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Turkey Says Azeri Gas Talks Stumble Over Armenia

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  • Turkey Says Azeri Gas Talks Stumble Over Armenia

    TURKEY SAYS AZERI GAS TALKS STUMBLE OVER ARMENIA
    By Orhan Coskun

    Reuters
    March 23 2010
    ANKARA

    Talks between Turkey and Azerbaijan over securing gas for Europe
    have temporarily halted due to disagreements over Turkey's attempts
    to normalise relations with Azeri arch-enemy Armenia, Turkey said
    on Tuesday.

    The talks over gas supplies from Azerbaijan's Shakh Deniz II gas
    project are crucial to help filling the European Union-backed
    Nabucco pipeline project, which aims to reduce Europe's dependence
    on Russian gas.

    But Muslim Turkish attempts to normalise relations with Christian
    Armenia, which still occupies territory claimed by Ankara's traditional
    ally Azerbaijan, have put a temporary stop to the talks.

    "We have not talked with the Azeris for between a month and a month
    and a half, the fundamental issue here is politics," said Energy
    Minister Taner Yildiz, speaking at a news conference.

    Turkey signed protocols late last year with Armenia which agreed to
    establish diplomatic relations and reopen their frontier, overcoming
    a century of hostility stemming from the World War One mass killings
    of Armenians by Ottoman forces.

    The Turkish Armenian peace accords however have been slowed as both
    sides accuse each other of trying to re-write the texts, and tensions
    between the two countries have increased since the United States
    passed a resolution branding the 1915 killings as genocide.

    Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 in a move of solidarity
    with Azerbaijan during the conflict over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh
    region.

    Yildiz said it was unclear whether a previous offer to transit the
    Azeri gas to Europe at less than markets prices had been accepted.

    NUCLEAR TALKS WITH RUSSIA

    Yildiz also said fundamental issues regarding the building of a
    nuclear power plant would have to be worked out with Russia by May.

    Turkey wants to build at least two nuclear power plants to reduce
    dependence on foreign energy imports and cover a looming shortfall
    in electricity.

    Energy Ministry sources have said the government may forego a tender
    for one of the plants and hand the project to a Russian-Turkish
    consortium after a previous nuclear tender, won by a Russian-Turkish
    partnership, was annulled over power pricing issues.

    "The fundamental issues regarding the building of a nuclear power
    station with Russia need to be resolved by May," said Yildiz.

    Yildiz also said that he hoped to boost crude oil supplies via tthe
    Kirkuk-Ceyhan pipeline from Iraq to 70 million tonnes per year from
    a current annual 25 million tonnes. (Reporting by Orhan Coskun,
    Writing by Thomas Grove)

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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