Puppet Masters
In an interview with the WirtschaftsBlatt newspaper, Roiss said that it's unrealistic to suggest that Austria, which receives a third of its gas from Gazprom, and Europe as a whole, would be able to cope without Russian supplies.
"If we can obtain large amounts of gas from a particular region, then we need to give investors the chance to build gas highways," he explained. "Negotiations for South Stream should therefore be accelerated, but not put on ice."
The South Stream project must "undoubtedly" comply with European Law, but "there can be exceptions in some areas," Roiss added.
According to the OMV chief, it's up to Gazprom to negotiate those "exceptions" with the European Union authorities.
Roiss was speaking ahead of Vladimir Putin's visit to Vienna on Tuesday, which would see OMV and Gazprom signing a deal on bringing the South Stream gas pipeline to Austria as was agreed in April.
The differences in the approach to the events in crisis-hit Ukraine have led to tension over South Stream between the EU and Russia.
The European Union is trying to stall the project until it complies with Europe's Third Energy Package. In Europe, pipelines can't be owned and operated by the same company, and according to the law Gazprom can only own 50 percent of the project.
The South Stream gas pipeline is aimed at supplying Russian gas to Europe without crossing Ukraine, which isn't seen as a reliable transit partner.
The OMV head stressed that "one should not make this economic integration into a political football, because our economy and prosperity are based on it."
Roiss believes that the current pan-European market of gas highways "isn't working" as EU needs more pipelines to provide "a real cross-border flow."
"Two highways are better than one, three are better than two and four are better than three," he explained.
Austria's Foreign Minister, Sebastian Kurz, also confirmed on Monday that Austria remains committed to the South Stream gas pipeline project.
"We need not only more suppliers, but also more variety in the routes that energy can flow to us," Kurz is cited by Reuters.
According to the FM, five European Union member states have firmly backed the South Stream gas pipeline project.
Comment: Austria seems to be taking a realistic view of its needs as a country, and appears to be positioning itself to make a deal with Russia's Gazprom, regardless of what the EU thinks.
Reader Comments
The Ukraine is being put on the ice, bypassed and free-traded into the Ice Age of Economics.
So much for the EU hands of friendship. It's every nation for themselves.
Stupid Kiev doesn't get it. They are what's for dinner.
When EU will be freezing in the cold, because of much less gas coming from Ukraine, then they will see their error, the US induced sick high-fever that ruled their minds until this winter.







'Put on ice' is truly a good way of describing a European winter without Russian gas...