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ANKARA: Nabucco falls behind rival Russian gas projects

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  • ANKARA: Nabucco falls behind rival Russian gas projects

    Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
    Oct 23 2009


    Nabucco falls behind rival Russian gas projects

    Friday, October 23, 2009
    DÃ-NDÃ` SARIIÅ?IK
    ANKARA - Hürriyet Daily News


    The energy row between Azerbaijan and Turkey has consequently become
    apparent as the two allies are experiencing a rough patch in
    relations. The once promising Nabucco project has fallen behind in
    importance for transporting Caspian energy to Europe as Russia pulls
    ahead with concrete steps on the South Stream pipeline, experts say
    The Nabucco project, which has been designed to provide Caspian energy
    to Europe via the shortest route and lowest price possible, has now
    fallen behind alternative Russian energy projects in terms of
    feasibility, experts said.

    In the hopes of lessening the dependency on Russian gas, both the
    European Union and the United States have actively supported the
    Nabucco project. The signature ceremony held by various governments in
    Ankara was defined as `a breakthrough' by the high-ranking officials
    from 15 countries who attended the event in July. However, no deal yet
    has been signed with potential suppliers so far.

    Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin did not even wait a month before
    signing a series of cooperation agreements on major energy projects
    with his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an in August.

    `Turkey unfortunately made the biggest mistake in supporting the
    [Russian proposed] South Stream pipeline in return for [Russia
    agreeing to use the proposed] Samsun-Ceyhan route,' Sinan OÄ?an,
    chairman of the International Relations and Strategic Analysis Center,
    or TÃ`RKSAM, told the Hürriyet Daily News & Economic Review on Friday.

    Moscow wants to bypass Ukraine in its gas deals; though the country is
    a major gas transit route to Europe, it has been a headache to Russia
    in the past. ErdoÄ?an allowed Putin to conduct feasibility studies in
    Turkish territory regarding a shift in the South Stream's route.
    Putin, in response, agreed to pump its crude oil into the proposed
    Samsun-Ceyhan pipeline as an alternative to the congested Bosphorus
    Strait.

    `Turkey only considers commercial profits and has to change its policy
    in line with evolving conditions. Russia, however, follows a more
    strategic and geopolitical policy and gets closer to its final goal
    step-by-step,' OÄ?an said.

    Russia also signed agreements on the Serbian leg of the South Stream
    gas pipeline and an underground gas storage facility on Tuesday.

    `As Putin already noted, it seems that the South Stream pipeline will
    be realized sooner than we expected,' OÄ?an said.

    President Abdullah Gül and his Russian counterpart Dimitry Medvedev
    discussed the South Stream's Turkish route in a recent phone
    conversation, OÄ?an said. Meanwhile, BOTAÅ?, the state-owned Turkish
    crude oil and natural gas pipeline and trading company, attempted to
    delay such approval due to its partnership in the rival Nabucco
    project, OÄ?an said.

    He said Turkey has hampered its own project. `The conditions are
    changing against Nabucco in favor of South Stream because of Turkey's
    commercial approach,' OÄ?an said.

    `One needs to consider such major projects in line with geo-strategic
    policies. Otherwise, even small changes may turn the tables, like is
    currently happening,' he said.

    Turkey has not yet permitted any construction on its territory except
    for feasibility studies, OÄ?an said. `I don't know what is discussed
    behind closed doors. As far as we've heard, only feasibility studies
    and research has been allowed,' he said. `But I can't see a reason why
    the project won't go the next step.'

    One of the consequences of the recent rift between Turkey and
    Azerbaijan is likely to occur in the energy field, OÄ?an said. `No gas
    project can be realized without Azerbaijan. The Nabucco project is on
    the agenda but we are seeing the worst days in the history of our
    relations with Azerbaijan,' he said.

    `Reconciliation with Armenia will be meaningless unless a settlement
    between Baku and Yerevan takes place. How can you put Armenia on the
    route of Nabucco if it doesn't find peace with the supplier country?'

    Russia's Gazprom signed a natural gas purchase deal in Baku on Oct. 10
    on the same day Turkey and Armenia signed two reconciliation
    protocols.

    `Russia is in a hurry to realize its projects bypassing Ukraine
    regardless of their higher costs,' Ä°lham Shaban, a Baku-based energy
    expert, told the Daily News in a phone interview Friday.

    ErdoÄ?an joined his Italian and Russian counterparts via a video
    conference call Thursday. The three discussed joint energy projects
    after Turkey's �alık Energy and Italy's ENI agreed to jointly build
    the Samsun-Ceyhan pipeline, which will carry crude Russian oil from
    the Black Sea to the Mediterranean.

    `The South Stream is the most feasible and promising project among the
    existing alternatives as Russia has concrete buyers and enough gas
    supplies,' Shaban said.

    `Nabucco has fallen one to two steps behind Russian projects because
    the project owners ` Turkey, Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary and Austria `
    are mainly transit countries and potential major buyers are in favor
    of Russian supplies,' he said.

    `Germany has turned its face to the North Stream while Italy clearly
    backs the South Stream. Austria has agreements to buy Russian gas till
    2035. Even Turkey is opting to buy Russian gas at a cost of $265-280
    per 1,000 cubic meters although Azerbaijan is providing it at $120.'

    The existing long-term deals to purchase gas from Russia are the
    biggest obstacles, he said. `Nabucco is the most optimal and shortest
    route to carry gas from the Caspian to Europe. But it is too early. I
    think it is a project for 15 to 20 years later.'
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