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EDM: Nabucco Project Approaching a Real Start

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  • EDM: Nabucco Project Approaching a Real Start

    Eurasia Daily Monitor


    February 8, 2008 -- Volume 5, Issue 25



    NABUCCO PROJECT APPROACHING A REAL START

    by Vladimir Socor

    Germany's Rheinisch-Westfaelische Elektrizitaetswerk (RWE) has joined
    the EU- and US-supported Nabucco pipeline project for Caspian gas to Europe.
    RWE is Germany's largest energy company overall and second-largest gas
    distributor. On February 5 in Vienna, the Nabucco consortium's five founding
    companies -- Austria's OMV as project leader, Hungary's MOL, Romania's
    Transgaz, Bulgaria's Bulgargaz, and Turkey's Botas -- signed with RWE the
    agreement on the latter's accession to the consortium. From this point on,
    each partner shall own a one-sixth stake (16.67%) in the pipeline project
    >From Turkey to Austria. New top management at RWE in recent months
    negotiated its entry into the consortium to diversify import options.

    The Essen-based RWE delivers some 40 billion cubic meters of gas
    annually from various import sources to German municipalities, households,
    industrial consumers, and electricity-generating plants. RWE expects to
    receive 2 billion cubic meters of Caspian gas annually through Nabucco's
    first phase and 5 billion cubic meters per year through the project's second
    phase. RWE also intends to supply gas to Central European countries,
    expanding there from the small market positions it currently holds in the
    Czech Republic, Hungary, and Poland.

    RWE's competitor (also Essen-based) E.ON Ruhrgas is Germany's largest
    gas transport and distribution company. A historic partner with Russia,
    Ruhrgas is a 6% shareholder in Gazprom and a participant in the Nord Stream
    pipeline project on the Baltic seabed from Russia to Germany (Handelsblatt,
    Financial Times Deutschland, February 6).

    Gaz de France (GDF), the largest gas distributor in that country, also
    seeks to enter the Nabucco consortium. On February 4 Romanian President
    Traian Basescu announced in a joint press conference with French President
    Nicolas Sarkozy in Bucharest that Romania would support GDF's accession to
    the Nabucco project in addition to RWE and on the same parity basis. On the
    following day, Romanian Minister of Foreign Affairs Adrian Cioroianu
    announced that the government would offer the French company a stake in the
    Romanian section of the planned Nabucco pipeline. At present, GDF is the
    majority shareholder in the gas distribution network for southern Romania
    (including Bucharest) and in two gas storage sites to be further developed
    in Transylvania (Rompres, Mediafax, February 4, 5).

    Hungary's MOL immediately welcomed Basescu's initiative and the
    potential contribution of Gaz de France to the Nabucco project's
    implementation. However, immediate reactions from the Austrian and Bulgarian
    sides evidenced some surprise and misgivings at this move.

    Turkey opposes GDF's participation. Ankara had in 2006-2007 suspended
    its negotiations with GDF in view of France's receptiveness to Armenian
    genocide claims. Following the election of Sarkozy as president, Ankara is
    also increasingly displeased with French insistence that Turkey be kept out
    of the European Union. Moreover, Turkey would favor a strong gas-extracting
    company, with field operations in the region, for joining the Nabucco
    consortium. Turkey also wants the consortium's pipeline to start from Ankara
    westward, so that Turkey would itself build and own the pipeline section
    >From the country's eastern borders to Ankara.

    The absence of a major Western or Western-friendly producer company,
    with gas resources of its own, has long been noted as a weakness in the
    Nabucco project. Its six member companies, as well as GDF, are primarily
    transmission and distribution companies, with relatively small-scale
    extraction operations. Azerbaijan's State Oil Company, a partner in the
    BP-led Shah Deniz project for gas extraction, is now being mentioned as a
    possible entrant to the Nabucco consortium.

    Also on February 5, the Nabucco consortium appointed Penspen Onshore
    and Offshore Pipeline Consultants to coordinate and supervise detailed
    planning of the pipeline that would run from eastern Turkey to Vienna. The
    London-based Penspen is involved in engineering projects in nearly 20
    countries worldwide.

    The consortium, Nabucco Gas Pipeline International, was founded in
    2002 by the five transit countries at Austrian initiative. Since then,
    Russia's monopolization of eastern Caspian gas and U.S. prohibitions on
    development of Iranian gas delayed the project's start year after year. The
    latest planning adjustments, made public during the signing event in Vienna,
    envisage the following sequence: Investment from banks and supply contracts
    with consumers to be secured during 2008; start of construction work in
    2009; completion of the pipeline's first phase in 2013, to carry 10 billion
    cubic meters of Caspian gas annually; and completion of the second phase by
    2018, boosting the capacity to 31 billion cubic meters per year.

    Construction costs are now estimated at 6 billion (up from the 2007
    estimate of 5 billion). According to the project's general director,
    Reinhard Mitschek, the consortium expects its stakeholders to cover 30-40%
    of those costs, the remainder to be raised from private investors or
    institutional ones, such as the European Investment Bank or even the World
    Bank (Die Presse, February 5).

    Nabucco and the Kremlin-backed South Stream project are racing each
    other for gas supplies in Central Asia and markets in Central Europe. While
    the EU and some of the Nabucco partners are loath to acknowledge the
    political-strategic implications of this contest, the Kremlin and Gazprom
    pursue South Stream largely in that vein. Although both projects are still
    in the planning stage, Russia is already offering long-term supply,
    pipeline, and storage deals to Nabucco countries and their neighbors. The
    Nabucco consortium is not yet in a position to make such offers without
    access to Central Asian or Iranian gas for its second phase. At last, the
    project is now approaching a real start of its first phase relying on
    Azerbaijani gas via Georgia.

    (Wirtschaftsblatt, MTI, Turkish Daily News, Dow Jones, February 5-7)


    --Vladimir Socor

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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