Photo: EU Commission President, Ursula von der Leyen
EU member states have agreed on an emergency gas plan that aims to soften the impact of a potential total stoppage in Russian gas supplies.
According to German news agency, dpa, on Tuesday, the plan provides for a voluntary 15 per cent reduction in member states’ natural gas consumption between Aug. 1, and March 31, 2023.
The emergency plan also entails a mechanism that would be created to trigger a bloc-wide alert in the event of widespread gas shortages and to implement binding savings targets.
EU diplomats told dpa on Tuesday that the agreement also sees the stringent terms of the commission’s first draft considerably watered down.
Various get-out clauses were introduced and the threshold for the introduction of binding savings targets were also being raised.
Under the terms of the amended agreement, binding savings targets can now only be enforced by the European Council rather than by the EU Commission.
The approval process for the revised plan was due to begin later on Tuesday at a special meeting of EU energy ministers.
Diplomats said that the qualified majority required should be easily achieved.
Exceptions agreed upon would mean that countries including Cyprus, Malta and Ireland would not have to save gas as their gas systems are not directly connected to those of another member state.
Mandatory gas savings can also be reduced in certain circumstances, including when filling gas storage facilities, in the event of power shortages and for the industrial use of gas as a raw material.
Russian energy giant Gazprom, had announced on Monday that it was reducing gas supplies to Germany through Nord Stream 1, from 40 per cent of total capacity to 20 per cent.
Such a scenario was precisely what prompted EU Commission President, Ursula von der Leyen, to submit a proposal for EU-wide gas conservation, a commission spokesperson in Brussels said on Monday evening.
During consultations among EU member states, only four member states expressed major reservations over the gas saving agreement, diplomats said.
Germany is among the countries heavily dependent on Russian gas and is a strong supporter of the emergency plan.
Economy Minister Robert Habeck is expected to attend the ministers’ meeting on behalf of the German government later on Tuesday.