"We hope, we are sure that our companies will come to an agreement by the end of the year and sign the contract."
Russia is in a hurry to clinch the deal but Beijing is well placed to drive a
hard bargain on price. Experts say China is not expected to need additional gas supply until
after 2030.
Moscow needs the deal more than Beijing, as Gazprom looks to China to make up for the collapse of the European market that used to account for 80% of its exports.
On account of sanctions and last year's unexplained explosions in the Nord Stream pipelines under the Baltic Sea, analysts expect Gazprom to deliver only 50-65 bcm to Europe and Turkey this year, down from a peak of about 200 bcm in 2018.
A first Power of Siberia pipeline is already up and
running, and Novak confirmed it would deliver 22 bcm of gas to
China this year. It is due to reach full capacity of 38 bcm by
2027.
(Reporting by Reuters
Writing by Mark Trevelyan
Editing by Gareth Jones)