Tag: natural gas in the Black Sea

  • Steps to secure Romania’s energy independence

    Steps to secure Romania’s energy independence

    With significant reserves of oil and gas, Romania is less reliant on Russia in this respect compared to other countries in the free world, and thus less vulnerable to Moscows unpredictable power plays. The Black Sea is home to large quantities of natural gas, with an untapped estimated volume of 200 billion cubic meters. The largest volume is found in the Neptun Deep perimeter, currently exploited by the Romanian state-owned enterprise Romgaz and the Austrian company OMV Petrom. The country also has a relatively new nuclear power plant at Cernavodă, in the southeast, with two functional reactors and another two that are currently operationalized.



    Our country has wind farms as well as a generous hydrographic network, favoring the building of hydroelectric power plants. Apart from these assets, Romania also has robust partnerships with EU and NATO Member States, who are also taking steps to secure their energy independence from Russia. Greece has recently inaugurated a hub for storing and transporting natural gas, which will cover not just its domestic demand, but will also help provide natural gas to other countries in the region, the Prime Minister of Greece, Kyriakos Mitsotakis said on Thursday on the sidelines of his meeting with his Romanian counterpart, Nicolae Ciucă. The two officials discussed about the gas interconnector linking Greece to Bulgaria and which is expected to transport up to three billion cubic meters of gas per year. The gas will be transported from Anatolia, in Turkey or from the Adriatic Sea, all the way to Bulgaria and Romania. Prime Minister Ciucă said Bucharest in turn will be able to redirect the gas transports to its eastern partners, the former Soviet republics of Ukraine and Moldova, whose pro-Western regimes have often been pressured by the Russian Federation, which uses its gas exports to these countries as leverage.



    Also on Thursday, Prime Minister Nicolae Ciucă met with John L. Hopkins, the president and CEO of the American company NuScale. The White House announced on June 26 that the United States government and the Oregon-based company will offer 14 million USD to support engineering and feasibility studies aimed at helping Romania build an SMR power plant. The Small Modular Reactor technology is not currently used in Europe, and the former thermal power plant in Doicești, Dâmbovița County (south) has been selected to host the first of the six modules expected to be built. Romania wants to become a regional hub for producing energy using SMR technologies, and the authorities have promised the first unit will be finalized by 2030. (VP)


  • May 18, 2022

    May 18, 2022

    WAR IN UKRAINE
    – Russia is pressing the attack in Ukrainian oblasts and intensifying its
    provocative actions in the borderlands, thus trying to offset a series of
    military failures, Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky said in his
    traditional address to the nation on Tuesday evening. In turn, Defense Minister
    Oleksy Reznikov said the war against Moscow is entering an extended stage,
    whereby the Russian Federation is trying to gain full control over Donbas and
    occupy the south of Ukraine. The Ukrainian Minister called on Ukraine’s Western
    allies to coordinate their deliveries of weapons to Kyiv. Today, the
    Prosecutor’s Office is bringing to court the first Russian soldier accused of
    having shot an unarmed civilian. This is the first war crimes trial in Ukraine,
    although many others are expected to follow, and will mark a test for the
    Ukrainian judiciary, at a time when international institutions are starting
    their own investigations into the war crimes committed by Russian troops in
    this country, AFP reports.




    ICJ -
    Romanian has decided to intervene in Ukraine’s favor at the UN International
    Court of Justice in the legal action launched against the Russian Federation,
    the Romanian Foreign Ministry announced today. On February 26, 2022, Ukraine
    filed a suit against the Russian Federation at the ICJ, regarding the interpretation,
    enforcement and compliance with the obligations stipulated in the 1948 Genocide
    Convention. According to the MFA, Ukraine claimed the Russian Federation has
    falsely reported genocide in the Luhansk and Donetsk oblasts in order to
    justify the recognition of the self-proclaimed People’s Republics of Donetsk
    and Luhansk, as well as to carry out a special military operation against
    Ukraine. Based on these false allegations, the Russian Federation is to date
    engaged in a military invasion of Ukraine, with serious and large-scale effects
    on human rights and humanitarian international law, the Romanian MFA also
    writes.




