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Russia Throws Down the Gauntlet Over Pipeline Projects

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  • Russia Throws Down the Gauntlet Over Pipeline Projects

    Russia Throws Down the Gauntlet Over Pipeline Projects

    By Ben Angel
    2009.10.26 17:52

    The race between Russia and the European Union over energy pipeline
    corridors has become a little more intense after a series of recent events
    in Turkey.

    Months of delays in negotiations between Turkey and Azerbaijan over Turkey's
    price for transmitting gas to Europe through the Nabucco gas pipeline and
    the Interconnector Turkey-Greece-Italy gas pipeline have culminated in a row
    between Baku and Ankara. This seemed to coincide with the recent
    rapprochement between Azerbaijan's ally Turkey, and its enemy Armenia. As
    Turkish-Armenian rapprochement began to appear inevitable, President Ilham
    Aliyev of Azerbaijan arranged a deal with Moscow during a Commonwealth of
    Independent States meeting in which he would direct the sale of 500 million
    cubic metres of gas from the newly tapped Shah Deniz Phase 2 gas field
    reservoir (a large deposit located below the Shah Deniz Phase 1 reservoir
    off Azerbaijan in the southern Caspian Sea) in 2010, and threatened to
    extend this deal into a permanent supply agreement. This would divert gas
    from the South Caucasus gas pipeline (which supplies gas to Georgia) and
    bypass Turkey.

    A week later, after the signing of the Ankara-Yerevan rapprochement,
    President Aliyev announced on Azerbaijani national television that he would
    no longer subsidise gas sold to Turkey, issuing further threats against
    Western efforts to use the Turkish pipeline to deliver gas to Europe.
    Negotiations have been quietly proceeding since then to restore Azerbaijan's
    confidence in Turkey as a transportation corridor partner.

    Then last week Russia, in a race to push through the Gazprom-Eni backed
    South Stream gas pipeline before the EU's Southern Corridor can be
    constructed jumped a major hurdle when Turkish Economy Minister Taner Yildiz
    announced on Tuesday that his Government will permit the Russian-Italian
    project to lay pipes within Turkish territorial waters. This will allow
    South Stream to bypass territorial waters controlled by Ukraine.

    These events have brought the race between the Southern Corridor and South
    Stream to the forefront of international attention, and moved Russia into a
    neck-and-neck chase with the Europeans, in which it may be even a bit ahead,
    in the race to build the first pipeline.

    Europe's Entry: The Southern Corridor

    The Southern Corridor is Europe's latest effort to diversify its energy
    sources and move beyond dependence on Russia. To be implemented by the
    Caspian Development Corporation (CDC), a body devised last November to serve
    as a `one-stop shop' for the transport of gas from the Caspian Sea and
    Central Asia to Europe, the Southern Corridor concept will involve using the
    existing South Caucasus gas pipeline, the Nabucco gas pipeline connecting
    Turkey and Austria, the Interconnector Turkey-Greece-Italy gas pipeline, the
    proposed White Stream project connecting Georgia, Ukraine and Romania and
    the Trans-Adriatic gas pipeline connecting Romania and northern Italy to
    deliver gas to Europe along three corridors (Turkey-Austria, Turkey-Italy
    and Georgia-Romania-Italy).

    Southern Corridor diversifies Europe's energy providers from the east. Since
    the West-Siberian gas pipeline was extended to Western Europe in the 1980s,
    Russia has dominated the European energy market. Today, the European Union
    receives 50 percent of its gas and 30 percent of its oil supplies through
    the Russian pipelines.

    Tapping Caspian Sea oil and gas resources was seen as the best remedy to
    reduce Russian control of Europe's energy market. In 1994 the BP Company
    (formerly British Petroleum) led a consortium of 10 oil firms in forming the
    Azerbaijan International Operating Company (AIOC - likely a play on BP's
    original name: the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company). The new AIOC began developing
    the Azeri-Chirag-Gunashli (ACG) oil fields in the central Caspian Sea.
    Similarly, BP worked with a smaller group of companies in a joint venture to
    develop the Shah Deniz offshore gas field farther south.

