KEY POINTS
  • Gazprom announced that gas supplies to two Eastern European countries would cease after they refused Moscow's demand to pay for gas in rubles.
  • Gas accounts for around a quarter of the European Union's energy generation, and Russia typically supplies around 40% of the bloc's natural gas imports.
  • Berenberg Chief Economist Holger Schmieding and Senior Economist Kallum Pickering said a sudden stop to gas supplies to Europe would push Europe into a recession.
Russian state-owned energy giant Gazprom announced that it would halt gas supplies to Poland and Bulgaria after they refused to pay for gas in Russian rubles following the Kremlin's demands.

Europe could be pushed into recession if Russia's gas squeeze widens, economists have suggested, after Gazprom cut off flows to Poland and Bulgaria.

The state-owned energy giant on Wednesday announced that gas supplies to the two Eastern European countries had ceased after they refused Moscow's demand to pay for gas in rubles. Gazprom said that supplies would resume once these payments were made, prompting accusations of "blackmail" from Bulgarian Prime Minister Kiril Petkov.