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Black Sea countries say pipelines are road to Europe

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  • Black Sea countries say pipelines are road to Europe

    Black Sea countries say pipelines are road to Europe

    By DEREK GATOPOULOS
    .c The Associated Press


    KOMOTINI, Greece (AP) - Trade and energy officials from 12 Black Sea
    and Caucasus countries pledged Saturday to expand ties with the
    European Union through the development of major energy networks,
    including new pipelines to Caspian Sea oil fields.

    ``Everyone wins,'' said Evripidis Stylianidis, Greece's overseas trade
    minister at the end of four days of meetings. ``Pipelines are good for
    the economy, for the environment, and for international development -
    and that helps peace and stability in the region.''

    Oil companies and regional governments are keen to find alternatives
    to shipping Caspian oil through Turkey's busy Bosporus Strait, already
    used to transport more than 50 million tons of oil a year.

    ``There is a growing danger of an accident with the concentration of
    many ships in the strait,'' Stylianidis said after the meetings in the
    northeastern city of Komotini, hosted by the Organization of Black Sea
    Economic Cooperation, a regional trade forum founded in 1992.

    ``Energy via pipelines will be faster and cheaper, and will pose a
    smaller environmental risk,'' he said.

    In June, the new Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline is due to start
    operation, carrying Caspian oil 1760 kilometer (1,100 miles) across
    Azerbaijan and Georgia to Turkey's Mediterranean coast.

    Additional projects are planned to link Bulgaria's Black Sea port of
    Burgas to Alexandroupolis in neighboring Greece and Vlora, Albania.

    Turkey's deputy foreign minister, Ender Arat, said the Baku-Ceyhan
    project would start on time, despite reports of delays.

    ``There were some construction delays in Georgia and other problems,
    but all of this has been resolved,'' Arat said.

    He said a proposed pipeline across Turkey from the Black Sea port of
    Samsun to Ceyhan would be a cheaper option than planned Balkan
    ventures. But Greece's Stylianidis said most proposed pipeline routes
    were not competitive, but complementary.

    ``Every country proposes the route that serves its own interests,'' he
    said. ``There is a strong will of the governments involved to back
    the Burgas-Alexandroupolis project.''

    Greece passed the rotating six-month presidency of the Organization of
    Black Sea Economic Cooperation to Moldova on Saturday.

    Representatives of the organization's 12 members - Greece, Albania,
    Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Georgia, Moldavia, Serbia-Montenegro,
    Romania, Russia, Turkey and Ukraine - also signed a declaration
    pledging closer cooperation, in areas from energy and tourism to
    fighting organized crime and ties with the European Union.

    Part of that cooperation includes plans to connect regional
    electricity and natural gas networks across to western
    Europe. Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Moldavia and Ukraine are already
    receiving EU assistance with financial aid and advice on market
    oriented reforms through the EU's new Neighborhood Policy program.



    04/23/05 11:23 EDT
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