Ukraine blocks transit of Russian gas to Europe, prompting price hike 

 

FILE – Vladimir Putin, who then was Russia's prime minister, autographs a natural gas pipeline in the Russian Far East city of Vladivostok during the pipeline's launch ceremony, Sept. 8, 2011. A contract allowing Russian gas to transit across Ukraine expired Dec. 31, 2024.

European gas prices reached a 15-month high on Thursday after Ukraine blocked the transit of Russian gas across its territory into the European Union.

The Russian state-run firm Gazprom is set to lose more than $5 billion a year following the route\’s closure, which Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called "one of Moscow\’s biggest defeats."

Kyiv will lose about $800 million in transit fees from Moscow.

Despite the rise in gas prices on Thursday, the impact on Europe will likely be limited, said energy analyst Thomas O\’Donnell, a global fellow at the Wilson Center based in Berlin.

"It was all prepared for. It\’s basically all priced in. Of course, there\’s winners and losers to a certain point. Certain countries are more dependent on this than others – Slovakia and Hungary, for example, and Austria," O\’Donnell told VOA.








Embed





Ukraine blocks transit of Russian gas to Europe, forcing up prices




Embed





The code has been copied to your clipboard.


px

px