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ANKARA: EU Shoots Itself In The Foot On Energy

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  • ANKARA: EU Shoots Itself In The Foot On Energy

    EU SHOOTS ITSELF IN THE FOOT ON ENERGY

    Hurriyet
    Feb 14 2010
    Turkey

    In almost any area of political or social endeavor, the topic of
    energy is becoming increasingly fundamental. Energy policy and
    politics drive so much that, at first glance, they might not seem
    specifically relevant.

    Energy is at the root of virtually all of Turkey's environmental
    debates and disputes. Decisions on which dam to build or which strategy
    to embrace for protecting the Bosphorus against shipping disasters
    are inherently matters about energy.

    Engage any agricultural expert in a discussion on the woes of the
    farming industry, and he or she will say commodity prices are down
    and input prices are up. What this conversation too is really about
    is energy.

    Little needs to be said, of course, about the role of energy in the
    wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Meanwhile the specter of climate change
    threatens our very existence and an accord to do anything about it
    remains elusive. An election in Ukraine, a set of protocols before
    Armenia's parliament, a regional referendum on the status of the
    northern Iraqi city of Mosul... in the final analysis, these are all
    energy discussions.

    The element of energy in Turkey's ongoing accession talks with the
    European Union is almost the perfect metaphor to capture the state of
    the entire negotiation. We have long argued that these negotiations
    proceed amid an asymmetrical perspective. In most European capitals,
    EU membership for Turkey is seen as sort of a good deed, a gesture
    of magnanimity. If there is a benefit for the rest of Europe, it
    is limited to the domestication of a country that otherwise risks
    getting out of hand in terms of its population, religion or migration.

    That Turkey's membership is inherently a good - if not a better -
    deal for the existing EU societies is an argument that falls flat. It
    falls flat even in Italy, a country that will actually cease to exist
    in about 120 years if population trends continue at their current rate.

    That this poverty of vision defines so much thinking in Brussels or
    Strasbourg is, of course, frustrating. That European leaders have by
    and large failed to define, let along articulate, their own strategic
    self-interest vis-a-vis Turkey is a sad statement on the age. But one
    would think one element of reason to be extracted from this irrational
    morass would be the energy relationship between Turkey and the EU.

    >From the prospective Nabucco or South Stream gas pipelines to the
    existing Baku-Ceyhan oil pipeline, to ongoing petroleum explorations
    by Norway's Statoil on the Black Sea to the tanker traffic flowing
    through Europe's largest city... it's all about energy.

    And yet, as our reporter Döndu SarıÅ~_ık wrote in our weekend
    edition, the "energy chapter," the most important pillar in the
    negotiation architecture, is closed at the behest of Greek Cyprus
    and is likely to remain so.

    Such shortsightedness is hardly a threat to Turkey's energy security.

    It is, however, one to that of the EU.
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