Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Canada Misses Azerbaijan Business Boat

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

  • Canada Misses Azerbaijan Business Boat

    CANADA MISSES AZERBAIJAN BUSINESS BOAT
    By Scott Taylor - Business Edge

    Business Edge, Canada
    Aug. 17, 2006

    But opportunities still abound for entrepreneurs, adventurers

    Since its independence was granted from the former Soviet Union in
    1991, Azerbaijan has set its sights on increasing connections with
    the West and divesting itself of the country's former communist
    infrastructure.

    The development of lucrative new oil resources in the Caspian Sea
    in conjunction with British Petroleum has helped fund that process,
    but a tentative war with Armenia, domestic political instability and
    rampant corruption have proven to be major speed bumps on the road
    to cultural transition.

    However, Azerbaijan is now enjoying an oil-fuelled economic boom
    and is looking to do more business with the West, but is failing to
    attract interest from Canada.

    "It is regrettable that we have achieved the lowest of co-operation
    from Canada among all of the world's developed nations," says Novruz
    Mammadov, special adviser to President Ilham Aliyev. "It is frustrating
    for us when we see so little interest (on the part of the Canadian
    government) in something which holds so much potential."

    Photo by Scott Taylor, for Business Edge Baku is the scene of a massive
    construction boom Canada is alone among the G-8 nations to have no
    diplomatic representation in Baku, and the nearest consular-visa
    functions are conducted either in Ankara, Turkey, or Moscow.

    "In the 15 years since independence, Canada has sent just two official
    delegations to visit our country," says Mammadov. "One from your
    foreign ministry in 2005 and some members of Parliament back in 2003."

    The Azeris, on the other hand, maintain a full embassy in Ottawa and
    are keen to encourage Canadian trade. After years of Soviet communism
    and post-collapse instability, the Azerbaijan infrastructure is in
    need of just about every commodity conceivable. Add to this the vast
    oil revenue and continuing development in the region and the Azeri
    government is in a cash-rich position to acquire its needs.

    "You have to remember that we are starting from absolute zero -
    we need just about everything," says Mammadov. "There are still
    tremendous opportunities for international companies in the energy
    field, telecommunications, diamonds, agricultures, electronics -
    the list is endless. And we have the revenue to pay for it."

    Rodney Moore, a spokesman for Foreign Affairs and International
    Trade Canada, says: "Since Azerbaijan gained its independence from
    the Soviet Union in 1991, Canada did not recognize the necessity
    of opening an embassy there, given the level of relations between
    the two countries and the amount of available resources within the
    ministry of Foreign Affairs."

    Kirk Purdy, president of Sword Energy Ltd., a private oil and gas
    company located in Calgary, says: "Canada's lack of participation
    in the development of Azerbaijan's energy industry will be costly,
    both in opportunity and gross national product. We are a world
    leader in energy-related extraction and processing technologies
    and it's unfortunate that we don't have the support of our Canadian
    government to share these skills with Azerbaijan's industrial and
    political community."

    Others, meanwhile, are taking advantage of business opportunities
    in Azerbaijan.

    "It's getting too bloody soft around here for my liking," says Terry,
    a 46-year-old ex-British paratrooper who now runs a bar in Baku, and
    who did not want to give his last name. "It used to be the case that
    the sight of a foreigner in Azerbaijan was so rare that the locals
    would stop and gawk at you when you walked down the street."

    Missing a front tooth and sporting a shaved head, the barrel-chested
    combat veteran with a gap-toothed smile and tattooed muscular arms
    would likely still create a stir in most civil societies. However,
    over the past decade the renewed oil boom has brought an entire cast of
    such characters into this previously isolated former Soviet Republic.

    In 1994 the newly independent Azerbaijani government signed what was
    termed the "deal of the century" with a number of Western companies to
    develop and export the vast untapped offshore oil and gas reserves in
    the Caspian Sea. British Petroleum is the key player in this region,
    having already had established pipelines through Kazakhstan.

    Photo by Scott Taylor, for Business Edge The wearing of the traditional
    hijab The experience gained in its North Sea oil projects has given BP
    a tremendous advantage in the international race to develop the Caspian
    Sea reserves. As a result, Azerbaijan has kept well ahead of the
    other four nations that share a border on this newly discovered wealth.

    "The Russians, Iranians, Kazakhs and Turkmen have no idea how much oil
    we are already pumping through (BP's) oil rigs," explained Terry, who
    spent 10 years in the region as a BP employee before opening his pub,
    The Garage, which caters strictly to foreign oil workers. "Our gap
    on the competition in terms of technology would need to be measured
    in light years."