    NATO -
    Finland and Sweden have today submitted their formal applications to join NATO.
    Tomorrow, Sweden’s Prime Minister, Magdalena Andresson and Finland’s president,
    Sauli Niinisto will travel to Washington to meet US president Joe Biden. Amidst
    Russia’s continuous threats regarding reprisals in the event of the two countries’
    NATO accession, the main obstacle seems to come from within NATO itself.
    Turkey, whose vote is essential to officially admit Sweden and Finland into
    NATO, has so far opposed this scenario, blaming the two countries for refusing
    its requests to extradite persons whom Turkey believes to be members of terrorist
    organizations, such as the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), as well as for
    suspending weapons exports to Turkey. Analysts believe Turkey is trying to gain
    leverage for voting in favor of the two countries’ NATO accession, such as
    lifting the USA’s refusal to sell F-35 fighter jets to Ankara.




    OFFSHORE LAW -
    The Chamber of Deputies in Bucharest has today adopted the draft law amending
    the Offshore Law. With 248 votes in favor and 34 votes against, the new law
    will allow the exploitation of natural gas deposits in the Black Sea. Whereas
    the ruling coalition made up of PSD, PNL and UDMR supported the new law,
    arguing it safeguards Romania’s energy security, AUR, a nationalist opposition
    party, criticized the law, claiming it provides benefits without any sanctions
    for investors. Energy Minister Virgil Popescu says the exploitation works in
    the Black Sea will produce more natural gas than Romania will be able to
    consume, saying that the additional revenues obtained as a result must be
    directed towards investments. Representatives of the Oil and Gas Federation
    said the new offshore law has been substantially improved and is based on
    stability, predictability, competitive taxation and the free market.




    MINIMUM WAGE
    – The Government is today expected to pass an emergency decree allowing
    employers to operate a tax-free increase in the minimum wage. The measure will
    take effect starting June 1 and is part of the Support for Romania package,
    designed to combat the negative effects of the price hikes. Workers with
    full-time individual employment agreements are eligible for the wage increase,
    as well as people who are hired over June 1 – December 31, 2022. Basically,
    employees can opt to increase the minimum wage from 510 to 550 Euro.




    MILITARY COMMITTEES – The
    Romanian Chief of General Staff, General Daniel Petrescu is attending the
    meeting of the European Union Military Committee and the NATO Military
    Committee, both held in Brussels until May 19. The agenda of today’s EUMC meeting
    includes the implementation of the Strategic Compass, the document regulating
    the EU’s defense and security framework until 2025, the effects of the war in
    Ukraine as well as the EU’s top priorities in the field of defense and
    security. The NATO meeting scheduled for tomorrow will discuss the geostrategic
    context and preparations for the NATO Summit in Madrid. NATO Defense Ministers
    will also look the developments in Ukraine, the implementation of the
    Deterrence and Defense Concept in the Euro-Atlantic area and NATO’s long-term
    posture. NATO Defense Ministers will also discuss NATO’s warfare concept, the
    Romanian Defense Ministry reports. (VP)



  • May 3, 2022

    May 3, 2022

    WAR IN UKRAINE – The European Commission is today
    discussing the sixth package of sanctions against Russia, which might include a
    spaced-out embargo on oil imports. Yesterday’s meeting of the EU Energy Ministers
    underlined, however, the lack of consensus regarding sanctions on Russian
    energy imports. Whereas Germany seems willing to curb its reliance on oil
    imports from the Russian Federation, Hungary again has opposed the move.
    Earlier today, Slovakia announced it will try to obtain an exemption from any
    embargo on Russian oil agreed at EU level. Meanwhile, American and British
    officials believe Russia is preparing to officially declare war on Ukraine in
    order to mobilize its reserve army, in an attempt to conquer the east and south
    of Ukraine. At the same time, the US ambassador to the OSCE, quoted by our
    Washington correspondent, says Russia is ready to annex new Ukrainian
    territories.




