(Another) Gas Crisis
With another gas crisis between Ukraine and Russia unfolding the first good analysis of the energy sector in Ukraine is published in the current issue of The Washington Quarterly:
Edward Chow and Jonathan Elkind, "Where East Meets West: European Gas and Ukrainian Reality".
The article can be downloaded:
http://www.twq.com/09winter/index.cfm?id=328
Where East Meets West:
European Gas and
Ukrainian Reality
On January 11, 2008, on the eve of the NATO summit meeting in
Bucharest, the Ukrainian president, prime minister, and parliamentary speaker
wrote to Secretary GeneralJaap de Hoop Scheffer, asking that Ukraine be
invited to begin a Membership Action Plan (MAP) leading to membership in
the Alliance.1 In April, the NATO heads of state deferred the issue of MAP for
Ukraine, and fellow aspirant Georgia, saying that progress should be assessed at
the December 2008 NATO ministerial.2 In that same month, after a tumultuous
year of political recriminations and policy deadlock within the ruling coalition,
Ukraine is also scheduled, to have its third pre-term parliamentary election in
three years.
These events shine a harsh spotlight on the current policymaking environment
in Kyiv, and also on the country's longstanding aspiration to join the Euro-
Atlantic community. At present, Ukraine is caught between the old, post-Soviet
world and the new, European one that it says it wants to join. Nowhere is this
clearer and more consequential, both for Ukraine and for the Euro-Atlantic
community, than in Ukraine's natural gas industry. While Ukraine plays a
criticalrol e as the key transit connection between gas producers in Russia as well
as CentralAsia and gas consumers in the EU, its incomplete market economic
transition and culture of corruption weaken its own energy security, destabilize
its economy, destroy public trust in its politics, and undermine the interests of its
European neighbors as well.
# 2009 by the Center for Strategic and InternationalStudies
The Washington Quarterly ¥ 32:1 pp. 7792
Edward Chow is a senior fellow in the CSIS Energy and National Security program and a
former internationaloilindustry executive. He can be reached at EChow@csis.org. Jonathan
Elkind is a nonresident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and previously served on the
staff at the National Security Council. He can be reached at jelkind@brookings.edu.
THE WASHINGTON QUARTERLY/ j JANUARY 2009 77
Worse yet, Ukraine's leverage in the energy
marketplace is eroding rapidly. A Ukraine that
modernizes the practices in its energy sector can
contribute significantly to European security,
stability, and economic prosperity. Yet, this is
not the role that Ukraine has played since 1991
and, even most disappointingly, not the role the
country has played since the dramatic Orange
Revolution brought new leaders to power in
2005. Western leaders who have encouraged
Ukraine's Euro-Atlantic aspirations would be well-advised to examine critically
the current state of Ukraine's gas sector, its implications for the country's
democratic development, and risks for European security as it considers
Ukraine's bid to join the trans-Atlantic community in 2009 and beyond.
Ukraine's Abundant Energy Potential
Ukraine's energy situation is much more complicated and perilous than it should
be. The country has a generous endowment of hydrocarbon resources both
onshore and offshore in the Black Sea. It has a capable energy workforce, and
long experience in the exploration, production, transportation, and refining of
oil and gas. Most prominently, it is strategically located and has large-scale
infrastructure.
Today, roughly 80 percent of the gas being exported from Russia to Europe
crosses Ukrainian territory, roughly 120 billion cubic meters (bcm) per year.
This gas originates variously in Russia and Central Asia, and it passes Ukraine en
route to European clients who are the best-paying customers of the Russian gas
titan, OAO Gazprom. In fact, two-thirds of Gazprom's revenue comes from the
sale of gas that crosses Ukraine, which in turn represents more than 20 percent of
growing European gas demand. Moreover, Ukrainian gas throughput can be
increased by 25 percent, to roughly 150 bcm per year, on a cost-effective basis,
with comparatively modest capital investment relative to all other alternatives.
Ukraine also has strategic strength in the form of other energy transportation
infrastructure. Its oil pipeline network can transmit roughly one million barrels
of oilper day (nearly 7 percent of totalEU demand) to centraland eastern
European destinations. It also has immense gas storage capacity. The country can
store up to 35 bcm of gas (roughly 40 percent of Germany's annualdemand) in
underground gas storage systems, which are mainly located in the west of the
country*/an ideall ocation for serving European gas customers. Gas storage is a
particularly valuable asset because it allows one to match supply, which is
Ukraine is caught
between the old,
post-Soviet world
and the new,
European one.
78 THE WASHINGTON QUARTERLY/ j JANUARY 2009
Edward Chow & Jonathan Elkind
basically constant year-round, and demand, which
often varies widely due to seasonal changes or
other commercialor even strategic factors.
