By Carlos Pascual
Special to washingtonpost.com
Friday, June 2, 2006
12:00 AM
In April 1986, Soviet lies turned the world's worst nuclear disaster at Chernobyl into a larger human tragedy. Twenty years later, lack of transparency in Ukraine's energy sector again threatens Ukraine's sovereignty, this time due to murky gas deals, set to expire in June. Unlike in 1986 when Soviet leaders tried to cover up Chernobyl's threat, Ukraine's leaders now have the opportunity to respond to alarm bells in the gas sector and forestall an impending danger to its own sovereignty and European energy security.
The Chernobyl tragedy was symptomatic of what was fundamentally wrong with the Soviet Union: false promises about technology, disregard for the environment, secrecy and obfuscation, and greater concern for national prestige than for its own people.
It was appropriate and ironic that reform of many of those Soviet practices secured Chernobyl's closure in December 2000. For years, Ukraine's leaders refused to consider closure, arguing that it would cause blackouts and threaten industry. In fact, Ukraine had excess capacity, but lacked market prices and systems to collect revenues in order to pay for fuel, replace obsolete plants, and ensure adequate supply. Electricity reforms that began in 2000 now allow Ukraine to export electricity to Hungary and Slovakia.
Today another form of potential energy tragedy threatens Ukraine -- the country's dependence on imported gas and shady contracts. The cutoff of Russian gas in January demonstrated Ukraine's reliance on external supply and its vulnerability to political pressure. The deal Ukraine and Russia negotiated to restore supply does not protect Ukraine's interests or reflect normal market practices:
Ukraine has already fallen into serious arrears under the new agreement with Russia. It is unclear why revenues from gas sales and transit have not covered Ukraine's payment obligations. We can write the scenario now for what will happen in June when the current price deal expires. As it has in other countries, Russia may well seek as payment a "fire sale" ownership stake in Ukraine's gas system or in major gas-consuming industries, which are the lifeblood of Ukraine's economy.
If Ukraine's new leadership is committed to acting on the lessons of Chernobyl, it will seek international help to restructure these agreements and will be fully transparent about the supply arrangements.
Forestalling a crisis is also in the interests of the EU, United States and Russia. The EU cannot afford to be passive. Almost all European gas imports from Russia -- nearly one-third of Europe's gas supply -- transit Ukraine. The United States hardly needs another crisis in the Russia relationship as we seek Russia's help in preventing a nuclear Iran. Russia needs neither an irate European customer nor a fight with diplomatic partners seeking to prevent an Iranian nuclear bomb.
Some practical steps:
Ukraine's friends have reflected on Chernobyl and said "never again." Today, "never again" means that Ukraine's friends and its leaders must work to ensure that lack of transparency in Ukraine's energy sector does not threaten the sovereignty for which Ukrainians have persevered.
Carlos Pascual is the Vice President for Foreign Policy Studies at the Brookings Institution and was U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine from 2000 to 2003.
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