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Ankara, Baku to Sign Nabucco Deal

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  • Ankara, Baku to Sign Nabucco Deal

    The Moscow Times , Russia
    May 16 2010

    Ankara, Baku to Sign Nabucco Deal

    16 May 2010
    Reuters

    BAKU, Azerbaijan ' A long-awaited Nabucco gas deal between Turkey and
    Azerbaijan, expected to be signed Monday, could unlock Azeri gas
    reserves for the West and eventually trim Europe's energy dependence
    on Russia.

    Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan is to travel to Azerbaijan on
    Monday to sign the EU-backed deal, which has been two years in the
    making and at times hostage to diplomatic relations in the volatile
    South Caucasus region.

    Tensions between the traditionally close Muslim allies had unnerved
    planners seeking fuel for the 7.9 billion euro ($10 billion) project,
    a key rival to Russian pipelines.

    Azerbaijan had been angered by Turkey seeking to normalize ties with
    Armenia, Azerbaijan's foe in a conflict over the breakaway
    Nagorno-Karabakh region.

    To Azerbaijan's relief, the Turkish-Armenian rapprochement collapsed
    last month, a result of Turkey pressing Armenia to make some gesture
    to defuse tensions in Nagorno-Karabakh.

    The earlier chill in relations had led to pricing disagreements over
    Azeri gas currently supplied to Turkey.

    More important for Europe, it had undermined negotiations that would
    form the basis for the export of Azeri gas through Turkey to countries
    like Austria.

    Precise details of Monday's expected deal are unknown, but it should
    at least resolve pricing differences over 6 billion cubic meters of
    gas Azerbaijan currently sells to Turkey.

    "The package agreement with Turkey will provide the necessary ¦
    conditions to start commercial talks with potential European buyers,"
    said Ana Jelenkovic of Eurasia Group.

    Buyers will be looking for volumes from the second phase production at
    Azerbaijan's Shah Deniz deposit in the Caspian Sea, operated by BP and
    Statoil and due to come online between 2014 and 2017.

    Azeri Energy Minister Natik Aliyev said the two sides had also agreed
    in principle on volumes Turkey would receive from Shah Deniz II, which
    will produce an additional 16 billion cubic meters per year on top of
    the current 9 bcm to 10 bcm from Shah Deniz I.

    Turkey has requested 6 bcm to 7 bcm of gas from the second phase, and
    Azerbaijan will look to accelerate the start of production to 2014, he
    said.

    That would free up volumes of gas to flow to Nabucco, albeit at a
    fraction of Russian current gas exports of 150 bcm. The Nabucco
    project would, nevertheless, mark an important step toward cutting
    dependence on Moscow, which supplies a quarter of the EU's gas
    imports.

    Nabucco aims to transport up to 31 bcm of gas annually from the
    Caspian region to an Austrian hub via Bulgaria, Romania, Turkey and
    Hungary.

    But it faces competition from Russia's South Stream project, which is
    due to start construction in 2012. Nabucco has been hit by delays and
    problems in pinning down supplies.

    Ilham Shaban of the Independent Center for Oil Research in Baku said
    Turkey had secured 5 bcm to 6 bcm annually from Shah Deniz II, but the
    price was not decided.

    "It's not reflected in the documents that are expected to be signed
    now since Shah Deniz II has not been officially sanctioned," he said.

    "But after Erdogan's visit, SOCAR will start active commercial
    negotiations with all potential buyers of gas from Shah Deniz II," he
    said. SOCAR is the Azeri state energy company.

    Jelenkovic said there were indications that under the agreement,
    Azerbaijan ' not Turkey ' would control the sale of transit gas from
    Turkey's border with Europe.

    As Azeri relations with the West deteriorated over its backing for the
    Armenian-Turkish thaw, Azerbaijan struck deals to sell small amounts
    of gas to Russia and Iran, tapping supplies courted by Nabucco.

    The gas deal with Turkey, Jelenkovic said, "reaffirms overall what
    Azerbaijan's energy strategy and what their goal is ' to remain a
    largely pro-Western energy supplier, but with a priority on
    controlling their gas supplies to Europe."
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