Russian President Vladimir Putin and European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker have reportedly discussed the future of Russia-EU energy cooperation but did not address the issue of sanctions. The meeting took place on the margins of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) on June 16

Russian President Vladimir Putin and European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker have reportedly discussed the future of Russia-EU energy cooperation but did not address the issue of sanctions. The meeting took place on the margins of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) on June 16.

“Energy interaction was discussed,” TASS quoted Russian ambassador to the EU Vladimir Chizhov as saying on June 16. “As of now, the European Commission has no joint stance on the Nord Stream project,” he said. “Various subdivisions of the European Commission still continue debating whether the so-called Third Energy Package applies to the Nord Stream or not. We consider one of the European Commission’s stances as correct,” Chizhov added.

The ambassador said Putin and Juncker “did not discuss sanctions. Sanctions are not an issue for the Russia-EU dialogue”. “We do not discuss the problem which was not created by Russia,” Chizhov claimed.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters, “Sanctions per se were not brought up”. “They discussed the situation where we have de facto found ourselves in a frozen relationship,” Sputnik quoted Peskov as saying.

Commenting on Juncker’s meeting with Putin, Chris Weafer, a senior partner at Macro-Advisory in Moscow, told New Europe that a return to the old EU-Russia relationship is impossible.

“What happened the last couple of years has significantly shifted the relationship. I don’t see – certainly under a Putin presidency, which at this stage looks likely to last until May 2024 – we will see a return to what we had before,” Weafer said.

He noted people are preparing for is a return to a new normalcy. “The general sense is that for sure sanctions will be fully rolled over this July by Europe. Nobody has any expectations for anything else. But, at the same time, expectations that sanctions will start to be significantly eased from the spring of 2017 are very high,” Weafer said.

“On that sense there is an expectation that by next year that we will be in a new normality, which can allow therefore the development of business and resumption of trade and better political relationship and that’s what companies and politicians are now preparing for. They have in their mind that 2017 is when we could see a shift. Clearly a lot of things need to happen between now and then not least of which is that critical point in Minsk 2, which is holding the regional elections in the eastern regions, which is far from clear,” Weafer said.

Asked if Putin and Juncker discussed the resumption of Russia-EU summits at their meeting earlier on June 16, TASS quoted Chizhov as saying that the whole spectrum of Russia-EU relations had been part of agenda. “The summit is just part of that bloc of problems,” he said. “Now, we are discussing the need to resume these summits. I am not sure that they will take place twice a year as it used to be until recently. But of course it’s going to be a dialogue at a high level,” Chizhov said.

Reuters quoted Juncker as saying before his meeting with Putin that he was aware that some people might not approve of his visiting Russia at a time when EU sanctions on Moscow remain in place, but that he thought it was the right thing to do. “We can have no illusions about the problems weighing on our relationship today. They exist. It would be pointless, even dangerous, to ignore them. We must tackle them urgently,” Juncker said.

https://www.neweurope.eu/article/putin-juncker-discuss-eu-russia-energy-ties-avoid-sanctions/