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Zelensky urges energy-rich countries to call time on Putin’s ‘blackmail’

March 26, 2022
in Business
Reading Time: 5 mins read
A A

Volodymyr Zelensky has called on energy producing countries to step up their output in order to prevent Russia from using its oil and gas to “blackmail” European nations.

His appeal came a day after EU leaders pledged to buy natural gas jointly and Germany unveiled targets to rapidly cut its dependence on Russian energy.

Joe Biden, on a visit to Poland said Nato unity was crucial to keeping up pressure on Russia in support of Ukraine, while the Turkish foreign minister said the international community to find “a face-saving way out, or an honourable exit for both sides [that] they can sell publicly,”

“As the international community we should continue pressure on the aggressor, which is Russia, and at the same time help both sides find this face saving way out,” Mevlut Cavusoglu told a conference attended by many Gulf officials in Doha, Qatar.

Cavusoglu said there was a backchannel between the Russian and Ukrainian presidents, but did not give any details

“They are all very sensitive issues, but it is not easy for them to reach an understanding on these very delicate issues while the war continues, while these civilians are dying.”

Speaking to the Doha conference by video link, the Ukrainian president called on “the responsible states, in particular Qatar” as “reliable and reputable suppliers of energy resources that can contribute to stabilise the situation in Europe”.

“They can do much more to restore justice. Europe’s future depends on your efforts,” he said. “I urge you to increase energy production so that Russia understands that no state can use energy as a weapon and to blackmail the world.”

Speaking at the same conference Saad al-Kaabi, Qatar’s energy minister who is also chief executive of QatarEnergy, said: “We are clear about trying to support the Europeans and the Americans. We have said the volumes that are divertible away from Europe, even if we can get a higher price for it, we will not divert them.”

However he has previously said that no other country could replace the total volume produced by Russia. Qatar, the world’s largest exporter of liquefied natural gas (LNG), estimates that it could only divert about 10-15 per cent of its volumes to Europe. The Gulf nation sells most of its LNG to Asian clients who are locked into long-term fixed contracts.

This week the US set out plans to redirect gas to Europe as western allies step up efforts to reshape global energy markets and punish Moscow. Washington said on Friday that it would aim to deliver at least 15bn cubic metres (bcm) of additional LNG to the EU this year along with other producers.

Washington has been pressuring Gulf states, particularly Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, to increase crude production to help dampen oil prices. But Riyadh and Abu Dhabi, which co-ordinate oil production levels through Opec+, which includes Russia, have so far resisted.

Saudi officials argue that the rise in oil prices is not caused by a lack of supply and increasing output would have little impact on prices. They also caution that there is a shortage of production capacity globally.

Zelensky said that it was “a matter of time” before European countries refused to buy Russian oil and gas, adding that sanctions against Russia are “aimed at only one thing — to start Russia seeking peace, so that it does not pose a common threat”.

The US president told the Polish head of state that Nato’s mutual defence clause was a sacred commitment. © Marcin Obara/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

US president Joe Biden was in Warsaw on the last full day of a visit to Europe. US secretary of state Antony Blinken and defence secretary Lloyd Austin, who are accompanying him, met their Ukrainian counterparts Dmytro Kuleba and Oleksii Reznikov.

The US president reassured Poland that Nato would defend it from any Russian aggression, telling Andrzej Duda, the president, that the alliance’s mutual defence clause was a sacred commitment.

“We take Article Five as a sacred commitment, not a throwaway, a sacred commitment that relates to every member of Nato,” Biden said during a meeting with Duda in Warsaw. “For your freedom and ours”.

Biden’s comments came ahead of a visit by the US president to a stadium hosting refugees from Ukraine, and after he met top Ukrainian officials to discuss further support for their defence against the Russian invasion, according to the White House.

US officials have suggested Poland could be vulnerable to Russian aggression, though there is no indication of a specific attack.

Biden said that Nato unity would be crucial to helping Ukraine.

The alliance needed to remain “absolutely, completely, thoroughly united” with “no separation in points view,” he said.

“Everything we do we do in unison and everyone comes along,” Biden said.

At a meeting with refugees, Biden called Vladimir Putin a “butcher” and said some the children who had fled Ukraine asked him to say a prayer for their fathers and grandfathers who stayed to fight.

The Ukrainian army said that its forces continued to maintain defensive positions while Russia “continues to regroup and build up forces to resume offensive operations”.

Russia has deployed “almost all” its units stationed in Crimea, which Moscow annexed in 2014, and in some districts of Kherson, Zaporizhzhia and Donetsk, in order “to suppress resistance from residents” of Kherson, Henichesk, Berdyansk and parts of the besieged city of Mariupol, Ukrainian forces said. Kharkiv officials said the city was shelled overnight.

A UK intelligence update said Russia continued to pound Kharkiv, Chernihiv and Mariupol, adding that its forces were “proving reluctant” to engage in large urban infantry operations.

“It is likely that Russia will continue to use its heavy firepower on urban areas as it looks to limit its own already considerable losses, at the cost of further civilian casualties,” the UK ministry of defence said.

Moscow said on Friday it was refocusing its month-long military offensive on the country’s eastern Donbas region. Ukrainian authorities and western officials reacted cautiously to the claim of a change of military strategy.

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