As for its domestic energy production, Ukraine
has severalhydrocarbon producing provinces onshore
and has vast geological potential both onand
offshore. Peak historicalgas production was
68.7 bcm in 1975 (more than the totalconsumption
of Germany, Italy, and the United Kingdom
at that time), compared to the current production
level of 20 bcm. Today there are opportunities for
enhanced oiland gas recovery from Soviet-era
fields plus previously untapped ''greenfield'' opportunities,
especially in deeper producing zones
and in the Black Sea. Industry experts, both inside and outside Ukraine,
commonly believe that with improvements in the overall investment climate
and with the right changes to the legal and regulatory environment, Ukraine
could double its gas production within a decade.
Enduring Energy Insecurity
Despite this resource potential, strategic location, and existing infrastructure, the
country struggles with energy security. The reasons are an incomplete transition
to market economics, chronic underinvestment, and profound opaqueness of
policymaking, which fuels corruption.
Seventeen years after the break-up of the Soviet Union, the energy economy
of independent Ukraine is still frozen in seemingly permanent transition. The
structure of the energy sector, particularly of the oil and gas industry, is a cross
between a Soviet branch ministry and private interest groups. The state-owned
company, NAK Naftohaz Ukrainy, contains many able and knowledgeable
professionals but is overly politicized in leadership, overstaffed, mismanaged,
impoverished, and operates under numerous fundamentalconfl icts of interest.
For example, one of the company's wholly-owned subsidiaries, UkrTransNafta,
operates the country's oil pipelines and is responsible for determining the terms
on which domestic crude oilis accepted into the system for transportation,
including from private oil companies that have invested in exploration and
production (E&P) activities. At the same time, other Naftohaz subsidiaries,
some of which have controlling private owners despite being predominantly
state-owned, are also in the business of extracting crude oil. Naftohaz's subsidiary
UkrTransNafta, therefore, is determining pipeline access for private E&P
investors even as they compete with other Naftohaz subsidiaries.
Ukraine's
corruption and
incomplete
economic
transition weaken
its own energy
security*/and
Europe's.
THE WASHINGTON QUARTERLY/ j JANUARY 2009 79
European Gas and Ukrainian Reality
Price signals, the most fundamental element of a
functioning market, are also profoundly confused and
obscured in the Ukrainian energy sector. For example,
in its current form, the gas industry employs
multi-tier pricing that reduces incentives to conserve
a precious resource and enables flourishing graymarket
trading. In other words, gas from domestic
Ukrainian production is theoretically earmarked for
use by residentialcustomers and government-funded
organizations at a subsidized price, while higherpriced
imported gas is meant to be used for industrialconsumption. Not
surprisingly, this schema is not honored in reality. Politically well-connected
individuals and companies use barter arrangements and re-export schemes to
profit handsomely while injuring the national welfare. Meanwhile, domestic gas
production is depressed by artificially low prices.
Non-transparency reaches its peak in internationalnaturalgas trade and
transit, where the poster child is the shady middleman, RosUkrEnergo (RUE).
The company's role is a political bone of contention in that an entity with no
assets, no track record, and no transparency was placed at the very center of the
Ukrainian gas economy. Moreover, RUE did not even have to compete for this
very lucrative position. It is also important to note that RUE was not the first
mysterious middleman to operate in the Ukrainian gas sector. One therefore
wonders: if RUE is thrown out, as the most senior Ukrainian officials have said
they would like to do, would RUE simply be replaced by another nontransparent
entity despite all declared policy to the contrary for supply contracts
with Gazprom and CentralAsian gas producers?
Similar to its predecessors Itera and EuralTransGaz (ETG), RUE makes a
fortune by re-selling gas in Ukraine and in neighboring central European
countries which has been imported from, or transported across, Russian territory.
Under the January 2006 gas agreement, Ukraine pays RUE in kind by giving it
more than 20 percent of the totaldel ivered gas, which is 15 bcm of the 73 bcm
that were nominally contracted for 2007. The value of the in-kind gas in late
2007 was $4.35 billion, assuming a gas price of $290 per thousand cubic meters
which was a representative price in centraland eastern Europe at the time.
Today, the value of this gas would be substantially higher, based on prevailing
prices for gas. According to numerous press reports and industry rumors, RUE's
ample profits flow into the pockets of well-placed officials in the Russian and
Ukrainian gas industries and governmentalstructures.
The Ukrainian oil and gas sector is dominated, some would say strangled, by
parties that controlinvestment decisions and cash flows, but who are not subject
to the responsibility of ownership. Typically, company owners must comply with
Ukraine's gas
sector presents
risks for
European
security.
