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Azerbaijan Says Still Working With Turkey On Gas Deal

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  • Azerbaijan Says Still Working With Turkey On Gas Deal

    UPDATE 1-AZERBAIJAN SAYS STILL WORKING WITH TURKEY ON GAS DEAL
    Afet Mehtiyeva

    Reuters
    May 17 2010

    BAKU, May 17 (Reuters) - Azerbaijan said on Monday it was still
    working with Turkey on the technical details of a long-awaited gas
    supply deal that could unlock Azeri gas reserves for the West.

    The two sides were expected to sign the agreement on Monday, during
    a visit by Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan. He said it could
    be signed when Azeri President Ilham Aliyev visits Turkey, without
    specifying when.

    "We discussed all issues related to gas transit with Turkey last
    month. Technical work for signing these documents is ongoing," Aliyev
    said after meeting Erdogan.

    The deal on gas supply and transit, two years in the making, could
    help unlock Azeri gas reserves for the West -- in particular the
    troubled 7.9 billion euro ($9.74 billion) Nabucco project -- and
    eventually trim Europe's energy dependence on Russia.

    Negotiations have been complicated by political tensions between
    the Muslim allies over a bid by Turkey and Christian Armenia --
    Azerbaijan's enemy in the conflict over rebel Nagorno-Karabakh --
    to bury a century of hostility and mend ties.

    The rapprochement collapsed last month.

    Precise details of the gas deal are unknown but it is expected to at
    least resolve pricing differences over 6 billion cubic metres of gas
    Azerbaijan currently sells to Turkey.

    Analysts say it could trigger commercial talks on volumes from the
    second phase of production at Azerbaijan's Shah Deniz deposit in the
    Caspian Sea, operated by BP (BP.L) and Statoil (STL.OL) and due to
    come online by 2017.

    Azerbaijan says it has agreed in principle on volumes Turkey would
    receive from Shah Deniz II, which will produce an additional 16 billion
    cubic metres per year on top of the current 9-10 bcm from Shah Deniz I.

    Turkey has requested 6-7 bcm of gas from the second phase.

    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. (Writing by Thomas Grove and
    Matt Robinson; Editing by Sue Thomas).
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