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EU officials have indicated their intention to seek a price cap on Russian gas alongside other measures to curb negative fallout from Russia’s war on Ukraine, despite criticism of such a move from inside the EU’s Czech presidency and a Russian threat to halt supplies.

The head of the EU’s executive, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, told reporters on September 7 that “we will propose a price cap on Russian gas” in addition to other steps.

Other measures will include forced cuts in electricity usage during peak times and limits on the revenues of companies that produce power from non-gas sources, she said.

“We must cut Russia’s revenues, which Putin uses to finance this atrocious war in Ukraine,” von der Leyen said.

The commission has been working since the start of the war to diversify gas supplies away from Russia, it said in a paper explaining von der Leyen’s proposed plan. Record levels of liquefied-natural-gas (LNG) imports have compensated for the reduction in Russian pipeline gas and enabled the filling of European gas-storage facilities to more than 80 percent, it said.

“However, the deliberate disruption of gas flows from Russia through most routes, affecting in particular 13 member states, and the unjustified halting of gas delivery through Nord Stream 1 point to a scenario of a full disruption of Russian gas supplies,” the paper says.

But some EU countries are wary of a cap on Russian gas prices if it puts the dwindling supply they still receive from Moscow at risk.

Czech Industry Minister Jozef Sikela told Czech senators earlier the same day that a cap on the price of Russian gas was not a solution for the current crisis and the bloc’s energy ministers should not discuss the option at a meeting this week.

Sikela called a price cap a political tool and “an unconstructive proposal,” not a solution.

Live Briefing: Russia’s Invasion Of Ukraine


RFE/RL’s Live Briefing gives you all of the latest developments on Russia’s ongoing invasion, how Kyiv is fighting back, Western military aid, global reaction, and the plight of civilians. For all of RFE/RL’s coverage of the war, click here.

“[A price cap] is more about another variant of sanctions against Russia than a current solution to the energy crisis in Europe. We don’t want to prepare more sanctions right now, but instead solve the energy situation,” he said.

The Czechs currently hold the EU’s rotating presidency.

Czech officials have called a special meeting of the EU Energy Council for September 9 as fears mount of debilitating fuel shortages this winter, brought on by international sanctions and Russian countermeasures resulting from Moscow’s unprovoked invasion of Ukraine in late February.

The commission said the price cap would mean countries could keep buying Russian pipeline gas as long as the price did not exceed an agreed threshold.

“Significant disruptions are already taking place without a price cap,” the commission said in its paper explaining the emergency measures.

The commission suggested setting the price cap above production costs and below current market prices to encourage Russia to keep on selling to Europe.

Speaking at an economic forum in Russia’s Far East on September 7, President Vladimir Putin called the notion of an EU price cap “stupid” and said Russia would stop supplying gas and oil to Europe if such a measure were implemented.

In addition to the EU, the Group of Seven (G7) industrialized powers have pledged to move urgently toward implementing a price cap on Russian oil imports in a bid to cut off a major source of funding for the war.

Putin said Russia can always sell fossil fuels around the world and would simply abandon its supply contracts with the West if it imposed price caps.

Russia has already cut off gas supplies through its highest-capacity pipeline, Nord Stream 1 to Germany, citing a turbine problem that its German partner dismissed as a pretext.

Russia’s share of gas imports to the EU had already declined from around 45 percent a year ago to around 30 percent in April.

Russian state monopoly Gazprom has cut off some countries completely since the Russian invasion began.

Last week it halted the flow of the Nord Stream 1 pipeline that used to supply about one-third of Russian gas to Europe over an alleged “repair” that its German partner says shouldn’t affect supplies.