80 THE WASHINGTON QUARTERLY/ j JANUARY 2009
Edward Chow & Jonathan Elkind
transparent government regulation and must
exercise discipline in their operations to
deliver financial performance for fear of
being rejected by the capitalmarkets on
which the company depends. Instead, the
parties who controlthe Ukrainian oiland
gas sector use their positions to block
development, to extract economic rent,
and to pick commercialwinners and losers
for their personalconvenience. For example,
only some projects get governmental approvals; only some companies get soughtafter
contracts. Consequently, control over the sector is a major prize in political
contests. When one political bloc is uppermost in national politics, no project
proceeds without the blessing of, and benefits for, people connected with that
bloc. When that group loses the political upper hand, deals are often subject to
renegotiation. At the same time, it becomes the job of each successive political
opposition to block all policy proposals, even the sensible ones, because the
opposition is not profiting. As a result, few major long-term policy initiatives
have been enacted or implemented.
One of the most damaging results of this pattern is chronic underinvestment
in the oiland gas sector. Opportunities to raise production, increase efficiency,
and improve reliability are lost because short investment horizons dominate. In
infrastructure-dependent, capital-intensive, long lead-time industries like oil and
gas, such actions severely damage the prospects for progress and development.
Consequently, the condition of Ukraine's oiland gas industry continues to
deteriorate. In May 2007, for example, one of the main gas transmission lines
near Kyiv experienced a failure and exploded. Had the accident occurred in the
winter, when cold temperatures hike demand and when all gas pipelines operate
at peak levels, the incident could have had a major humanitarian impact.
Instead, it only signaled the risks of underinvestment in operations, maintenance,
and upgrades.
Ukraine consumes between approximately 60 and 75 bcm annually, which
makes it the sixth largest gas consumer in the world, with consumption levels
that are completely out of proportion to the size of its economy.3 Its
consumption equals that of all the Visegrad countries*/Czech Republic,
Hungary, Poland, and Slovakia*/combined. Its energy intensity is not only
higher than Western European countries, but it is twice as high, or twice as
inefficient, as neighboring Poland. Ukrainian officials and lawmakers make
ritualistic comments about the need to reduce energy intensity, but the extent of
realaction is very limited.
Roughly 80 percent
of gas exported from
Russia to Europe
crosses Ukrainian
territory.
THE WASHINGTON QUARTERLY/ j JANUARY 2009 81
European Gas and Ukrainian Reality
Missed Opportunities
In the wake of the 2005 Orange Revolution, President Viktor Yushchenko and
Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko declared high ambitions for energy sector
reform, increasing public expectations. Three years later, none of the stated
intentions and expectations has been met. Most conspicuously, the gas sector
remains as convoluted and impenetrable as ever. In March 2005, Yushchenko
declared that gas trade with Russia would be conducted on a cash basis rather
than through non-transparent in-kind payments. Yet, no proper negotiation
process followed. Throughout the fourth quarter of 2005, tensions over the gas
issue grew, and both Russia and Ukraine resorted to the gas equivalent of saberrattling.
The Russians' version of this high-stakes brinksmanship was to threaten
to cutoff gas supply to Ukraine. The Ukrainian version was to threaten to stop
gas transit to Europe.
On January 1, 2006, Russia's Gazprom reduced gas throughput to Ukraine by
an amount roughly equivalent to what Ukraine would have been entitled to
extract if a contract were in place. In the midst of a bitterly cold winter
throughout Europe, Ukraine apparently retaliated by taking unsanctioned gas
from the pipeline system. Foreign governments, especially in Europe and the
United States, reacted quickly, criticizing the Russian cut-off and calling for the
two sides to reach a negotiated settlement. Early on January 3, Russia returned
the gas pipelines to normal operations, appearing to concede that it had lost the
battle for international public opinion.
On January 4, Naftohaz Chairman Oleksiy Ivchenko and Ukrainian Minister
of Fuels and Energy Ivan Plachkov announced a new gas agreement with
Gazprom and RUE. To those who had been monitoring the mounting crisis, the
agreement was as incomprehensible in its logic as it was unprofessional in its
form. Regrettably, it also established the pattern for two subsequent years of
negotiations. The result of the early 2006 negotiations was unfavorable to
Ukraine inasmuch as it gave away the previously-agreed nominal gas price of
$50 per thousand cubic meters and accepted a nominalprice of $95. In exchange
for this concession, Ukraine did not receive an agreed pricing formula for future
years, which would have removed the opportunity for politically-charged
eleventh-hour negotiations. Nor did Ukraine receive agreement on a period
for transition to higher prices or a long-term, ship-or-pay volume guarantee from
the Russian side, nor any other enforceable contract provisions. Instead, the
RUE import monopoly was expanded, and its non-transparent in-kind payment
further entrenched.
