from Washington could impact non-Russian companies like OMV.
![]() ![]() Trucks fill Chinese gaps in LNG market Washington (UPI) Jun 4, 2018 The lack of available pipeline capacity leaves the Chinese market looking at trucking to bridge the gap for liquefied natural gas deliveries, analysis finds. A report emailed from consultant group Wood Mackenzie found the Chinese market is looking at trucking to make up for the lack of pipeline coverage inland. "We expect China's gas demand to reach 9.3 trillion cubic feet this year," Miaoru Huang, a senior manager at Wood Mackenzie, said in the report. "Similar to 2017, 12 percent of de ... read more
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