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By Nina Chestney
LONDON (Reuters) -Half of Russian gas giant Gazprom's 54 clients have opened accounts at Gazprombank, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak said on Thursday, as European companies approach imminent payment deadlines.
Companies in the European Union have been trying to confirm for weeks how they can legally buy Russian gas, after Moscow demanded foreign buyers start paying in roubles and cut gas supplies to Bulgaria and Poland last month after they refused to do so.
Russia has said foreign companies need to open two accounts to comply with its new payment mechanism - one for foreign currency, and one for roubles - and European companies need to complete any currency conversion within 48 hours.
The EU has shared two pieces of written guidance with countries, but neither explicitly said opening rouble accounts would breach EU sanctions against Moscow for its invasion of Ukraine. That has left some companies struggling to understand whether they can open these accounts to buy gas.
Nearly all the supply contracts EU companies have with Gazprom are in euros or dollars and some top Western companies have already opened accounts at Gazprombank.
Novak told a forum on Thursday that around half of Gazprom clients have opened special accounts at Gazprombank in foreign currency and in roubles.
"Gas payments under main contracts are due ... and there is information that some big companies already opened accounts, paid (gas bills) and are ready to pay on time," Novak told a forum. "In the next couple of days we will see a final list of who's paid in roubles and who's refused."
Companies have payment deadlines for April gas deliveries from May 20.
'CLEAR AS MUD'
The European Commission has advised companies against opening a bank account in roubles at Gazprombank to pay for gas but has not explicitly said doing so would breach sanctions in its formal written guidance to governments on the issue, according to officials with knowledge of the matter.
European gas prices have been volatile all week due to concerns around how European companies can legally pay for Russian gas supplies.
"After mixed messages emerged from both sides earlier this week, the situation appears as clear as mud," said Wei Xiong, senior analyst at consultancy Rystad Energy.
Russia supplies around 40% of the EU's gas and nations have been under pressure to fill storage sites this summer ahead of winter and its higher seasonal demand.
EU gas inventories are currently around 41% full, compared to around 34% at the same time last year, according to Gas Infrastructure Europe data and appear to be on track to reach the EU's new minimal storage requirement of 80% of capacity by Nov. 1, said analysts at Jefferies.