FACTBOX: How is Ukraine coping with the gas cut-off?
(Reuters) - Russia cut gas supplies for Ukraine on New Year's Day over a dispute about 2009 gas prices and unpaid debts.
The following is a factbox on how Ukraine is coping with the gas cut-off during freezing temperatures that have fallen in Kiev to minus 20 degrees Celsius (minus 5 F):
DOMESTIC CONSUMPTION:
Ukraine currently consumes about 260 million cubic meters (mcm) a day, of which 200 mcm/day comes from reserves and 60 mcm/day comes from domestic gas production.
Ukraine's Energy Ministry said Ukraine consumed 59.3 billion cubic meters (bcm) of gas in 2008, plus about 7 bcm of "technical" gas to keep the transit pipeline system working.
In 2008, Ukraine imported 47.9 bcm from Russia at a cost of $8.61 billion.
RESERVES:
Ukraine's state energy company Naftogaz says it has 16.5 billion cubic meters of gas in reserves. That could last Ukraine over two months, based on average consumption rates.
HOUSEHOLDS:
Households so far have not been affected by the Russian gas cut-off. Naftogaz said heating should not be affected by the dispute.
Heating in towns and cities in Ukraine is carried out by central heating utilities which pipe hot water into homes and flats. In villages, many Ukrainians still use wood and coal to heat their homes during the freezing winter months.
In December, some local utilities in Ukraine briefly had their gas cut because they had failed to pay their bills, leading to heating problems for some households.
INDUSTRY:
Ukraine's government said on January 6 it had ordered some regional utilities to start using fuel oil instead of gas. It said the government would soon start importing fuel oil, though it has so far given no idea of how much it would seek to import.
"Regions have been ordered ... to take necessary measures to prepare and move all heat generation companies to work on reserve fuel -- fuel oil," the government said.
"A government decision is being prepared which will cover the purchase of necessary fuel oil volumes abroad," it said. Continued...
Analysis
Karzai image in tatters
Just how far Hamid Karzai's reputation has fallen is summed up by a cartoon in the Economist, which shows the newly re-elected Afghan leader seated at a table -- between Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Robert Mugabe. Full Article



