GECF members says they do not control gas prices the way OPEC influences the price of oil. However, the Bloomberg news agency quotes Venezuelan Energy Minister Rafael Ramirez as saying when the gas market is more developed worldwide, perhaps the GECF will have more instruments to regulate the market.
Natalia Milchakova, oil and gas analyst at the Otkrytia Financial Corporation in Moscow told VOA that gas producers cannot now control prices the way the OPEC oil cartel does, because pricing mechanisms for the respective energy resources are related to the means of delivering them. Gas, today is delivered mostly by pipelines based on long term contracts, while oil is transported in ships and can be withheld to increase prices. However, Milchakova says liquefaction allows gas to be transported like oil, which could change the situation.
The analyst says she does not exclude the possibility that the GECF can somehow influence market supplies and therefore prices, but notes that is not likely in the near future.(www.hxen.com)
Meanwhile, Moscow continues to threaten Ukraine with a gas cutoff on January first if Kyiv does not pay off a $2 billion debt in full. This is the third year in a row that Russia has raised a debt issue at the height of winter. Most of Russia's gas exports to Western Europe run through pipelines in Ukraine. The Chairman of Russia's Gazprom energy company and First Deputy Prime Minister, Viktor Zubkov, did not rule out gas supply disruptions to Europe if Russia and Ukraine do not settle their differences.