Late in 2006, under a new government led by Prime Minister Viktor
Yanukovich of the Party of Regions, Ukraine accepted a nominalprice of
$130 per thousand cubic meters for 2007. Late in 2008, the nominalprice rose to
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Edward Chow & Jonathan Elkind
$179.50, again without normalinternational contract protections. During the
same period, both Belarus and Bulgaria successfully negotiated multi-year gas
supply agreements with pricing mechanisms and multi-year periods for transition
to ''European'' pricing levels with Russia. Neither of these countries has
negotiating leverage comparable to Ukraine's, leverage which reflects the fact
that 120 bcm of gas transit Ukraine annually from Russia to European
consumers. For reasons that are inexplicable as a matter of basic negotiating
leverage, Ukraine failed to secure self-protection that less powerful neighbors
managed to secure with Gazprom.
Ukraine claims to receive gas, while Russia claims to sell gas, at nominal
prices that do not correspond with reality. These nominal prices have deceived
the Ukrainian public into thinking they were getting a better deal than they are,
and have created a disincentive to engage in gas sector modernization, a faulty
logic that is based on the fear that Ukraine could not survive economically if it
were required to pay European gas prices. False prices and faulty contract
compliance also allowed the Russian side to accumulate debt obligations from
Ukrainian entities, thus setting the stage for predatory buy-outs by entities with
the right connections (whether Russian, Ukrainian, or other).
The mechanism used to mask these false prices is simple. According to the
terms of the January 2006 agreement, Ukraine pays a stated price (initially
$95 per thousand cubic meters, then $130 for 2007, and $179.50 for 2008) to
import up to 58 bcm of gas per year (roughly three-quarters of Ukrainian
demand). To receive that volume of gas for domestic use, Ukraine must actually
buy 73 bcm of gas, out of which 15 bcm is transferred to RUE for the ''service'' of
delivering the total volume of gas to Ukraine. As a result, the actual price paid
by Ukraine is significantly higher than the nominal price, since approximately
one of every five cubic meters that Ukraine purchased (15 of 73 bcm) is actually
being turned over to RUE, with its beneficialowners pocketing the handsome
profits.
In 2007, gas was selling in several central and Western European countries for
around $290 per thousand cubic meters on a delivered basis.4 In that same year,
Ukraine paid the nominalprice of $130 per thousand cubic meters for 56 bcm of
gas that was said to be sourced from CentralAsia, and Ukraine paid $230 for a
further 17 bcm that was said to be sourced from Russia. In aggregate, Ukraine
paid $11.19 billion for 73 bcm in 2007. In exchange for that aggregate sum,
Ukraine actually received only 56 bcm of gas for its own consumption, making
the price Ukraine effectively paid in 2007 for each thousand cubic meter of the
usable gas $192.93, not $130. Similarly, the real price in 2008 that corresponds
to the nominalprice of $179.50 is roughly $240 per thousand cubic meters.
For RUE, this arrangement has been exceptionally lucrative. RUE has been
able to re-sell at European market value the gas it receives as an in-kind transfer.
THE WASHINGTON QUARTERLY/ j JANUARY 2009 83
European Gas and Ukrainian Reality
Certain Ukrainian industrialand export customers
are willing to pay close to full value, which means
that RUE can pocket literally billions of dollars
per year.5 The reason behind RUE's preferential
place in the Eurasian gas trade has never been
explained in comprehensible terms. Gazprom and
Russian government officials have always blamed
the Ukrainians while the Ukrainians have always
blamed the Russians. Nonetheless, the simple fact
is that Gazprom allowed billions of dollars of value
to flow into the pockets of a group of middlemen
without demonstrable industry expertise and without
compensating Gazprom's shareholders, or Russian taxpayers, in any
commensurate way. And the Ukrainian government and Naftohaz allowed
RUE to occupy an absolutely central place in the Ukrainian economy, earning
billions from the role, without ever having had to compete for the role or prove
its capabilities in any way.
From time to time since 2005, Ukrainian officials have proudly asserted that
they have extemporized skillfully, allowing their country to buy time and adjust
gradually to higher gas prices. Unfortunately, such claims ring hollow. Three
years after the arrivalof Yushchenko and the Orange forces, the gas sector is no
more transparent than it was in 2004, when RUE's role was more limited. As of
2008, Ukraine still lacks the stability and predictability that would come from
long-term gas contracts. Ukraine also lacks the protections that would come
from an international-style agreement that includes all the standard provisions
that Gazprom routinely negotiates and concludes with its German, French, or
centralEuropean counterparties*/provisions such as take-or-pay obligations for
gas buyers, ship-or-pay obligations for shippers, price adjustment mechanisms,
clear arbitration provisions, and many more.
