Energy & Precious Metals - Weekly Review and Outlook

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By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com -- Two presidents are taking on very audacious gambles: Vladimir Putin wants Europe to pay for Russia’s gas in rubles while Joe Biden hopes to provide enough barrels of oil at home to stop crude and gasoline prices from going higher.

It’s interesting to see how far both will get.

In Putin’s case, his “pay-in-rubles-or-no-gas” threat comes after the end of the peak winter demand for heating, raising questions of how desperate European buyers could be to comply with his demand.

With spring is progress and summer to follow Moscow could be the one feeling a little hot under the collar here.

Gas is a big foreign exchange earner for the Kremlin.

In the first nine months of 2021, the latest data available from Russian gas producer Gazprom (MCX:GAZP) show revenue from sales to Europe, Turkey and China was 2.5 trillion rubles ($31 billion) from exporting 176 billion cubic meters of gas between January and September.

Should the European Union refuse to play ball with Putin - there are already enough protests to show they won’t - the standoff could drag until meaningful cold returns in late autumn for Europe to feel distressed enough to consider a deal or compromise with Moscow. That could be in November. And if Putin digs his heels in, it could mean seven months of no gas sales to Europe until then.

In that time, Russia might be forced to pump its gas into domestic storage sites that can hold around 72 bcm. Gazprom-owned storage sites in Europe could hold another 9 bcm.

Gazprom expects domestic gas demand to increase to 260 bcm by 2026 from 238 bcm in 2020 and has plans to expand storage.

In the short term, if European gas is redirected to existing storage, it would be full in three to four months and some gas production could then be shut down, damaging long-term growth, analysts said.

"For Russia, a decision to restrict supply would be like shooting itself in the foot," analysts at SEB Research said.

Also, the EU has rules covering measures to prevent and respond to disruption to gas supplies, Reuters reports.

The regulation identifies three levels of crisis: an early warning, an alert, and an emergency. EU countries are required to have plans in place for how they would manage the impact of a supply disruption at the three crisis levels.

In an emergency, European governments can intervene only if market-based measures are insufficient to ensure supplies to households and to customers providing essential services. Each country's plan should define responsibilities for entities including industrial gas consumers at each crisis level, list actions to make gas available in an emergency, and a plan for how countries will cooperate.