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Ukraine Mulls 'Russia Bypass' Pipeline to Carry Additional Gas

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  • Ukraine Mulls 'Russia Bypass' Pipeline to Carry Additional Gas

    Ukraine Mulls 'Russia Bypass' Pipeline to Carry Additional Turkmen Gas
    Supplies

    Global Insight Daily Analysis
    28 April 2005

    By Andrew Neff

    Ukraine is raising the prospect of constructing a gas pipeline from
    Turkmenistan that would supply Ukraine and European markets but avoid
    Russia, according to Alexei Ivchenko, chief executive officer (CEO) of
    Naftogaz Ukrainy, the state oil and gas holding company. Ukraine is
    seeking to form an international gas transportation consortium to
    bring Central Asian and Russian gas to Ukraine and on to European
    markets, pushing a proposal that would include Turkmenistan,
    Kazakhstan, Russia, and Ukraine (see CIS Regional: 31 March 2005:
    Ukraine Pushes Gazprom for 'Normal' Gas Sector Relationship and CIS
    Regional: 4 April 2005: Ukraine Seeks Increase of In-Kind Payment for
    Turkmen Gas Supplies).

    Ivchenko said that if Russia does not participate in the consortium
    and refuses to allow Turkmenistan to boost its exports via the Russian
    pipeline system, then Ukraine - which is heavily dependent on Turkmen
    gas imports - would consider building a 'Russia bypass' pipeline to
    ensure its energy security.

    Significance: Geography would seem to make it quite difficult for a
    potential gas pipeline linking Turkmenistan to Ukraine without
    crossing Russian territory. Ivchenko said that such a pipeline could
    be routed via the Caspian Sea to Azerbaijan, then to Georgia and via
    the Black Sea to Ukraine, although this would require a rapprochement
    between Turkmenistan and Azerbaijan, which are at odds over their
    maritime border. An alternative route could be directed from
    Turkmenistan via Iran and Turkey and the Black Sea to Ukraine, but
    this also seems highly unlikely, given that Iran wants to be a gas
    exporter (rather than merely a transit state) to Ukraine and Europe in
    its own right.
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