http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7181220.stm

BBC NEWS (London)
Thursday, 10 January 2008, 16:43 GMT

EU warns Serbs on Russia gas deal
By Paul Kirby EU reporter

The European Commission has voiced concern about the
controversial takeover of Serbia's oil monopoly by the
Russian energy giant Gazprom.

Russia's state-run gas company has offered 400m euros
(£300m) for a majority stake in NIS and Belgrade could
agree to the deal this month.

But some estimates suggest NIS's value is far higher
and a number of European companies have expressed
interest.

The commission says the sale of Gazprom should be open
and transparent.

Spokeswoman Krisztina Nagy said: "The commission hopes
that the sale of an important asset such as the
Serbian oil company will be open and driven by
objective, commercial and economic interests."

EU membership bid

The sale of NIS has become caught up in Serbia's
progress towards joining the European Union, which
could also move forward this month.

We simply have no alternatives - Gazprom's proposal
includes security of supply and this is very important
to Serbia
Dejan Stojadinovic Serbian energy ministry

The EU has told Belgrade that a pre-entry agreement,
initialled in November 2007, could be signed if Serbia
co-operates more fully with the UN war crimes tribunal
in The Hague.

But Serbian media reports suggest Prime Minister
Vojislav Kostunica will insist on the Gazprom deal
going through as a condition for signing.

He has already warned the EU that Belgrade will halt
membership talks if Brussels goes ahead with its plans
for a civilian mission to Kosovo, whose leaders want
independence from Serbia.

'Political motives'

Some analysts have said the NIS sell-off to Moscow
might be politically motivated.

In return for Serbia's main oil company, they suggest
that Russia would provide support on Kosovo and
Belgrade would move away from the EU.

The commission will not speculate on the reason for
the deal, although it is keen to stress that Belgrade
should be prompted by "objective" interests.

The Serbian energy and mining ministry says the
motivation is not political, but based purely on a
need for a secure supply of gas.

A dispute between Gazprom and Ukraine in January 2006
led to an interruption in gas supplies to Western and
Central Europe, including Serbia.

That crisis highlighted energy security as a pressing
issue across Europe, and for Serbia in particular,
because it relies on Russia for 91% of its gas.
The EU depends on Gazprom for a quarter of member
states' supplies.

Pipeline offer

For Belgrade, the most tempting aspect of the Gazprom
offer is the prospect of a reliable source of gas.
Unlike its European competitors, Gazprom has linked
its offer for NIS to an extension of its South Stream
pipeline into Serbia.

A ministry spokesman, Dejan Stojadinovic, said
Belgrade was acting out of necessity.

"We simply have no alternatives," he said.
"Gazprom's proposal includes security of supply and
this is very important to Serbia. We have no possible
supply from Algeria or Norway, which are supply points
for the rest of Europe."

Another Serbian official said the deal with Gazprom
could be signed on 28 January, but the energy ministry
insisted there was no deadline.

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