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A Couple Of Slaps From "Big Brother"

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  • A Couple Of Slaps From "Big Brother"

    A COUPLE OF SLAPS FROM "BIG BROTHER"

    news.am
    Oct 28 2009
    Armenia

    Yesterday, Turkish Minister of Energy and Natural Resources Taner
    Yıldiz put an end to the empty talk about Azerbaijan's ability to
    influence Ankara's foreign and energy policy in any way.

    The aim of the empty talk was "enhancing" Azerbaijan's regional
    influence by means of rhetoric. In fact, however, Baku exhausted its
    potential for energy diktat long ago - it has neither the necessary
    resources nor means of diversifying routes or political weight to
    torpedo Turkey's strategic task of becoming the main point for
    hydrocarbons transit to Europe. That was the reason why billons
    of U.S. dollars were invested in the Baku-Ceyhan and Baku-Erzurum
    projects. Leaving the communications inoperative is as impossible
    for President Ilham Aliyev as yielding his chair to some Isa Gambar.

    So the direction for the transit of Caspian resources at Azerbaijan's
    disposal can by no means be changed. Another matter is that the
    reserves are not sufficient to meet both Turkey's ambitions and
    Europe's demands.

    Ilham Aliyev is not to blame for the West having been unable to push
    through the Transcaspian gas main project. As a result, the two pipes
    of great length designed for supplying energy resources from Central
    Asia to Europe -- the Baku-Ceyhan oil pipeline with an annual capacity
    of 50m tons, and the South Caucasus gas pipeline Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum
    with an annual capacity of up to 30bn cubic meters - actually run
    only to end in Azerbaijan's well that is running dry. Strategically,
    the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum gas pipeline was designed for Central
    Asian gas, rather than for Azerbaijan's. It was laying the gas main
    through the bottom of the Caspian Sea than was supposed to make the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum gas pipeline part of the Nabucco project.

    Azerbaijan is capable of supplying only 1/3 of the necessary volume to
    this pipeline, which can hardly satisfy Turkey and the end consumers
    in Europe. The designed annual capacity of the Nabucco gas pipeline is
    30bn cubic meters, and, in this context, Azerbaijan's efforts are "a
    drop in the ocean." By various estimates, over the following decade,
    Azerbaijan will be capable of supplying within 5bn cubic meters of
    gas to this pipeline, whereas at least 15bn cubic meters are required
    for it to be put into operation. Moreover, the volume Azerbaijan
    is ensuring now does not reach Turkey in full. Let us remember that
    Georgia, a transit country which completely upset its relations with
    Russia, became dependent on Azerbaijani gas, while Turkey "granted"
    its gas quota in the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum pipeline to Georgians. So
    Turkey has never received strategic amount of gas from Azerbaijan
    and hardly expects to receive it.

    Realizing that Russia will go all out to prevent a pipe from being laid
    through the Caspian bottom, Turkey, without wasting time, joined the
    Russia-launched South Stream project. The difference of this project
    from Nabucco is as follows: from Central Asia the pipeline will
    run along the northern Caspian coast (a Near-Caspian gas pipeline),
    rather than through the bottom of the Caspian Sea, which, however, is
    not of essential importance for Turkey. On the contrary, this reduces
    the number of transit countries between Central Asia and Turkey --
    Russia in place of Azerbaijan and Georgia. The efforts exerted by
    RF Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and his Italian counterpart Silvio
    Berlusconi were crowned with success - Turkey joined the South Stream
    project. At that very moment Azerbaijan felt the hard slap delivered by
    its "big brother" - it was not while Yerevan and Ankara were signing
    the Protocols in Zurich.

    The second slap proved to be even header. Baku got it yesterday,
    when Turkish Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Minister of Energy
    and Natural Resources Taner Yildiz agreed on the details of Turkey's
    participation in the South Pars project with Iran. It is the world's
    largest gas field coverings an area of 9,700 square kilometers, with
    3,700 square kilometers (South Pars) being in Iranian territorial
    waters. It can really serve as resource base for the Nabucco project,
    but Azerbaijan drops out of the game. Moreover, the West may share the
    same fate, as Turkey seems to be going to "uncap the Iranian barrel"
    with Russia. So Russia is "drawing" Central Asian resources into
    the South Stream and Blue Stream projects, while Turkey is ensuring
    access to the European market for Iranian gas. Thus, Europe's energy
    security problem can be resolved by combined efforts of Turkey and
    Russia, with Iran's energy potential necessarily used.

    Armenia may play a key role in the Turkey-Iran-Russia energy triangle.

    In any case, over the last few years, Russia, slowly but surely, has
    been creating a powerful "electric energy base" in Armenia. With the
    Iran-Armenia gas main considered, Armenia's prospects will be even
    better after the Armenian-Turkish border has been reopened.

    As regards Azerbaijan, the only thing for it to do is to feed the West
    promises, beg compensation of Turkey for gas at a giveaway price and
    try to get Russia's support by supplying ridiculously small volumes
    of gas (500m cubic meters) to the Gazprom Company by means of bypass
    routes.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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