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At this crucial moment of Russian aggression in the Kerch Strait and the five-year anniversary of the Euromaidan Revolution, there is much U.S. policy makers can do to help Ukraine make further progress on its energy reforms.

Ukraine will ultimately decide its own fate, but the United States has a strong interest to support an emerging regional ally in three ways: increasing diplomatic pressure, providing technical assistance, and offering financial support tied to specific reforms, according to an article published at CFR.org and authored by Sagatom Saha, an energy policy analyst and former visiting fellow at DiXi Group, a Ukraine-based think tank focused on energy-sector analysis, and Ilya Zaslavskiy, head of research at the Free Russia Foundation and a member of the advisory board of the Hudson Institute’s Kleptocracy Initiative.

Although Ukraine has made more progress in its energy reforms since the Euromaidan Revolution than at any point since its independence in 1991, that progress has been halting. For example, the government moved to close the gap between natural gas prices for households and industrial consumers, reducing subsidies that were a major drain on the national budget. But Ukraine failed to put in place necessary policies to prevent the government from fully reintroducing subsidies. Import prices have increased over the last two years, but household prices have stayed the same, potentially crowding out budgetary priorities like defense and welfare.

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Inefficiency, corruption, and lack of transparency continue to hamper Ukraine’s natural gas sector. Going forward, Kyiv would benefit from advancing energy reforms that would completely eliminate population-wide subsidies, according to the piece. It also needs to complete necessary reforms to attract foreign investors so that Ukraine can produce more gas domestically. The alternative, ceding to populist pressure and oligarchic influence would limit economic growth and risk return to dependence on Russian energy supplies. The choice it makes will determine the fate of the country’s energy and economic security for years to come.

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On the one hand, Ukraine has ostensibly redesigned its national energy regulator to align with EU energy legislation; in practice, however, there is still no functional body to independently enforce market rules that encourage competition. Meanwhile Naftogaz, Ukraine’s state oil and gas company, remains a virtual monopoly with 75 percent of the country’s natural gas production, crowding out private investment.

The lack of government guarantees to prospective investors, independent courts to enforce ownership rights, and fair access to the gas transit system all work in concert to prevent Ukraine from becoming a net gas exporter in the next decade despite having abundant shale gas reserves. Ukraine’s opaque licensing system for gas exploration also prevents many prospective gas producers from entering the market. Paradoxically, it is not what is “below the ground”, but instead the “above the ground” issues that prevent Ukraine, a country at war with Russia, from achieving its own energy independence.

In a paper published by the Council on Foreign Relations, the authors urge Kyiv’s executive and legislative branches to depoliticize natural prices, firmly establish regulatory independence, and carefully dismantle energy-sector monopolies, while judicial branch create a predictable and fair environment for all potential investors.

For its part, Washington should make this energy reform a priority in its bilateral relations with Kyiv, showcasing to Ukrainian and European investors, among others, to promote development of Ukraine’s domestic natural gas sector. To demonstrate seriousness, Washington should closely coordinate with the IMF and other Western donors for more stringent compliance for loan disbursements and extend its targeted sanctions program against Russian oligarchs to the corrupt Ukrainian ones as well.

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Second, the United States should pair increased pressure with regulatory and legal assistance. Specifically, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, the Department of Interior, and State Department should step up their work with Ukrainian partners to design strong, independent regulatory agencies, formulate simplified licensing procedures, and share the know-how needed to develop shale gas resources, collect royalty revenues, and combat corruption, according to the article.

The United States and European allies benefit when Kyiv is a self-reliant, energy-secure Ukraine, capable of standing up to Russian interventionism. Supporting Ukraine’s energy reforms is a low-risk, high-reward strategy for Washington to counter Moscow’s influence at NATO’s border without overcommitting to military options that are not feasible in the region. Completing reform will also enhance unity within the EU Energy Union and integrate Ukrainian gas production, storage, and transit assets into the EU market. With sustained, considered U.S. support, Ukraine can reform its inefficient gas sector into an engine not only for its own economic progress and security, but for the whole of Eastern Europe, the authors conclude.