Moldova and Ukraine question on real nature of Nord Stream 2 project
Within his meeting with Andriy Parubiy at the inter-parliamentary conference of the last week, Andrian Candu signed an open letter to the chiefs of the EU Parliaments. Next week the letter will be signed by Lithuania and Poland.
"Last week, within the meeting with my Ukraine colleague, Andriy Parubiy, at the inter-parliamentary conference, I signed an open letter addressed to the leaders of the EU Parliaments regarding our doubts towards NordStream2 pipeline", mentioned Andrian Candu, the President of Parliament.
“The real nature of the Nord Stream 2 project is far from being economic: this is a political initiative by [Vladimir] Putin aimed at destabilising Europe and depressing European countries,” said Andriy Parubiy, chairman of the Ukrainian parliament. He was speaking at an inter-parliamentary conference incorporating Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine which discussed the Eastern Partnership and current security challenges.
“This is a case about which we can speak with one voice,” said Mr Parubiy, underlining the Russian attempt to weaken Ukraine and Moldova.
Russia disagrees. “We support the implementation of this project, which is undoubtedly, absolutely free from politics. This is a purely economic and moreover purely commercial project,” replied Russian President Vladimir Putin after meeting the Austrian chancellor, Sebastian Kurz.
The Nord Stream 2 pipeline calls for the construction of two segments of a pipeline from the Russian coast through the Baltic Sea to Germany. It will have a capacity of 55 billion cubic metres of gas per year. It is currently entirely financed by the Russian energy giant Gazprom, which is also the majority owner together with five other European energy companies from Germany, France, Britain and the Netherlands, informs emerging-europe.com.
Ukraine believes that elaborating a common resistance strategy is a vital necessity, not only for Ukraine, but for Moldova and Georgia but “for the whole free world.”
“There is an acute need to reach a common stance on energy security,” Mr Parubiy said. “Ukraine – and other countries – already feel the consequences of Russia’s energy blackmail.”
“We must create potent institutions and facilities capable of working out operative means of impeding Mr Putin’s information warfare against the free world,” he added.