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Turkey Said Talks Are Underway On Several Key Issues Of Nabucco Proj

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  • Turkey Said Talks Are Underway On Several Key Issues Of Nabucco Proj

    TURKEY SAID TALKS ARE UNDERWAY ON SEVERAL KEY ISSUES OF NABUCCO PROJECT

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/
    27.06.2009 01:23 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ A European Union official said on Friday that an
    imminent breakthrough looms on the draft of the text that will lay the
    legal framework for the Nabucco pipeline project, however Turkey said
    talks are underway on several key issues, Hurriyet DailyNews reports.

    Consensus was reached Monday on the draft of the inter-government
    agreement for the Nabucco pipeline planned to carry Caspian natural
    gas to Europe via Turkey. "If no government party to the agreement
    raises an objection by Friday night, then this will mean that there
    is a complete consensus on the document which will be signed in July,"
    the EU official told a group of journalists.

    However, later on Friday a Turkish official denied the report of an
    agreement, saying the EU had sent the document but Ankara rejected any
    time pressures imposed to accept the draft. "We responded saying such
    attempts will be non-efficient and will not bear any results. This
    response was sent to everybody related to the issue in the European
    Union," the official Reuters news agency.

    There have been thorny negotiations over the document regarding
    taxing issues, as well as Turkey's request to have 15 percent of
    the gas passing through the pipeline allocated to meet local energy
    needs. Reuters quoted the officials as saying that an agreement was
    reached on the taxation issues but talks continue on Turkey's request.

    "Reaching an agreement on the tax regime was very difficult, since
    there is one entity, which is the consortium of the pipeline, but
    operating in different countries," the official said.

    The pipeline, which will pass through Turkey, Bulgaria, Romania,
    Hungary and Austria, is made up of a consortium of Austria's OMV,
    Germany's RWE, and the gas companies of Turkey, Hungary, Romania
    and Bulgaria.

    "It was very difficult to reach a consensus on the tax regime, but
    they did find a formula," said the EU official who did not want to
    elaborate on the details of the formula.

    A formula seems to have been found on Turkey's request for a 15 percent
    lift off, but the official did not share the details. During last
    month's Prague summit, bringing the EU together with gas producing
    countries, it was announced that Turkey had dropped its 15 percent
    lift off request and the intergovernmental agreement would be signed
    in June. "But Turkey was not happy," said the official, without going
    into detail how the disagreement on the issue was solved.

    It appears that Turkey and the other consumer countries in the European
    Union will hold joint negotiations with the producer countries,
    instead of pushing for separate deals.

    "Turkey and the EU have the same problem of energy supply and energy
    diversification. We are together on this. The bargaining with Caspian
    suppliers will be done as a group," the official said.

    Reaching a deal on the intergovernmental agreement represents an
    important turning point in the realization of the project according to
    the official. It not only shows the political will of the countries
    party to the project, but it also enables the consortium to go ahead
    with negotiations with producer countries, taking the project to
    another phase.
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