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EDM: Gazprom's "Pure Commerce" in Georgia

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  • EDM: Gazprom's "Pure Commerce" in Georgia

    Eurasia Daily Monitor
    Thursday, November 9, 2006 -- Volume 3, Issue 208



    GAZPROM'S `PURE COMMERCE` IN GEORGIA

    by Vladimir Socor

    Gazprom's deputy chairman and head of Gazexport, Aleksandr Medvedev,
    confirmed on November 7 the price hike to $230 per 1,000 cubic meters of gas
    to Georgia in 2007, up from $110 in 2006. Gazprom will stop deliveries to
    Georgia on January 1, 2007, unless the new contract is signed before that
    date, Medvedev warned. At the same time, he proposed that Georgia pay the
    higher price by handing national assets over to Gazprom. `This is pure
    commerce,' he told a Moscow news conference (Itar-Tass, Interfax, November
    7).

    Moscow had first informed Tbilisi of this move on October 31, the day
    when Minister of Foreign Affairs Gela Bezhuashvili was arriving in Moscow
    for yet another Georgian effort to defuse tensions. Thus, Gazprom's initial
    announcement of an extortionate $230 price was timed to actually increase
    the tensions. A hike of such magnitude adds a further dimension to Russia's
    economic blockade and political assault against Georgia.

    Gazprom's stated new price for Georgia is an arbitrary decision in a
    monopolized `market.' It equals the average price for Russian gas in Western
    Europe and is more than double the $110 price currently charged to Georgia's
    neighbors, Armenia and Azerbaijan, per 1,000 cubic meters of
    Russian-delivered gas. It is also far higher for Georgia than the price set
    for Ukraine at $130 for 2007 or the prices now being demanded from Belarus
    and Moldova at $140 and $160 or $170, respectively, for 2007. Those
    ostensible discounts are explained in part by Gazprom's takeovers of
    controlling stakes in Armenia's and Moldova's gas transport and distribution
    systems and its expectation to achieve similar results in Belarus and with a
    Russia-leaning Ukrainian government.

    Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili told an international
    conference in France on November 3 that Moscow's extortionate price hike to
    Georgia and overall political use of energy is a `bad precedent for
    everyone. Energy should not become a political tool' (AP, November 3). On
    the same day, however, U.S. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack told
    the media, `We believe that market forces should determine the price levels.
    So Georgia and Gazprom are going to work out a price. Our general take on
    this is that Russia should be a good partner for its clients [sic] and a
    reliable supplier of energy.' The statement inadvertently implied that
    Russia and Georgia are negotiating as equivalent actors in normal market
    circumstances -- an implication all the more disconcerting as the spokesman
    had sought official guidance before giving this answer to a press query from
    the previous day (state.gov, November 3).

    Top Georgian officials including Bezhuashvili, Prime Minister Zurab
    Noghaideli, and Parliamentary Chair Nino Burjanadze are publicly asking
    Moscow to explain the commercial formula it is using to arrive at such a
    price. These and other Georgian officials describe that price as politically
    motivated and amounting to blackmail -- an interpretation substantiated by
    Gazprom's refusal to explain it, against the backdrop of Russia's blockade
    measures and political campaign against Georgia.

    Gazprom has not officially identified the Georgian national assets it
    seeks to take over. Clearly, its primary target remains Georgia's gas
    transport and distribution system, as was the case in 2005. Georgian
    officials unanimously rule out the idea of transferring assets to Russia in
    return for price restraint on energy. State Minister for Economic Reforms
    Kakha Bendukidze had in 2005 and early 2006 favored selling to Gazprom the
    gas transit pipeline that runs via Georgia to Armenia. However, Bendukidze
    was speaking of a straight commercial sale for cash, not in payment for gas,
    not linked to the annual negotiations over the gas price, and in any case to
    be carried out at a time chosen by Georgia. In common with the other
    Georgian officials, Bendukidze rules out any non-commercial sale of assets
    in return for gas and `under blackmail.'

    Tbilisi regards the Gazprom-named price as not final and is prepared
    to negotiate it down. However, officials assert in consensus that Georgia
    would not accept a Gazprom price that could not be justified commercially.

    Georgia has some limited but real options to de-monopolize gas imports
    this coming winter through arrangements with Azerbaijan and Iran.
    Ministerial-level negotiations have been under way since October with Baku
    and Tehran, in anticipation of a possible emergency similar to that of
    January 2006. At that time, never-explained sabotage blasts on three energy
    lines running to Georgia on Russian territory in the North Caucasus stopped
    gas and electricity deliveries for several weeks. Georgia survived last
    winter amid great hardship, on meager volumes of energy imported from
    Azerbaijan and Iran.

    This coming winter will be the last one in which Georgia may be forced
    to survive without Russian gas after January 1. With its current annual
    requirement estimated at some 1.6 to 1.7 billion cubic meters, the country
    needs some 300 to 400 million cubic meters of gas from Azerbaijan and Iran
    in January-February to tide Georgia over on an emergency basis. Stable
    deliveries of Azerbaijani gas from Shah-Deniz beginning next year should
    finally emancipate Georgia from Gazprom's monopoly.

    (Interfax, 24 Saati, Imedi and Rustavi-2 televisions, November 3-8)


    --Vladimir Socor
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