Sunday, January 4, 2009

Gasprom toughens position in Ukraine gas dispute


MOSCOW (AP) -- Russia's state gas company said Sunday that it was hiking the price it wants Ukraine to pay for natural gas, hardening its position in a dispute that has decreased supplies to Europe.


Gazprom CEO Alexei Miller said that the state-controlled company wanted $450 per 1,000 cubic meters, up from its last offer of $418.

Ukraine's state gas company accused Gazprom of being unwilling to seek a compromise and said any price increase should be accompanied by a similar hike in the fee Ukraine gets from Russia to move gas through its pipelines on to European customers.

Russia's tough stance in the negotiations may reflect both political and economic considerations. Gazprom, which once aspired to be the largest corporation in the world, has been hit hard by the financial crisis and is deep in debt.

The negotiations also have been hampered by strained relations between the Kremlin and Ukraine's West-leaning government. Kiev has angered Moscow by seeking to join NATO and by supporting Georgia during its August war with Russia.

Last year, Ukraine paid $179.50. Its state company, Naftogaz, refused Gazprom's offer of $250 before negotiations over a 2009 contract broke down Wednesday, prompting Gazprom to shut down gas supplies to Ukraine.

Gazprom has continued to send gas to Europe, which relies on the Russian company for a quarter of its gas. But 80 percent of the gas Gazprom sends west passes through the same pipelines that supply Ukraine, and over the past four days the pressure in the pipelines has dropped. Some European countries -- Romania, Hungary, Poland and Bulgaria -- have reported a decline in supplies. Ukraine has said it has sufficient gas reserves to meet its needs for weeks.

Gazprom said he hoped Sunday's offer would bring Naftogaz back to the table as soon as possible, but Naftogaz remained unbowed.

"We are open for negotiations if there are reasonable proposals that correspond to European market conditions," Naftogaz spokesman Valentyn Zemlyansky told The Associated Press. "If the price for gas is $450, then the transit fee will rise accordingly."

European countries now pay about $500 per 1,000 cubic meters, including transit costs, but the price is expected to decline significantly as the gas market begins to reflect the fall in world oil prices.

Russia has accused Ukraine of siphoning off gas from Russian shipments, while Ukraine has accused Gazprom of refusing to supply the gas that the system needs in order to pump fuel to Europe.

"Then they say that Ukraine is stealing it," Zemlyansky said.

Gazprom has said it is fulfilling all of its transit obligations.

Gazprom also has been pumping more gas to Europe via pipelines in Belarus and the Blue Stream pipeline that sends gas to Turkey.

Bulgaria's pipeline operator said Sunday that Russian gas supplies have dropped by up to 15 percent.

Bulgargaz CEO Dimitar Gogov told Bulgarian National Radio that the situation was not yet critical. Bulgaria gets 90 percent of the gas it uses from Russia.

Joanna Zakrzewska, spokeswoman for Poland's gas monopoly PGNiG, said deliveries arriving via Ukraine have dropped 11 percent.

Zakrzewska said the shortfall in deliveries via Ukraine is being made up for in its entirety for now via transit routes through Belarus.

Associated Press Writer Maria Danilova in Kiev, Ukraine, contributed to this report.

Source: Yahoo Finance

Friday, January 2, 2009

Microsoft may cut 15,000 jobs this month


The world's top software firm, Microsoft, is planning a massive reduction in its workforce where up to 15,000 jobs may be axed this month, says a media report. 


"Microsoft is preparing to announce the first wide scale layoffs in its 32-year history, with up to 15,000 jobs at risk, according to some predictions," 'The Times' said in a report published online. 

Speculation about job cuts was triggered by a report by Fudzilla, a technology blog site, which said employees were told that the software group was preparing for major layoffs from its global operations on January 15, it added. 

Earlier, a brokerage firm Oppenheimer & Co's analyst Brad Reback had asked Microsoft to cut its workforce by 10 per cent or about 9,100 employees. 

"Such layoff exercise "would be a healthy move for the company," Reback added. Microsoft had close to 91,000 employees on its payrolls at end of July-September quarter. 

Further, 'The Times' report stated that the news of job losses came amid the company being forced to apologise for an embarrassing hiccup with its Zune digital music player. 

A bug in the device's internal clock in the original 30-gigabyte version failed to cope with the last day of the leap year and thousands of owners were left with a frozen screen on December 31. 

The report quoted Microsoft statement as saying, "the issue should be resolved over the next 24 hours as the time change moves to January 1, 2009. We expect the internal clock on the Zune 30 GB devices will automatically reset." 

Besides, Microsoft is scheduled to release its second quarter results for the fiscal year 2008-09 on January 22. 

Battling the economic crisis, companies in their bid to save costs, have announced over one lakh job cuts in December in the US.


Source: financialexpress