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ANKARA: Turkey And Russia Vow To Cooperate On Energy

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  • ANKARA: Turkey And Russia Vow To Cooperate On Energy

    TURKEY AND RUSSIA VOW TO COOPERATE ON ENERGY

    Hurriyet
    May 18 2009
    Turkey

    ANKARA - Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin says Turkey and Russia
    have agreed to extend a contract on natural gas supplies. The current
    agreement is scheduled to end in 2012. A proposed new pipeline,
    Blue Stream 2 is expected to meet Turkey's growing need for natural gas

    The prime ministers of Turkey and Russia agreed over the weekend to
    strengthen the countries' energy cooperation and begin negotiations
    over the Blue Stream 2 natural-gas pipeline project.

    The announcement came Saturday at a televised joint press conference
    held by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his Russian
    counterpart, Vladimir Putin, in the Black Sea resort of Sochi. The
    two first held a one-on-one meeting, which will be followed by talks
    between their delegations, attended by Turkish Energy Minister Taner
    Yılmaz and Aleksei Miller, the CEO of Russian gas giant Gazprom.

    The Blue Stream pipeline currently runs from Russia to Turkey under
    the Black Sea; the proposed new pipeline, known as Blue Stream 2,
    is expected to expand its output capacity by 10 billion cubic meters
    annually. Plans call for it to enable gas deliveries to countries in
    the Middle East, Israel and other nations.

    Without elaborating, Putin said Turkey and Russia had agreed to extend
    a contract on natural gas supplies. The current agreement to supply
    Turkey with about 6 billion cubic meters of Russian gas annually is
    scheduled to end in 2012; the proposed pipeline is expected to meet
    Turkey's growing need for natural gas.

    During the Erdogan-Putin meeting, Russian delivery of electricity
    to Turkey, as well as the latest developments in Turkish plans to
    construct nuclear power plants, were among the topics discussed. Putin
    said Russian companies were ready to help build four nuclear power
    plants in Turkey.

    Regional issues, including Nagorno-Karabakh discussed

    The leaders also held talks concerning regional disputes, including
    the Nagorno-Karabakh issue. Putin said the two parties involved,
    Armenia and Azerbaijan, must be the ones to reach a compromise,
    and that other countries could only act as mediators or guarantors
    of any agreement that might be made. Erdogan was expected to update
    the Russian leader about the rapprochement process between Turkey
    and Armenia, reported daily Milliyet.

    Before departing for Russia, Erdogan spoke to reporters at
    Istanbul's Ataturk Airport and said Turkey cannot remain silent on the
    Nagorno-Karabakh issue. His remarks came in response to those made by
    Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, who said if Turkey wants to help
    find a peaceful solution to the problem, it should not interfere in
    the agreement process.

    "As a country in the region, it is out of the question for
    Turkey to remain silent on the Nagorno-Karabakh issue," Erdogan
    said. "The closing of the border [with Armenia] is related to
    Nagorno-Karabakh. Thus, we cannot open the border unless the problem
    is resolved."

    Meanwhile, Bernard Fassier, the French co-chairman of the Organization
    for Security and Cooperation in Europe's Minsk Group, will hold talks
    today in Ankara, one of his stops after a regional tour to Armenia and
    Azerbaijan. He is expected to meet with Foreign Ministry Undersecretary
    Ertugrul Apakan, reported the Anatolia news agency.
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