Originally posted by danwild6
recently Russia has been flexing its muscle regarding these resources. While claiming that it wants to beknown as a reliable dealer but at the same
time demanding political concessions from neighboring nations and the EU itself.

- I disagree.
Russia has been alarmed at the backing, involvement and encroachment of the US in some of those ex-soviet territories surrounding her and has told
them that if they want to leave the Russian 'club' then the price of that is to forfeit the massively subsidised price they were paying for energy
(re oil & especially gas).
.....and just why should Russia continue to subsidise them and not expect a market price?
It's true it was a shock to some but it wasn't as if it was suddenly sprung on them (the dispute has been rumbling on for some time) and neither is
it true to say that they were gouging those countries either, they were simply being told to pay the same market price as the EU customers (and after
the short hullabaloo even that was negotiated into a phased implementation).
Russia did not do anything in relation to her EU customers, she certainly didn't flex any muscles in our direction.
It''s also worth bearing in mind that the particularly cold winter last tme didn't help either (Russia - as has happened before - not unnaturally
put herself first and this resulted in some short gas pipeline pressure drops).
There were also concerns about gas pressure in the pipeline running through the Ukraine to the EU but that was solely a matter of the dispute they had
and not something 'aimed' the EU itself.
(naturally this was all hugely exaggerated and exacerbated by the traders in the international energy markets who are currently involved in driving up
prices and behaving like hysterical school children over every rumour and small incident).

So I'd like to ask the Russian and European members of this forum what they think of the current state of the relationship and what do they
think the future holds.

- Business is business.
We need their goods and they want our custom/cash.
You can choose to see the negotiations that follow from this situation as 'them' making 'demands' etc but I don't.
We want, they want; we demand, they demand; we stand up for our interests and they, not unnaturally, theirs and round and round it goes.
Happily in this our interests converge.
Russia and the EU are fairly evenly matched in terms of being able to threaten each other (each could completely destroy the other in all meaningful
regards) but I don't believe that is seriously on anyone's mind or likely to be.
(if anyone really is frightened about this 'defence' angle then the UK's announcement that they are to either extend the life of the Trident system
or replace it - irrespective of the ridiculous British tory game-playing on the matter - that should allay those concerns.....and you can bet the
house on France doing similar when the time comes)
I'm sure you know that in trade terms the EU economy is massively greater than Russia's.
(Mind you the Russian situation regarding debt is a big plus for them as is the ability to back their currency with raw materials in such huge
demand).
Commerce will find a peaceful way because that is the only way in which we can all prosper from this situation......and the alternative is either such
a waste and lost opportunity or at worst so ruinous for us all.
'We' appear, IMO quite rightly, to be going down the road of a reasonable mix in energy supply.
Germany especially has built a very impressive and very large renewable and clean energy sector, France continues to export significant amounts of
energy from her nuclear power plants and as far as the UK is concerned we are set to hugely expand clean and renewable energy production as well as
building a handful of brand new nuclear reactors.
Northern Europe in the form of the Scandinavian countries are making huge strides with very demanding energy efficiency, recycling and conservation
measures made mandatory, geo-thermal energy seems to be a major one for them
We do still have, and will have for quite some time yet, major energy production within the EU from oil and gas fields too, Norway is still a major
oil and gas producer and even though Britain is a net importer now our dependance on imports is still very much reduced too.
Ditto the Dutch with their gas.
Large parts of southern Europe already use micro solar energy production, which is another element of this on the verge of much more widespread
growth.
As with any speculation about what
might happen all possibilities are at least in theory out there but I see no reason to frighten ourselves
unnecessarily just because (as per) this is difficult and far from straight-forward (in places).
We have every reason to believe we will get a lot more right than wrong IMO.
That's not to be complacent but to be realistic and sober about where we are and not get carried away with paranoia and the doom-sayers who'd have
us believe every generation is the last
(but I'll admit that they only have to right the once

).
[edit on 22-7-2006 by sminkeypinkey]