Over the past three years, Ukraine's negotiating leverage has eroded greatly.
Gazprom is three years closer to its objective of commissioning bypass pipelines
that will allow it to transport more of its gas to Europe without having to cross
Ukraine. Blue Stream, which passes under the Black Sea to Turkey, is operating
at capacity while Nord Stream, which is meant to cross the Baltic to Germany, is
proceeding, though not without a number of headaches. And South Stream,
which is planned to pass under the Black Sea to Bulgaria, is now under
development. All three of these routes will bypass Ukraine entirely.
Even without these pipelines being completed, Ukraine's leverage is rapidly
eroding. Naftogaz's chronic and massive indebtedness*/it is currently in
technical default of its international bond obligations*/makes Gazprom the
only potential purchaser of its remaining valuable assets, namely the trunk gas
Three years after
the Orange
Revolution, the
gas sector is no
more transparent
than it was.
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Edward Chow & Jonathan Elkind
pipeline and storage facilities. Gazprom's dominant position gives Russia the
possibility of taking over Ukraine's decaying infrastructure and strengthening its
controlover gas exports to Europe, including those from CentralAsia, even
without having to construct all the bypass pipelines it is planning.
Although gas trade and transit carries the greatest international impact, they
are not the only parts of the Ukrainian energy sector that remain distorted and
dysfunctional. Domestic production is stagnant to declining at the time when it
should be booming. Investment in exploration and production of Ukraine's oil
and gas resources, which could have been substantial at a time of historically
high internationalprices and constrained access to new prospects, has amounted
to a trickle at best.
The sole international competitive bidding for new development that
occurred in this entire period, for the Prikerchenskiy offshore block in the
Black Sea, has been a classic case of non-transparency, rent-seeking, and
professional incompetence. First, in 2005, Ukrainian officials deliberately chose
not to employ standard marketing techniques that are universally recognized as
proven approaches to increase industry awareness of new prospects, and thus
increase potentialbids from competing companies. Then in 2006, with the
country experiencing political turmoil associated with imminent parliamentary
elections, bids were collected under an ill-conceived process, and a small
independent American oilcompany with modest experience in offshore west
Africa, Vanco, was announced the tender winner.
In late 2007, with yet another new Ukrainian government about to arrive, the
terms of the production sharing agreement (PSA) were concluded and
formalized by the outgoing government. The timing struck knowledgeable
industry observers as unusual, a long-term deal concluded in haste by a lameduck
government just before its departure. Most observers assumed the deal
would be overturned by an incoming government, and unfortunately they were
proven right. In May 2008, it was officially revealed that Vanco's Pricherchenskiy
investor group includes the Ukrainian firm Donbass Fuel and Energy
Complex (DTEK), which is owned by Ukraine's richest man, Rinat Akhmetov,
the force behind the now-out-of-power Regions Party of Ukraine, as well as
other mysterious entities whose ownership and expertise have never been
revealed. The second Tymoshenko government, in turn, cancelled Vanco's
license, allegedly due to problems in the fairness and adequacy of the tender
process and license terms, which then led to an open disagreement between
Yushchenko and Tymoshenko. In the summer of 2008, Vanco announced it
would take the matter to international arbitration. The deputy head of the
presidentialsecretariat stated to the press: ''We do not have the right to revoke
the license unilaterally.''6
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European Gas and Ukrainian Reality
This entire experience calls into question Ukraine's interest in attracting
transparent foreign investment into its upstream oiland gas industry. Despite
numerous efforts, no major foreign investor has been able to achieve any success
in Ukraine's upstream oiland gas sector, including RoyalDutch Shelland
Marathon. The nature of the current investment climate should ring alarm bells
in the ears of Ukrainian policymakers along with the leaders of the Euro-
Atlantic community. If developing the country's domestic hydrocarbon
resources is a priority for Ukraine, as it should be, and if foreign investment is
essentialto the country's ability to develop those resources in a timely manner,
and it is, then it is important to acknowledge that, at present, the investment
climate of Ukraine is highly unattractive.
Improving Ukraine's Oil and Gas Sector
Currently, Ukraine's oil and gas sector is being operated in a completely
dysfunctional manner. Yet, there are several beneficiaries, well-positioned
individuals and key political forces, milking the energy sector, particularly the
oiland gas industry, for personalenrichment and as sources for politicalfunds.
