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Azerbaijan: Baku Mum on Washington's Proposal For Turkmen Gas Deal

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  • Azerbaijan: Baku Mum on Washington's Proposal For Turkmen Gas Deal

    http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insight/arti cles/eav120209a.shtml

    EURASIA INSIGHT

    AZERBAIJAN: BAKU MUM ON WASHINGTON'S PROPOSAL FOR TURKMEN GAS DEAL

    Mina Muradova 12/02/09

    Washington presumably hopes that the gas would be shipped via the
    long-planned 1,641-kilometer-long Trans-Caspian gas pipeline. The
    route would funnel Central Asian energy to Azerbaijan, circumventing
    Russia. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. From there,
    Turkmen energy would make its way to Europe along another long-planned
    route, dubbed Nabucco. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
    archive].

    At a November 17 news conference in Ashgabat, Daniel Stein, senior
    assistant to the US Special Envoy for Eurasian Energy Richard
    Morningstar, stated that it might be possible to reach an agreement on
    shipping natural gas across the Caspian Sea without first reaching an
    agreement on the sea's territorial boundaries. Talks on a
    comprehensive Caspian pact have long been stalemated. [For background
    see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    After leaving Ashgabat, Stein traveled to Baku to meet with Foreign
    Minister Elmar Mammadyarov on November 18. The Ministry of Foreign
    Affairs in Baku has refused to confirm or to deny that Stein's
    proposal is under consideration by Azerbaijani leaders. "If such an
    appeal is addressed to Azerbaijan, Baku will consider it, but I have
    to stress that it requires the consent of the second side
    [Turkmenistan], as well," spokesperson Elkhan Poluhov said.

    In a November 26 interview with Izvestiya, Azerbaijani Deputy Foreign
    Minister Khalaf Khalafov expressed an expectation that Azerbaijan and
    Turkmenistan would follow a precedent set by Russia and Kazakhstan,
    two countries that split stakes in disputed Caspian Sea offshore
    fields on a 50-50 basis in order to resolve their own territorial
    dispute.

    Local analysts are skeptical that the US proposal can help make the
    Trans-Caucasus pipeline become a reality. Turkmenistan has given no
    indication that it is open to business with the West, believes Ilham
    Shaban, head of the Baku-based Center for Oil Research. The failure of
    Turkmen President Gurbanguly Berdymukhamedov to attend a November oil
    and gas conference in Ashgabat "shows that their government does not
    want to cooperate [with foreign investors] and no political guarantees
    will be given," he said.

    Azerbaijan can do little to change that situation and pressure
    Ashgabat to settle the two countries' differences, Shaban added.

    Talks on how to divide up the Caspian Sea have been ongoing since the
    collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and
    Russia want a 22-kilometer limit on territorial waters. Turkmenistan
    and Iran consider the body of water to be a lake, which presupposes,
    they argue, that its waters should be divided into five equal parts.

    Talks between Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan on the topic intensified
    after Berdymukhamedov came to power in late 2006. A proposal was
    floated in 2008 for the joint development of disputed offshore oil and
    gas fields, but the idea soon fell by the wayside. In July,
    Berdymukhamedov ordered government lawyers to look into Azerbaijani
    claims to three Caspian Sea fields and send their findings to an
    unspecified international arbitration court.

    Another Baku analyst believes Stein's statement was intended as a
    political nudge from Washington for Baku and Ashgabat to revisit the
    territorial question. "Although it could be considered as a step
    forward, I do not expect quick result and easy solution of the dispute
    because Russia's interests predominate in the region, [and it] itself
    aims to deliver gas from the Caspian region to Europe," said Elkhan
    Shahinoglu, the director of the Atlas Center for Political Research.

    Foreign Ministry spokesperson Poluhov claims that "constructive talks"
    continue with Ashgabat on how to define Caspian Sea boundaries "based
    on international legal norms."

    Editor's Note: Mina Miradova is a freelance reporter based in Baku.
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