    The outer-space analogy is an apt one, as a patron in The Garage
    describes the ex-pat bars in Baku as being similar to the intergalactic
    nightclubs depicted in the Star Wars movies, "only instead of strange
    individuals from foreign planets, they are bizarre representations
    from across the globe."

    The original bars and clubs were deliberately rough around the edges
    to appeal to the mostly ex-military types who blazed the trail through
    this heretofore non-westernized territory.

    However, as the boom in the Azerbaijan economy - 25-per-cent growth
    last year in GDP alone - spreads into sectors outside the oil industry,
    the hospitality business has begun to cater to a much greater variety
    of foreign tastes.

    "First it was McDonalds, then a whole bunch of fancy restaurants,
    and now we've even got expensive wine bars," bemoaned The Garage owner.

    "Baku will never be the same."

    This recent wave of change will not be the first time that outside
    forces have left an indelible imprint on Azeri society and culture.

    As descendants of central Asian Turkic tribes, the Azeris are
    essentially Muslim Turkmen.

    However, in 1920, the Russian Bolsheviks occupied the oil-rich
    territory of the present Republic of Azerbaijan. The subsequent seven
    decades of communism and Russian influence drastically diminished
    the religious Islamic influence in this region.

    Throughout my weeklong visit, I spotted just one Azeri woman wearing a
    traditional hijab, while the vast majority dressed in Western-style,
    MTV-inspired fashions. Although minarets and mosques still dot the
    cityscape, unlike non-secular Islamic nations, the call to prayers
    is not broadcast via loudspeakers five times a day.

    In terms of architecture, the capital Baku is a bipolar hybrid of
    Turkish ornate and Soviet bland, while on the extreme ends of the
    spectrum there remains the presence of the ancient walled city and
    an ever increasing number of modern glass and steel skyscrapers.

    Culturally, the long period of Soviet control has left a continuing
    legacy of authoritarianism ingrained in the public mindset.

    Journalists are still escorted about the city by official handlers
    wearing dark suits and driving old black Volga automobiles - once
    considered a "Mercedes equivalent" in the Soviet Union.

    On the plus side, many of the hosted luncheons were capped off by
    the Russian tradition of exchanging elaborate toasts with over-proof
    vodka. Certainly not something one would expect from a member nation
    of the Organization of the Islamic Conference.

    On the other hand, the Azeris align themselves closely with their
    'brothers' in Turkey. Not only do they share a similar (albeit
    distinct) dialect with the Turks, they also share an affinity to
    recognize a 'father figure' for their newly founded nation.

    Whereas the Turks have enshrined Mustafa Kemal Ataturk as the founder
    of modern Turkey, in Azerbaijan it is Heydar Aliyev (the first
    president at the time of independence) who carries this torch. Since
    his death in 2003 Aliyev has been commemorated extensively throughout
    the country.

    >>From the time one arrives at Heydar Aliyev International Airport
    his image can be seen on billboards and statues all across the country.

    In government offices, one is more likely to see a portrait of Heydar
    Aliyev than of his son Ilham who is the current president.

    The impact of the sudden economic boom in Azerbaijan is clearly
    illustrated by the fact that two separate currencies are in
    circulation. The worn-out dirty old Manats are valued at 4,800 to
    a single U.S. dollar, while the crisp new (Yeni) Manat trade in at
    about $1.20 US each.

    One of the initial drawbacks to foreign investment and trade
    partnerships is that in the immediate post-Soviet climate, corruption
    was rife. Every level of government - right down to the policeman on
    the street - wanted a piece of the estimated $150-billion US windfall
    that was projected in the "deal of the century."

    A display ad in a Baku English-language daily newspaper calls upon
    the foreign corporations to form an investor forum to collectively
    combat the corruption. "It's not easy doing business in Azerbaijan,"
    reads the headline. "Corruption? Unfair practices? Vague regulations?

    Unjust courts? Monopolies? Unseen traps for investors? Together let's
    try to change things!" Another sign that the flow of new money is
    having an impact is that the police are no longer as aggressive in
    their encounters with foreign nationals.

    "One night the local police stopped a BP employee on his way home
    from the bar. When he refused to pay them the usual 'We'll let you
    go this time' bribe, they locked him in jail," said Hermann Lehmann,
    a six-year veteran on the Azerbaijan oil scene.

    "The next day, when he informed his bosses at BP, they immediately
    demanded justice and heads rolled at the police station. Believe me,
    money talks in Baku."

    (Scott Taylor is the publisher/editor-in-chief of Esprit de Corps
    magazine and can be reached at [email protected])

    http://www.businessedge .ca/article.cfm/newsID/13240.cfm

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X