Russian energy company OAO Gazprom
 has submitted draft proposals to European Union regulators about its 
pricing and other practices, the European Commission said Friday. 
"I can confirm that we have received the proposals," said EU commission spokesman Antoine Colombani. 
The move comes just over a week after Joaquín Almunia, the 
EU's competition chief, said he had held a "constructive" meeting with Gazprom's Alexander Medvedev. Following the meeting, Gazprom pledged to present a first set of draft proposals in writing within days to the commission. 
A first round of talks between the two sides is expected to be called as soon as the commission has reviewed Gazprom's proposals. 
The EU launched a high-profile probe into Gazprom
 in September last year, after raids on the company's offices in 
September 2011. Days after the EU announced its investigation, the 
Kremlin fired back with a decree preventing the company from disclosing 
information to foreign regulators without government permission. 
Under EU antitrust rules, a company can offer concessions 
aimed at addressing the EU's concerns, which Brussels can then decide to
 make legally binding on the firm. Those so-called "commitments" don't 
imply wrongdoing by the company and are a way of settling a case without
 imposing fines.