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EU Says Turkey is Committed to Nabucco

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  • EU Says Turkey is Committed to Nabucco

    Global Insight
    February 18, 2008


    EU Says Turkey is Committed to Nabucco

    by Zoe Grainge


    The European Union (EU) co-ordinator for natural gas projects in
    Southern Europe, Jozias van Aarsten, said at the weekend that Turkey
    was fully committed to the EU-endorsed Nabucco pipeline project. Van
    Aarsten had held a meeting with Turkish officials and planned to hold
    further talks soon on a disagreement over a pricing mechanism for the
    project. Turkey has failed to agree on the pricing of the project and
    is also opposed to French company Gaz de France
    joining the consortium that will build the pipeline. Turkey has been
    angered by France's objections to its bid to join the EU and by
    French moves to make denying the alleged Armenian genocide. Turkey
    rejects the label genocide and insists the mass killings of Armenians
    at the start of the last century were the result of the chaos of war.
    A delegation, led by France's Trade Minister, is scheduled to visit
    the Turkish capital, Ankara, next week to try, among other things, to
    overcome Turkey's objections to Gaz de France, the state-run Anatolia
    news agency reported.

    Significance:In the past two weeks, there has been a lot of newsflow
    from Nabucco. The latest EU-level talks come after the European
    Commission confirmed its approval of a third-party access exemption
    for the Austrian stretch of the proposed Nabucco pipeline. The
    decision means the project developers--OMV, MOL, Transgaz, Bulgargaz,
    BOTAS, and RWE--will have exclusive rights to use up to 50% of the
    pipeline's Austrian-based capacity. Turkey has made two public
    objections to GDF joining Nabucco, and differences need to ironed out
    fast if the project is to keep up its current momentum.
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