Europe huddles down for a winter without Russian gas
Woolly socks and thermostats turned down a notch: Europeans are
preparing for a difficult winter without gas supplies from Russia, part of the
fallout from the war in Ukraine.
Latvians
have been adjusting since the end of July, when Russia stopped supplying gas to
the Baltic former Soviet state.
They know what to expect in the coming months.
"Energy
prices are so exorbitant that we already cut off the hot water from the city
pipeline and installed our own hot water boiler," said Juons Ratiniks, who
lives in the city of Rezekne, near the Russian border.
"It
is cheaper to use it when we actually need it than pay for constantly heated
hot water," supplied centrally, the retired border guard explained.
Politicians
need to understand that people expected help when their energy bill started
shooting up, said Ratiniks.
With
elections due in October, he warned, "they better support heating for us —
otherwise we'll give heat to them!"
Bulgaria,
Denmark, Finland, the Netherlands and Poland have also already had their gas
cut, while other countries have seen their supply reduced drastically.
Deliveries
of Russian gas to Germany via the Nord Stream pipeline will be halted for
several days at the end of this month, the second stoppage this summer. While
ostensibly for maintenance, Berlin has accused Moscow of halting supplies over
Western sanctions imposed over Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Overall,
supply was down in July by around 70 percent, year on year, according to
several experts consulted by AFP.
References:
BBC News, CNN News, NDTV , The News, Al-Jazeera, CNBC, Economist, Times of
India, Sky sports, New York Time, Sky News,
Indianexpress
No comments: