Andrew Korybko
Russia wouldn’t just lose tens of billions of dollars’
worth of yearly revenue if the US’ plans succeed, but tensions with Turkiye
might become unmanageable if the complex energy interdependence that tied them
together till now is broken, which could destabilize the South Caucasus and
Central Asia
Zelensky announced last month that
Ukraine will import American LNG from Greece via the “Vertical
Gas Corridor” pipeline. This project complements Poland’s
joint LNG plans with the US and to a lesser extent Croatia’s to lay
the basis for American LNG completely replacing Russian gas in Central &
Eastern Europe (CEE) one day. Although it’s much more expensive, policymakers
on the continent are going along with this on energy security pretexts, but US
pressure upon them likely played a major role in their decision.
The US’ latest energy power
play could also put an end to Russia’s Turkish gas hub plans. These were announced in late 2022 after
talks between Putin and Erdogan, but Bloomberg reported
last June that they’d been shelved due to technical difficulties in supplying
CEE from Turkiye as well as disagreements between it and Russia. Neither party
confirmed their report, but now that the US captured more of the CEE market
through the “Vertical Gas Corridor” pipeline, the odds of this hub being built
have declined.
The Duran’s Alex Christoforou wrote an insightful post on X about this, which importantly noted that the “Eastern Mediterranean (Israel and Cyprus) is watching the start of this vertical corridor closely as it can be utilized to sell future EastMed gas into Europe.” The “EastMed” refers to the proposed underwater pipeline of the same name for exporting Israel’s enormous offshore gas reserves to the EU. Its completion would likely eliminate the need for Russian gas in CEE for good when combined with US LNG.
To make matters even more
concerning for Russia, Reuters reported last month that “Turkey’s gas shift threatens Russia and Iran’s
last big European market”, which drew attention to how increased domestic
production and LNG imports could greatly reduce Turkiye’s future need for
Russian gas via TurkStream. Trump’s threatened
sanctions on all those who continue importing Russian energy without
provably weaning themselves off of it, which could take the form of up to 500%
tariffs, could accelerate this trend.
Russia wouldn’t just lose tens
of billions of dollars’ worth of yearly revenue if all the aforementioned
American plans succeed, but tensions with Turkiye might become unmanageable if
the complex energy interdependence that tied them together till now is broken.
It’s already expected that Turkiye will inject
Western influence into Central Asia through the new
TRIPP corridor, thus posing challenges
along Russia’s entire southern periphery, which will further complicate
Turkish-Russian ties.
If their complex energy
interdependence weakens by then, such as if their gas hub plans essentially
remain frozen or are officially canceled and Turkiye begins importing less
Russian gas from TurkStream, then Turkiye might be emboldened to more aggressively
challenge Russia on this front. After all, the scenario of Russia cutting off
gas exports in order to coerce concessions from Turkiye during a crisis would
be less effective, which could result in more hardline Turkish positions that
raise the risk of war.
Russia should therefore seek
to revive their gas hub plans and reach an agreement with the US, perhaps as
part of the grand deal that they’re trying
to negotiate right now, to secure Russia’s gas market share in Turkiye
and possibly restore part of it in CEE. That would almost certainly require
Russia compromising on some of its maximalist goals in Ukraine, and
the US’ word can’t be taken for granted since future presidents could rubbish
any deal, but Russia should still consider this possibility instead of ruling
it out.
Andrew Korybko, Substack, December 5, 2025
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