    Today, Caspian oil runs through Georgia and Turkey in the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline (the second largest oil pipeline in the
    world after the Druzhba), and its gas goes through the South Caucasus
    pipeline (which follows the same route as far west as Erzurum). In the
    future, it is planned to send Caspian gas from eastern Turkey through the
    Southern Corridor pipelines. The most well-known component of the Corridor
    is the proposed pipeline from Turkey to Austria to be built by Nabucco Gas
    Pipeline International GmbH (named after a Giuseppe Verdi opera), a
    consortium led by Austria's OMV energy firm. This pipeline would supply
    southeastern Europe and connect Caspian gas with Western European energy
    markets.

    Russia's Entry: South Stream

    Russia is racing in with a pipeline of its own to supply gas to southeastern
    Europe and ensure an equally reliable connection with Western Europe. With
    its South Stream, and corresponding Nord Stream, gas pipelines Moscow plans
    to eliminate its own reliance on its Western neighbours.

    Russia began facing difficulties transmitting gas to the West when newly
    independent Ukraine diverted it from pipelines passing through its
    territories. Russia attempted to halt gas supplies to Kiev several times for
    its alleged failure to pay for what it had overtly imported, but each time
    the Ukrainians simply diverted gas from the pipelines going to Europe to
    make up the shortfall.

    Following the 2004 Orange Revolution in Ukraine and after a 2007 dispute
    over Transneft's attempt to normalise the price of oil sold to Belarus,
    Russia's quest for another option became even more urgent. Gazprom selected
    two projects: Nord Stream, a Baltic subsea pipeline that would carry gas
    from St. Petersburg to Germany, and South Stream, a Black Sea subsea
    pipeline that would carry gas from the Krasnodar Region to Bulgaria.

    The South Stream project is useful to Russia not only as a more reliable
    means of delivering gas to the market, but, as Russian Prime Minister Putin
    demonstrated this week, an effective diplomatic weapon. The Russian
    newspaper Kommersant stirred fears internationally on Tuesday by suggesting
    that the timing of the Russian-Turkish agreement meant that Bulgaria, which
    has elected the relatively anti-Moscow Citizens for European Development
    (GERB) Party under Prime Minister Boyko Borissov, would be excluded from the
    South Stream project for refusing to cooperate on other energy projects. In
    a more notable example of non-cooperation, fellow GERB Party politician and
    Mayor of Burgas Dimitar Novikov echoed on Greek television the unpopularity
    of the pipeline. `Our priorities are projects related to the development
    of
    tourism and light industry, not those which threaten the environment such as
    the Burgas-Alexandropoulis oil pipeline,' he said.

    Putin has arranged with Turkish Economy Minister Yildiz the use of the
    proposed Turkish Samsun-Ceyhan pipeline, replacing the Bulgarian-Greek
    bypass route, but the threat to take the gas pipeline around Bulgaria has
    proved to be either inaccurate reporting or a bluff, at least for the time
    being. Still, Turkish cooperation removes a bargaining chip from Ukraine,
    which had earlier sought to trade its approval for the South Stream passing
    through Ukrainian territorial waters in return for Russian approval for
    Ukraine's White Stream subsea gas pipeline to pass from the Georgian
    coastline through Russian territorial waters to Ukraine.

    Turkish cooperation has also reportedly helped speed up the South Stream
    project's timetable, so that it would be completed before the rival Nabucco
    pipeline. Media observers such as The Moscow Times have suggested that the
    threat of the speedy construction of such a bypass of the Ukraine-based
    West-Siberian gas pipeline might be designed to damage Ukrainian President
    Viktor Yushchenko's chances of reelection at the beginning of 2010.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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