Poland's state-owned pipeline operator on Friday said it resumed gas deliveries to war-torn Ukraine, following a brief interruption brought on by slashed supplies. Warsaw stopped sending the daily four million cubic metres of gas to Ukraine on Wednesday, accusing Russia's Gazprom of only delivering 45 percent of its gas order that day.
The allegations came as tensions run high between the two countries over the bloody conflict in Ukraine, where Warsaw has supported Kiev in its battle against pro-Russian separatists in the east. Ukraine's main gas utility said the cut in supplies was an attempt by Russia to squeeze the reverse flows of gas it is being sent by EU states. But on Friday, Poland's Gaz-System said Gazprom had sent it more gas on Thursday than in the previous 24 hours. "But the delivered amount remains lower than what Poland ordered and is at the level of volumes from early September," Gaz-System spokeswoman Malgorzata Polkowska told AFP.
Another of Ukraine's suppliers, Slovakia, meanwhile said Friday its gas delivered from Russia remained 10 percent below expectations. And Romania too said gas deliveries from its giant Soviet master had fallen. "We don't know if it is a technical problem or an interruption but we have noticed a five-percent reduction," Energy Minister Razvan Nicolescu told Realitatea TV on Friday.