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Austrian gets exemption for Nabucco gas line

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  • Austrian gets exemption for Nabucco gas line

    Oil & Gas Journal, TX
    Feb 14 2008


    Austrian gets exemption for Nabucco gas line

    Uchenna Izundu
    International Editor

    LONDON, Feb. 14 -- Austria will not have to grant third-party access
    (TPA) along its section of the proposed Nabucco natural gas pipeline
    under an exemption approved by the European Commission. The approval
    means that Austria will have more freedom to determine capacity
    allocation and transport tariffs.

    The move demonstrates the European Union's support for the 31 billion
    cu m/year pipeline to carry Central Asian gas across the Caspian Sea
    to Europe. The project competes with Russia's proposed South Stream
    proposal (OGJ, May 21, 2007).

    The exemption is temporary, and Austria's regulator has promised
    safeguards to ensure competition with future capacity allocation on
    that part of the pipeline.

    The 3,330-km Nabucco pipeline is seen as a way for the EU to
    diversify gas supplies for its members.

    "The Nabucco company has applied for exemption from the general rule
    of regulated third-party access in all four member states
    concerned-Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary, and Austria," the EC said. "The
    safeguards to which the exemption is subject include a capacity cap
    preventing a dominant undertaking from booking more than half of the
    Nabucco exit capacity in Austria and rules to ensure a transparent
    and nondiscriminatory capacity allocation to third parties."

    Jozias van Aartsen, the EU's coordinator of the Nabucco project,
    planned to visit Ankara to seek Turkey's commitment to the pipeline.
    Turkey has suggested that the project is not its only option and has
    sought for Iranian gas to be supplied in the pipeline, despite EU
    opposition.

    Experts estimate that in the next 20 years Europe's consumption of
    natural gas will increase to almost 800 billion cu m/year from 500
    billion cu m/year.

    Last month, RWE Gas Midstream became the Nabucco consortium's sixth
    partner.

    Other members are OMV Gas International, MOL, Bulgargaz, Transgaz,
    and BOTAS, each holding a stake of 16.67% of Nabucco Gas Pipeline
    International Ltd.

    Gaz de France has also expressed an interest in joining the Nabucco
    consortium, but Turkey has opposed its inclusion after the French
    National Assembly voted that it would be a crime to deny the massacre
    of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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