Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Tbilisi: Of Pipes and Men

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Tbilisi: Of Pipes and Men

    Civil Georgia, Georgia
    Feb 24 2005

    Of Pipes and Men

    Tea Gularidze, Giorgi Sepashvili
    Civil Georgia / 2005-02-24 14:05:06

    Plans to Sell Trunk Gas Pipelines Stir Controversy

    Negotiations between the Georgian leadership and the Russian energy
    giant Gazprom over the potential sale of Georgia's main gas pipeline
    network are currently underway. The United States calls on Georgia to
    excercise caution when making a final decision.

    News about the government's decision to privatize Georgia's gas
    pipeline system broke after President Saakashvili told the Italian
    newspaper La Stampa on February 20 that Georgia is in fact
    negotiating with Gazprom over this issue. This triggered fierce
    criticism from the opposition, which questions the political
    rationale behind these negotiations.

    Despite the apparent determination by the Georgian government to keep
    this issue of selling the pipeline on the table, US officials remain
    cautious. In an interview with the Georgian daily 24 Hours, published
    in Georgian on February 24, the U.S. President's Advisor for Caspian
    Energy Issues Steven Mann said said that as a sovereign state,
    Georgia has the right to independently make decisions regarding
    privatization, but the United States has been calling on the Georgian
    leadership to use caution when making these kinds of decisions.

    Mann added, that the United States has been working to secure
    Georgia's energy independence for many years and the U.S. will be
    categorically against any steps which might hinder this process.

    Selling of the trunk gas pipeline will contradict the plans of the
    United States, which envisages the creation of alternative gas supply
    sources for Georgia, Steven Mann said.

    Mann also said that he has held many discussions with Georgian
    President Mikheil Saakashvili and late Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania
    over this issue. While saying that the United States is not against
    cooperation between Georgia and Gazprom, the U.S. official added the
    latter represents an important part of Georgia's energy sector.

    Mann continued by saying that selling Georgia's gas pipeline system
    to Gazprom would reduce the selling potential of gas piped through
    the Shah-Deniz project. The U.S.-backed Baku-Tbilisi-Erzerum gas
    pipeline, or the 'Shah-Deniz project', is part of the much broader,
    BP-led oil and gas development project in the region, which also
    includes the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) Main Export Oil Pipeline
    Project.

    Nonetheless, Mann said that the Shah-Deniz project will be
    implemented regardless of whether Gazprom buys Georgia's gas pipeline
    system or not.

    Some observers suggested, that the recent revelation of the ongoing
    talks between Georgian officials and Gazprom was intended to raise
    the stakes in Georgia's privatisation plans. Speaking with reporters
    on February 22 Georgian State Minister for Economic Reform Issues
    Kakha Bendukidze made it clear that Gazprom is not the only company
    which can buy Georgia's gas pipeline system.

    `I think the fact that the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzerum gas pipeline is so
    sensitive to these issues [of selling the trunk pipeline] means that
    the Georgian gas pipeline system might have two potential buyers: one
    may be the Shah-Deniz Consortium, the other - Gazprom; if one of them
    wishes to gain a victory over the other, it should come and launch
    talks with the Georgian government,' said Bendukidze.

    But BP, which leads the BTC and Shah-Deniz projects, has no intention
    of taking part in this privatization process. `We will continue our
    activities and do not intend to purchase anything,' Tamila
    Chantladze, a spokesperson for the BP Tbilisi Office, told Civil
    Georgia on February 23.

    In order to sell Georgia's gas pipeline system the authorities will
    have to make amendments to the Law on Privatization, which bans the
    sale of facilities which are of `strategic importance' to the
    country. Georgia's gas pipeline system is on the list of
    `strategically important' facilities. Bendukidze has been adamant
    since his appointment that he sees no real meaning behind the
    designation of certain facilities as `strategically important.'

    A small group of opposition parliamentarians has already expressed
    protest regarding the plans to sell the gas lines. `This will be a
    huge mistake. This is really a strategic facility which should remain
    under Georgian control,' MP Davit Berdzenishvili, leader of the
    opposition Republican Party, told Civil Georgia.

    MP Davit Gamkrelidze, who chairs the New Rights-Industrialists
    parliamentary faction, also called on the authorities to refrain from
    selling the pipelines. `Transferring this facility to Russia will
    finally destroy Georgia's energy independence,' he said at a news
    conference on February 22.

    The government will also have to convince Parliamentary Chairperson
    Nino Burjanadze, who, in an interview with the Georgian daily
    Rezonansi (Resonance) published on January 31, said she is
    `categorically against selling the gas pipelines, especially to a
    Russian company.'

    Some observers say that the Georgian government, who normally take a
    clearly defined pro-western stance, might be engaged in some kind of
    political 'horse-trading' with Russia, in which Tbilisi may be
    willing to give up its energy independence in exchange for the
    political concessions by Moscow which are presently hindering ties
    between the two countries. Above all these issues include the
    resolution of the conflicts in South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

    `Of course it is not ruled out that a particular political deal might
    take place; however, it is difficult to say what kind of deal it will
    be,' economic analyst Revaz Sakevarishvili told Civil Georgia.

    This latest situation surrounding the government's decision to sell
    the country's gas pipelines is nearly identical to one which
    occurred over the same issue less than two years ago.

    In 2003, then-President Eduard Shevardnadze became a target of
    criticism by the opposition - which, at that time included most of
    the current officials - as a result of a declaration of intent over
    strategic cooperation with Gazprom. Steven Mann arrived in Georgia
    shortly after this hand-shake agreement was made and warned the
    Georgian leadership not to undertake steps which could have
    endangered the Shah-Deniz project.

    But the Georgian authorities at that time signed an agreement with on
    strategic cooperation for 25 years, which is still valid. It
    envisages the supply of natural gas to Georgian customers and the
    rehabilitation of gas pipelines, including two trunk-line gas
    pipelines, one of which will be used for transporting gas to Armenia
    and the other to Turkey, via the Adjara Autonomous Republic. Analysts
    say that Russia is mainly interested in purchasing those pipelines
    which are used for transit purposes.

    Russia is currently the only supplier of natural gas to Georgia.
    Although a reserve pipeline with Iran has been recently repaired, its
    capacity is far below what the country requires. Iranian gas is also
    nearly three times as expensive as the gas Georgia receives from
    Russia.
Working...
X