Russian gas giant Gazprom , squeezed by plunging sales abroad as the Ukraine conflict prompts European buyers to turn away, is seeking to raise regulated prices at home to fund investment, Interfax news agency reported on Thursday.
Gas prices in Russia do not meet Gazprom’s needs for implementing investment projects, stated Aleksei Sakharov, head of Gazprom’s strategic division, during a meeting of the Expert Council under the State Duma,
Gazprom's board is proposing that about 1,600 managers and administrators be cut from its headquarters at St. Petersburg, citing recent challenges.
The United States is now supplying liquefied natural gas to Ukraine, a move implemented in the final days of the Biden Administration.
Moscow responds to Trump ultimatum as 1,000 North Koreans killed in Kursk - Kremlin seeks to play down new Trump threat over war in Ukraine
Kyiv region. A Russian ballistic missile strike in Ukraine's capital on the morning of January 18 killed three people and wounded three others. Dnipropetrovsk region. On the morning of January 17, a Russian missile attack on the region's second-biggest city, home to more than 500,000 residents, killed four people and wounded 14 others.
Flows of gas via the Turkstream pipeline unaffected after air defences downed the drones, defence ministry in Moscow says
US President Joe Biden has stated that Kremlin's leader Vladimir Putin is in a "tough shape" following the imposition of extensive sanctions against Russian oil. Source: French news agency AFP, citing Biden's statement,
The Biden administration on Friday targeted Russia’s energy sector, including its oil industry, with some of its harshest sanctions to date meant to cut off funding for Moscow’s war against Ukraine.
Oleksandr Syrskyi credited Ukraine's attacks on "industrial enterprises ... Energy 2025-01-14T04:40:54Z Gazprom, Russia's energy giant, is discussing a 40% cut to its HQ staff as the war keeps ...
Two weeks have passed since the Russian gas transit through Ukraine was stopped, and despite all the efforts of Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico, there are almost no prospects for resuming supplies.