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Russia plays better hand in pipeline poker

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  • Russia plays better hand in pipeline poker

    Deutsche Welle , Germany
    Aug 9 2009



    Russia plays better hand in pipeline poker



    Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift: Russia and Turkey
    have agreed on the construction of a gas pipeline under the Black Sea
    soon after the EU signed a deal with Ankara on the Nabucco
    pipeline. The Russian project is ahead at the moment.

    Russia and Europe are heading for a grim race in the construction of a
    gas pipeline under the Black Sea. Or so it would appear after the
    signing of a contract between Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin
    and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

    There's a need for both the Russian South Stream as well as the
    European Nabucco pipeline, because gas consumption in Europe will
    increase in the next decade.

    However, the Russian project is ahead at the moment, if you consider
    it from a political and business point of view.

    The Russians will be the first to begin construction and they can
    probably more easily afford the estimated 20 billion euro ($28
    billion) costs with their state-run Gazprom. A private consortium is
    to build the EU pipeline for around 10 billion euro ($14 billion).

    The Nabucco project has to be run as a business whereas Gazprom can
    afford massive losses.

    EU members disagree

    Bildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift:
    Russia and Turkey signed the South Stream Pipeline deal on August 6
    European states such as Greece, Italy, Bulgaria and Austria as well as
    Turkey are partners in both pipeline projects.

    This indicates two things: it's everyone for himself when it comes to
    energy security. A uniform European approach is not expected and is
    also not desired, for energy provision falls in the jurisdiction of
    the member states. A consistent energy policy in the European Union is
    worlds away compared to the largest producer, Russia, because the 27
    member states cannot agree on what they really want.

    After their experiences as part of the former East Bloc, the Baltic
    States and Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia want to avoid any
    dependence on Russia.

    The largest group in the EU, including Germany and France, are
    compliant customers who know that they will be dependent on the
    Russian gas stopcock for a long time to come.

    In principle, it is only right that the North Stream in the Baltic and
    South Stream and Nabucco in the south should provide alternatives to
    the present supply lines through Ukraine and Belarus. Above all, the
    loser will at first be Ukraine which will be deprived of its status as
    an important transit country to Turkey.

    The Caucasus question

    The Caucasus plays a key role in the great gas debate. Important Gas
    and oil pipelines, built with the help of the US, run through Georgia
    which is in a long-term dispute with Russia.

    Neither South Stream nor Nabucco can operate properly without a stable
    Georgia, Azerbaijan and Armenia.

    Bildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift:
    Nabucco has to be run as a business whereas Gazprom can afford massive
    losses
    And even more important than the question of the pipeline routes is
    the question of the gas supplier. Who should supply the gas for the
    pipelines? Russia and the EU are endeavoring to persuade the central
    Asian states, especially Turkmenistan, Iraq and Iran to be the
    suppliers. That's where the actual competition is.

    Russia does not produce enough from its own oil fields to be able to
    fulfill the contracts and thus needs new sources. The EU is also
    endeavoring to strengthen deliveries from the Mediterranean area and
    Norway but here too new methods of conveyance are needed.

    In order to guarantee the supply of energy, the EU has to do some
    homework on its own territory. Europe desperately needs North-South
    and East-West pipelines in order to be able to smooth out production
    shortfalls among its member states.

    France advocates that the Russians should not only be viewed as
    competitors that one simply has to keep out of the European
    market. Rather, the EU, Russia and Turkey should run all the pipelines
    together.

    The happy winner at the moment, thanks to its geographical position,
    is Turkey. It will become the most important land of transit and is
    connected via the third pipeline, Blue Stream, directly with Russia.

    Turkey could not do anything else than sign the contracts with Putin,
    after all, Russia supplies two thirds of the gas for the Turkish
    market and thus possesses a virtual supply monopoly.

    Author: Bernd Riegert (td)
    Editor: Andreas Illmer

    http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,45526 70,00.html
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