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“I’M NOT JOKING” – Putin Urges Germany to Make Decision on Buying Russian Gas Again via Nord Stream


These translations are done via Google Translate

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(Reuters) – President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday that Russia was ready ​to resume gas supplies to Germany via the Nord Stream ‌pipeline that was heavily damaged by undersea explosions in 2022, and the onus was on Berlin to make up its mind.


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Putin told journalists in St. ​Petersburg that one of the two lines of the ​Nord Stream 2 pipeline was intact and could start pumping ⁠gas “tomorrow.”

“I’m not joking – just press a button and the gas ​starts flowing. But for that, a decision from the government (of Germany) ​is needed,” he said.

Putin said, however, that Nord Stream was under U.S. sanctions and Germany would need to reach an agreement on removing these.

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He said Russia ​could supply up to 28 billion cubic meters a year, “but we ​just need a clear answer from our German partners to Gazprom — whether they’ll ‌take ⁠it or not. Because otherwise we’ll be placing it on other markets, selling it to other partners.” Gazprom is the Russian company that produces and sells the gas.

Putin was speaking to foreign news ​agencies at the ​St. Petersburg Economic ⁠Forum, where a senior member of Germany’s far-right AfD party met Russian officials on Wednesday and called ​for a reopening of Nord Stream.

Germany has struggled to ​emerge ⁠from the energy shock caused by the shutdown of the pipelines, which were crippled by explosions in September 2022 that left Berlin scrambling ⁠to find ​alternative supplies.

Russia has accused Ukraine of ​being behind the attack, though Kyiv has repeatedly denied involvement.

Reporting by Vladimir Soldatkin, Dmitry ​Antonov and Anastasia Lyrchikova; writing by Mark Trevelyan; editing by Rod Nickel

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