Uzbekistan rejects Russian 'gas union' plan
Uzbekistan’s energy minister on Wednesday poured cold water on a Russian proposal for a “gas union” including the Central Asian country, saying Tashkent would not agree to political conditions that would jeopardise its national interests, Reuters reported.
Russia said last month it was discussing a gas union with Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan to support shipments between the three countries and to other buyers including China.
It is part of a shift in Moscow’s strategy since its invasion of Ukraine, which prompted the European Union to sharply cut its reliance on Russian energy.
But the Uzbek minister, Jorabek Mirzamahmudov, said Uzbekistan had yet to receive the proposal.
“Even if a gas agreement is concluded with Russia, this does not mean a union,” he said. Negotiations were being conducted to deliver Russian gas by pipeline via Kazakhstan but this would be a “technical contract”, not a union.
“If we import gas from another country, we cooperate only based on a commercial, sales contract. We will never agree to political conditions in exchange for gas. In short, we will get the gas contract offered to us only if we agree to it, otherwise not,” he said.
Uzbekistan remains partly dependent on foreign gas, however. The country, including the capital Tashkent, has experienced gas shortages over the last few days as consumption has spiked due to a cold spell.
Mirzamahmudov said the cold snap had forced Uzbekistan to halt exports of 6 million cubic metres of gas a day to China.