The present state of affairs underscores the most essentialprerequisite for change
in Ukraine's oil and gas sector: political will. The needs of the nation, for today
and tomorrow, are consistently overridden by short-term political expediency
and personalgain, creating a corrosive effect on the entire politicalsystem, as it
contributes to a broad loss of faith in the political process among the Ukrainian
public. The open and free press that has exposed the corruption underlying the
oil and gas industry, however, is one of the truly important and hopefully lasting
changes after the Orange Revolution. Today's energy policy, which serves the
interests of certain political elites rather than the country, poses imminent
danger to the nation, yet it is not being addressed with any sense of urgency. To
date, no political faction has demonstrated a willingness to put aside parochial
interests for the good of the nation, a reality that must be changed if Ukraine is
to pursue membership in the Euro-Atlantic community.
As experience around the globe will attest, sound energy policymaking is a
difficult task. The United States, and many other political cultures that are far
more settled than Ukraine, struggle to make good choices in energy policy.
Effective energy policy requires political leadership, economic analysis, public
dialogue, consensus building, commercial awareness, planning, and professional
execution, not the enunciation of lofty goals. Energy policy should be based on
sound priorities, action plans, intermediate objectives, and realistic timetables.
At present, Ukrainian officials betray a lack of seriousness on energy strategy,
which undercuts the ability of commercial and public decisionmakers to plan
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Edward Chow & Jonathan Elkind
energy-related aspects of their future, and reinforces already high public cynicism
about the mishandling of the energy sector.
Gas supply and transit, which have been the source of so much controversy
and intrigue since Ukrainian independence, must form the core of a sound
Ukrainian energy strategy. Ukraine could credibly set the goal of reducing its
reliance on imported gas from the current level of approximately 75 percent to
50 percent within the next five to seven years. Achieving this objective would
require a range of efforts, some related to domestic supply and some to demand.
On the demand side, there is great scope for helping Ukrainians, particularly
those living in multi-family apartment buildings, to simultaneously reduce their
gas consumption and improve their comfort as well as quality of life by investing
in energy efficiency. Another essentialaspect of this initiative would be to
reduce gas consumption by allowing gas prices to increase to full-cost recovery
levels and by enforcing payment discipline. This is important because allowing
the accumulation of gas debts only makes Ukraine vulnerable to highly
disadvantageous debt-equity swaps.
In addition to reducing gas consumption, Ukraine could increase its domestic
gas production. Eliminating multi-tiered pricing would encourage new domestic
production, because domestic production is currently designated for sale to
residentialand budgetary-institution consumers, but at only a fraction of the true
market value. The current practice discourages domestic production and
subsidizes higher-priced imports.
For gas transit, Ukraine's goal should focus on stabilizing its contractual
relationship with Russia. At present, Ukrainian officials constantly declare that
their country is a reliable transit partner, but a short conversation with virtually
any European gas industry executive will reveal that this self-perception does not
correspond to the understanding of industry experts outside Ukraine. Nearly
seventeen years of post-Soviet experience have taught Europeans that Ukraine is
the part of the supply chain that often leads to disputes, mutual recriminations,
and endless charges and counters charges. It is the weak link. It is hardly
surprising that many Europeans conclude that it is better to pay lip-service to the
idea of closer gas-related engagement with Ukraine rather than formulate
policies that would lead to such engagement. At present, because of the legacy of
Soviet-style gas contracts, Ukraine is Russia's problem to manage. And Europe
does not appear to object to this reality.
Ukraine can transform its reputation by developing policies that aim to
improve its reliability as a transit partner. A first step would be to engage in a
systematic internationally-sanctioned assessment of the condition and investment
requirements of the Ukrainian internationalgas transit system (IGTS).
The assessment could identify opportunities to increase operating efficiency and
reduce bottlenecks, serving as the basis for increasing Ukraine's transit revenue
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European Gas and Ukrainian Reality
by increasing throughput volume, and not by extorting higher transit tariffs as is
often proposed by Ukrainian officials. Such a technical audit would be welcome
and possibly funded by the donor community. Needed capital improvements can
be financed by internationalcredit according to modern business standards.
Ukrainian officials often complain that transit across their country is
substantially less expensive than across many other European countries which
occupy a far less strategic position in the supply chain, a fact borne out by
analysis conducted by the Energy Charter Secretariat, among others. Transit
across Ukraine, however, comes with an uncertainty premium that the market is
no longer willing to bear. Ukraine would be better advised to build market
confidence and increase its transit revenues by increasing volume first and only
later by increasing transit fees if such increases can be justified by investments to
improve reliability and increase capacity in the Ukrainian IGTS.
