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Ukraine may sign memorandum over gas price with Russia by April 14

Moscow and Kiev, which are at loggerheads over a separatist rebellion in east Ukraine, are bound by a 10-year gas agreement signed in 2009 which successive Ukrainian governments say carries an onerous price that weighs heavily on the economy.

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Ukraine, locked in a longstanding pricing row with Russia over gas, hopes to sign a memorandum with Moscow this month on supplies that will run until the end of March 2016, its energy minister said on Wednesday. Russia and its ex-Soviet neighbour agreed last year on a "winter package" for supplies with a price discount of $100 per thousand cubic metres and advance payments, but that accord expired on Tuesday and has yet to be replaced.

"A memorandum will be signed for the whole period until the end of the heating season in 2016," Energy Minister Volodymyr Demchyshyn said. He gave no details on the memorandum, which he expected to be signed by April 14, but said it could include conditions, pricing and volumes of gas.

Moscow and Kiev, which are at loggerheads over a separatist rebellion in east Ukraine, are bound by a 10-year gas agreement signed in 2009 which successive Ukrainian governments say carries an onerous price that weighs heavily on the economy. Although the old deal has expired, the pipes remained open, with Russia's top natural gas producer Gazprom saying on Wednesday that Ukraine had requested 5 million cubic metres of gas for April 1. "Gazprom will fulfil it," said Gazprom spokesman Sergei Kupriyanov.

Previous gas rows between Ukraine and Russia have affected European Union markets, where Gazprom covers a third of gas demand. Around 40% of that gas travels via Ukraine. Earlier on Wednesday European Commission Vice President Maros Sefcovic said he would broker talks in the middle of April and was hopeful of being able to negotiate more favourable terms for Kiev. Russia will extend the gas price discount for Ukraine into the second quarter, TASS news agency reported Russian President Vladimir Putin as saying on Tuesday, but any further decisions would be taken in three months and depend on the price of oil.

A European Commission official, who asked not to be named, welcomed the report. "It is a good and welcome development to see that the Russian government intends to extend the price formula," the official said. Due to the fall in global energy prices, the discounted price Ukraine pays for Russian gas should now be around $250 per thousand cubic metres, according to Ukraine's energy ministry. Demchyshyn said in the past week Ukraine had drawn no more than 10 million cubic metres from reserves, receiving 40-45 mcm in reverse flows from Europe, 55 mcm from its own production and less than 10 mcm from Russia. He said Ukraine's gas market was "balanced", with 7.7 billion cubic metres in storages.  

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