The United States is now supplying liquefied natural gas to Ukraine, a move implemented in the final days of the Biden Administration.
Gazprom's board is proposing that about 1,600 managers and administrators be cut from its headquarters at St. Petersburg, citing recent challenges.
The move comes as the company has effectively lost its European export market, with the only remaining gas route to Europe now running through Turkey. Read also: Gazprom eyes massive 40% central staff cut,
Both Moscow and Kyiv have escalated hostilities in recent weeks as they seek to gain the upper hand in potential ceasefire negotiations.
Two weeks have passed since the Russian gas transit through Ukraine was stopped, and despite all the efforts of Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico, there are almost no prospects for resuming supplies.
During nearly three years of war following Russia's invasion, U.S. President Joe Biden's response focused on Ukraine's survival as a democratic nation rather than full territorial
Gazprom chief executive Alexei Miller was notified ... economic challenges following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, which has ravaged its finances. The energy group suffered its ...
Flows of gas via the Turkstream pipeline unaffected after air defences downed the drones, defence ministry in Moscow says
Gazprom is considering cutting about 40% of its headquarters staff - more than 1,500 job cuts - as the Russian gas giant grapples with the loss of most of its sales to Europe, state news agency TASS reported on Monday.
US President Joe Biden has stated that Kremlin's leader Vladimir Putin is in a "tough shape" following the imposition of extensive sanctions against Russian oil. Source: French news agency AFP, citing Biden's statement,
Energy 2025-01-14T04:40:54Z Gazprom, Russia's energy giant ... citing recent challenges. Ukraine said it retrieved a diary from a North Korean soldier that contains a confession of stealing ...