Five Steps to Energy Sector Stability
To achieve the priorities outlined above, Kyiv can take five steps that will help
stabilize Ukraine's energy sector. First, Ukraine should seriously and professionally
negotiate with Russia to reach new long-term agreements on gas supply and
transit. At this writing, representatives of Naftohaz and the Government of
Ukraine continue to negotiate with Russian officials and Gazprom over a future,
multi-year gas agreement and a gas price for 2009. Senior officials from the
presidentialsecretariat and the Tymoshenko government continue to use the gas
issue as a cudgelto attack each other in hopes of scoring politicalpoints. This is
not only unproductive for the country but is also damaging efforts that aim to
improve Ukraine's reputation as a serious and reliable transit country. It is not
clear from press reports whether Ukrainian representatives are pursuing a clear
negotiating strategy that is informed by expert analysis and supported by duly
experienced professionals in fields such as international business practice, law,
and finance, or are simply building on old and inefficient policies and practices.
In any case, it is hard to imagine why Russia would agree to a firm contract prior
to the upcoming, pre-term parliamentary election in Ukraine. Yet, Ukraine's
winter gas supply and Europe's gas imports depend on agreements that expire on
December 31, 2008.
Second, Ukraine needs to transform the state-owned company Naftohaz into
a functioning commercialconcern. Naftohaz dominates the Ukrainian oiland
gas industry in the style of a Soviet branch ministry, and consequently simply
hemorrhages money. The fact that Naftohaz remains dominant, despite its
consistent financial losses, reflects a conscious dual choice on the part of
successive rounds of Ukrainian legislators, cabinets, prime ministers, and
88 THE WASHINGTON QUARTERLY/ j JANUARY 2009
Edward Chow & Jonathan Elkind
presidents: first, the choice not to address the
utter insolvency of the oil and gas sector and,
second, the choice to engage in asset-stripping
and rent-seeking.
Naftohaz is on the brink of bankruptcy due
to the absence of necessary and crucialreforms
in areas like gas pricing. The company is
responsible for buying gas for the needs of
Ukraine's population, governments, and some
industry, but is unable to collect payment from
consumers in amounts sufficient to replace the consumed gas and operate the
delivery system. As a result, Naftohaz's finances have reached the breaking
point. It borrows expensively in the debt markets, paying a high premium
because of its non-transparent business practices and precarious financial
position, and uses the funds for current operations instead of capitalimprovements.
The cycle repeats until Naftohaz is declared to be on the verge of
bankruptcy, at which point the government finally steps in and bails out the
company, declaring it to be too important to fail. The government then changes
absolutely nothing in the way Naftohaz operates, and the whole corrupted
process starts over again. Naftohaz received a bailout in early 2008 as the current
government entered office but went right back to losing money hand over fist.
By summer, a new bailout was already under discussion, and by early October, a
new bailout priced at $1.7 billion was announced.7 Unfortunately, there is no
reason to believe that the pattern will not repeat itself yet again.
To end this vicious cycle, Naftohaz must be subjected to fiscal discipline. It
needs to be able to charge its customers nothing less than the actual cost of the
delivered fuel. In addition, Naftohaz and all its lenders must be informed that
there will be no further government bailouts of the company. Naftohaz's
operations must be rid of non-core functions, and inherent conflicts among the
various Naftohaz functions must be resolved once and for all. In the long run, the
essentialfunctions of energy production, transportation, and distribution will
need to be unbundled, consistent with European reform efforts, and with
creating a competitive market. In short, Naftohaz must be transformed so that it
is no longer a big black hole.
Third, RUE and other middleman firms must be removed. These firms impose
a hidden cost not only on Ukraine but also on Russian taxpayers and Gazprom
shareholders. RUE also introduces serious risks and instability into the European
gas supply chain. In late April 2008, press reports about a possible new
Ukrainian-Russian gas dealindicated that RUE was to be removed, with all
wholesale gas to be purchased by Naftohaz while independent gas traders would
serve the intermediary function between Naftohaz and end users. Depending on
In the long run,
energy production,
transportation, and
distribution need to
be unbundled.
THE WASHINGTON QUARTERLY/ j JANUARY 2009 89
European Gas and Ukrainian Reality
implementation, this arrangement could open
opportunities for new intermediary companies to
establish themselves in the same way as RUE and
others did, with all the attendant risks that are
discussed above.
Fourth, Ukraine should promote efficiency by
reforming pricing and helping consumers use less
gas. The danger in multi-tier wholesale gas pricing
is that domestically-produced gas, which is nominally
designated for public and household consumption,
may get sold on the gray market to
domestic industrialusers or export buyers who are
willing to pay European prices. These illicit sales fuel corruption and muffle the
market signalthat would otherwise promote increased domestic production and
decreased consumption. Serious pricing reform is required*/based on a sensible,
transparent, and easily understandable rate methodology that allows gas
producers or sellers to recoup their costs plus a reasonable rate of return.
