Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey Balances Azeri, Armenian Links

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Turkey Balances Azeri, Armenian Links

    TURKEY BALANCES AZERI, ARMENIAN LINKS

    Guardian
    Tuesday May 5 2009
    By Orhan Coskun

    ANKARA, May 5 (Reuters) - Turkey's efforts to normalise relations
    with Armenia will not harm planned energy projects with Azerbaijan,
    including the Nabucco gas pipeline, Energy Minister Taner Yildiz
    said on Tuesday. Turkey's traditional ally Azerbaijan has objected
    to U.S.-backed talks with Armenia because it wants to first resolve
    a dispute with Armenia over its occupation of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    enclave before Turkey opens its borders. "Energy will play the role
    of catalyst in bringing relations between Azerbaijan, Armenia and
    Turkey to a more positive level," said Yildiz, who took over the
    government's energy portfolio after a cabinet reshuffle at the weekend.

    "There's no plan to delay the projects with Azerbaijan" because
    of the Armenian normalisation talks, he said. Prime Minister Tayyip
    Erdogan is due to meet President Ilham Aliyev in Baku next week and is
    expected to try to allay some of Azeribaijan's concerns over the thaw
    in Turkish-Armenian ties. Partners in the 7.9 billion euro Nabucco
    project, which has European Union backing, want Azeri gas to fill the
    pipeline initially when it opens in 2013. The 3,300-km-long Nabucco
    will eventually carry about 30 billion cubic metres of gas from the
    Caspian and Middle East to meet about 5 percent of European demand.

    Botas the state pipeline operator in Turkey, Germany's WE, Austria's
    OMV, Budapest-based MOL, Bulgaria's Bulgargaz and Romania's Transgaz
    are partners in Nabucco. Turkey already buys about 6 billion cubic
    metres of Caspian natural gas annually after a pipeline from the Azeri
    Shakh-Deniz field opened in 2007. Some of that gas, which Turkey buys
    at a discount, is shipped on to Greece. Turkey is seeking an additional
    8 billion cubic metres of gas from Azerbaijan to meet domestic needs,
    according to Energy Ministry sources.

    Botas officials are in Baku this seek to discuss the Turkish
    request for more gas, Yildiz said. (Writing by Ayla Jean Yackley)
Working...
X