    NATURAL GAS – The Romanian state-owned company Romgaz is expected
    to complete the deal allowing the American company ExxonMobil to exploit the
    natural gas deposits in the Black Sea, in the Neptune Deep offshore field. Some
    100 billion cubic meters of gas are expected to be extracted from the area,
    while exploitation rights are owned by ExxonMobil and OMV Petrom in equal
    shares. Romgaz will pay over $1 billion for today’s contract. Before extraction
    works can start, investors expect Romanian authorities to modify the offshore
    law, which the Senate’s special committees started debating today. The main
    modifications to the document adopted four years ago have to do with lowering
    exploitation taxes for deposits in the Black Sea as well as on land, as well as
    with the elimination of restrictions on prices, all part of a legal framework
    to ensure predictability. The Romanian state and state-owned enterprises will
    be given priority to buy the resulting output, while 60% of the profit will go
    to the state. Additionally, companies will be able to deduct 40% of their
    investment, compared to 30% under the current legislation.


    FORECAST – The National Strategy and Forecast Company
    downgraded to 2.9% the economic growth forecast for this year, compared to 4.3%
    previously. The Commission says the overlapping shocks generated by the energy
    price hikes which impacted global supply chains) are amplifying the risks and
    economic uncertainty, also impacting the short-term evolution of the business
    sector. The forecast is in line with the estimates presented by international
    financial institutions, which significantly lowered their forecast regarding
    Romania’s economic growth in 2022. The IMF recently estimated a growth of 2.2%
    for 2020, down from 4.8% originally, while the World Bank estimated Romania’s
    GDP growth to stand at 1.9% this year.




    EUROBAROMETER
    – Three quarters of young Romanians
    feel optimistic about the future of the European Union, while half of them
    believe things are headed in the right direction for the EU, according to a
    Eurobarometer published on Monday. According to the survey, young Romanians
    have greater support for European policies compared to other age categories and
    are content with their lives. Their main concerns are related to the education
    system, the economy, unemployment, housing, the environment and climate
    change.


    RWB – Romania can boast of a diverse, relatively
    pluralistic media landscape that produces hard-hitting public interest
    investigations. Pressure from owners, lack of transparency in financing or
    market difficulties, however, hamper the reliability of the information, reads
    the 2022 World Press Freedom Index released by Reporters without Borders.
    Romania ranks 56th, down by 8 positions compared to the previous
    year. Norway remains top of the world press freedom index for the sixth
    consecutive year, followed by Denmark and Sweden. The lowest-placed countries
    in terms of press freedom are China, Myanmar, Turkmenistan, Iran, Eritrea and
    North Korea. In a message released today to mark World Press Freedom Day,
    Romania’s Prime Minister, Nicolae Ciucă, expressed
    confidence there is no democracy without press freedom, whereas journalists
    should be allowed to do their job.


    COLECTIV – The Bucharest Court of Appeal earlier today
    postponed for the fifth time a final sentence in the court case investigating
    the Colectiv nightclub fire of October 30, 2015, when 64 people were killed and
    another 200 were injured. During a rock concert hosted by the club that night,
    the pyrotechnics show ignited the foam covering the ceiling and walls of the
    overcrowded venue. Part of the people were killed on the spot, while other died
    to the burns, the deadly mix of fumes or in the stampede near the exit. The
    court of first instance handed down sentences between 3 and 11 years in prison
    to district 4 mayor at the time, Cristian Popescu Piedone, cityhall workers,
    club owners, firefighters, pyrotechnicians as well as representatives of the
    pyrotechnics company.


    CCR – The Chamber of Deputies and the Senate are today
    convening in a joint plenary sitting to appoint two new Constitutional Court
    (CCR) judges, one of them expected to replace the current president of CCR,
    Valer Dorneanu. The mandates of the two judges expire in June, and under the
    law, the new judges must be designated at least a month in advance. CCR
    comprises nine judges, appointed for a mandate of nine years. Of these, three
    are appointed by the Chamber of Deputies, three by the Senate and three by the
    president of Romania. The Court replaces a third of its judges every three
    years.


    GOPO AWARDS – A new Gopo Awards Gala will take place this evening
    in Bucharest, celebrating the best-performing cinema projects in the last year.
    Some 900 guests are expected to attend. 19 features launched in cinemas or
    streaming platforms in 2021 have been nominated in 20 categories. This year’s
    edition also celebrates solidarity. Film enthusiasts from around the world are
    invited to take part in a fund-raising campaign titled United through Film.
    All proceeds will go to Ukrainian filmmakers with the help of the International
    Coalition for Filmmakers at Risk. (VP)