Price formation will require capable and independent regulators to operate in
a publicly transparent fashion so that the interests of producers and consumers
are adequately balanced and duly protected. Price reform will mean higher prices
all across the Ukrainian economy, which means the potential for negative
impacts on the poor, namely those least able to pay higher prices. In order to
lessen the impact on the poor, Ukraine should follow the example of other
eastern and centralEuropean countries that have already undergone price
reform. Energy efficiency programs can help reduce the energy consumption of
residentialand institutionalbuil dings as a first priority. Lending programs can be
created, expanded, or strengthened to allow Ukrainian industry to borrow money
in order to invest in upgrades for plants and equipment. And targeted assistance
can be introduced to alleviate the burden on those legitimately unable to pay.
The current system unfortunately operates in the interest of well-connected gas
consumers and penalizes the poor who suffer shortages*/making reform a
necessity.
Finally, Ukraine needs to improve its investment climate for exploration and
production of hydrocarbons. If naturalresource endowments were the only
relevant factor, Ukraine would be able to produce significantly greater quantities
of oiland gas than it does today. Significant improvement to the business
climate, however, is required to attract the investment of billions of dollars
needed for serious upstream development. Ukrainian energy legislation and
regulation will need to be updated to correspond with norms found elsewhere
around the globe. The updated system will need to provide for fair access to
geologic data, transparent decisionmaking processes, longer licensing periods,
The essential
prerequisite for
change in
Ukraine's oil and
gas sector is
political will.
90 THE WASHINGTON QUARTERLY/ j JANUARY 2009
Edward Chow & Jonathan Elkind
use of model contracts, and truly competitive tenders. In other words, almost all
of today's standard practices, which are optimized for insiders and those paying
for inside access, would need to be replaced. This will take time. Meanwhile,
Ukraine will need a success story or a demonstration case that can prove the
country's new political will to encourage upstream investment.
The Key to Euro-Atlantic Aspirations
Ukraine is a country generously endowed with many assets. Its well-educated
population of 46 million, industrial and technological prowess, huge agricultural
potential, and cultural wealth all make it a natural candidate for the Euro-
Atlantic community, if that is the wish of its people. The current form of the
country's energy sector, however, needs to be seen for what it is, a major threat
to itself and to its neighbors. If Ukraine fails to modernize its energy sector
practices, the sector will continue to undermine Ukrainian politics, economy,
and energy security. Most importantly, it will threaten Europe's own energy
security.
Ukraine has the potential to change this story line. Friendly governments and
international institutions can help with capacity building for effective policy
execution, but only after the political will for energy reform is in place. Serious
energy sector reform would not only help Ukraine but would also stabilize the
economic undergirding of all European gas importing countries. In this sense,
serious energy reform would arguably be Ukraine's single most important
contribution to improve the security of the trans-Atlantic community. On the
other hand, continuing failure to engage in energy reform, when the high stakes
are so obvious to all, would be a clear signal that Ukraine is not ready to pursue
its stated desire of becoming a more integralpart of the Euro-Atlantic
community.
Notes
1. Press Office of President Viktor Yushchenko, ''Joint Address to NATO Secretary
General'', January 11, 2008, http://www.president.gov.ua/en/news/8645.html.
2. Bucharest Summit Declaration, April 3, 2008, http://www.nato.int/docu/pr/2008/p08-
049e.html.
3. Gas consumption figures drawn from the BP StatisticalReview of World Energy 2008,
available at http://www.bp.com/productlanding.do?categoryId6929&contentId704
4622. GDP figures are purchasing power parity estimates, drawn from CIA's World
Factbook, available at https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/in
dex.html.
4. To compare (in a rough manner) the price of gas delivered to a given European country
X and the price of gas delivered to Ukraine, one needs to subtract from the gas price in
country X the price of transit from Ukraine's eastern border to country X. For example,
THE WASHINGTON QUARTERLY/ j JANUARY 2009 91
European Gas and Ukrainian Reality
in January 2007 Russian gas delivered to France cost on the order of $295 per thousand
cubic meters. If one deducts gas costs of transit between Russia and France, the
comparable price in Ukraine would have been roughly $230. This is only an indicative
comparison and should not be interpreted as implying that there is a standard or an
''accepted'' gas price in Europe. Gas prices under a given contract reflect the full range of
factors from competitive gas supply to quantity of demand, and from available alternative
fuels to skill of the commercial negotiators.
5. Since Ukrainian regulators never based their rate-making calculations on the actual
price of gas (rather, they used the nominal price for their calculations) Ukrainian
customers never paid the actualrepl acement cost of the gas they consumed. This fact
allowed debt to pile up, which then provided the basis for more non-transparent deals.
6. ''Ukraine president suspends cabinet's decision to controltop state companies,'' BBC
Monitoring KievUnit, May 20, 2008.
7. Alexander Bor, ''Ukraine Orders $1.7