Germany seizes Russian energy firm's subsidiaries

FILE - The facilities of the oil refinery on the industrial site of PCK-Raffinerie GmbH, jointly owned by Rosneft, are illuminated in the evening in Schwedt, Germany, on May 4, 2022.
Berlin on Friday took control of the German operations of Russian oil
firm Rosneft to secure energy supplies which have been disrupted after Moscow
invaded Ukraine.
Rosneft's German subsidiaries, which account for about 12% of oil
refining capacity in the country, were placed under the trusteeship of the Federal
Network Agency, the economy ministry said in a statement.
"The trust management will counter the threat to the security of
energy supply," it said.
The seizures come as Germany is scrambling to wean itself off its
dependence on Russian fossil fuels. Moscow has stopped natural gas deliveries
to Germany via the Nord Stream 1 pipeline.
The move covers the companies Rosneft Deutschland GmbH (RDG) and RN
Refining and Marketing GmbH (RNRM) and thereby their corresponding stakes in
three refineries: PCK Schwedt, MiRo and Bayernoil.
Fears had been running high, particularly for PCK Schwedt, which is close
to the Polish border and supplies around 90% of the oil used in Berlin and the
surrounding region, including Berlin-Brandenburg international airport.
The refineries' operations had been disrupted as the German government
decided to slash Russian oil imports, with an aim to halt them completely by
year's end.
By taking control of the sites, the German authorities can then run the
refining operations using crude from countries other than Russia.
Russia's war in Ukraine has set off an energy earthquake in Europe and
especially in Germany, with prices skyrocketing as Moscow dwindled supplies.
Germany has found itself severely exposed given its heavy reliance on
Russian gas.
Moscow had also built up a grip over Germany's oil refineries, pipelines
and other gas infrastructure through energy giants Rosneft and Gazprom over the
years.
Energy deals with Russia were long seen as part of a German policy of
keeping the peace through cooperation with Russian President Vladimir Putin's
regime.
The cheap energy supplied by Russia was also key in keeping German
exports competitive. As a result, the share of Russian gas in Germany had grown
to 55% of total imports before the Ukraine war.
In early April, the German government took the unprecedented step of
temporarily taking control of Gazprom's German subsidiary, after an opaque
transfer of ownership of the company sent alarm bells ringing in Berlin.
Germany has also been scrambling to find new sources of energy as
deliveries from Russia have dwindled in the wake of the invasion of Ukraine.
The German government has also taken the stark step of firing up
mothballed coal power plants, while putting two of its nuclear power plants on
standby through April, rather than phasing them out completely as planned by
year's end.
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