Russia’s Gazprom on Wednesday revealed that its gas exports to countries outside of the former Soviet Union dropped by more than a quarter year-on-year between January and May after losing several European clients.
According to a statement released by the energy giant, exports to countries outside the region totalled 61 billion cubic metres, a 27.6 per cent fall from the same period last year,
Gazprom added that gas deliveries to China via the “Power of Siberia” pipeline were increasing, but it did not provide any figures.
Since Russian President Vladimir Putin sent troops into Ukraine on February 24, Moscow had demanded that clients from “unfriendly countries” – including EU member states, paid for their gas in rubles.
The new requirement was seen as a measure to sidestep Western financial sanctions against Russia’s central bank imposed over Moscow’s offensive in Ukraine.
So far, Poland, Bulgaria, Finland, and the Netherlands have had their natural gas deliveries suspended over refusing to pay in rubles.
EU countries had scrambled to reduce their dependency on Russian energy but were divided about imposing a natural gas embargo as several member states were heavily reliant on Moscow’s energy supplies.