Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey: Gas Transit Deal With Azerbaijan Shakes Up Regional Energy P

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Turkey: Gas Transit Deal With Azerbaijan Shakes Up Regional Energy P

    TURKEY: GAS TRANSIT DEAL WITH AZERBAIJAN SHAKES UP REGIONAL ENERGY POLITICS
    by Yigal Schleifer

    EurasiaNet.org
    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/64536
    Nov 17 2011

    That high drama production known as Turkey-Azerbaijan relations has
    delivered a new plot twist, with the recent signing of a deal that
    allows for the transit of Azeri gas across Turkish soil and into
    Europe, making it the first tangible step towards creating a southern
    corridor for the delivery to Europe of non-Russian gas.

    Ankara and Baku like to boast of their "brotherly relations" but
    their ties have frequently been strained over the last few years. As
    we learned from Wikileaks, Azeri President Ilham Aliyev has less
    then brotherly feelings towards Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan. And when Turkey signed a 2009 deal with Armenia to restore
    relations, Azerbaijan quickly reacted by taking down Turkish flags
    in Baku and hinting that other actions could be in store if the deal
    goes through (which it didn't).

    The tension between the two countries was only exacerbated by the
    tough negotiations that they were conducting over the terms of the
    transit of Azeri gas over Turkish soil. So it came as something of a
    surprise that Ankara and Baku, with little fanfare, inked a deal on
    October 25 that provides for Azeri gas to transit into Europe through
    Turkey. From RFE/RL's report on the deal:

    Turkey and Azerbaijan have signed a long-awaited agreement on Caspian
    natural-gas supplies and transit to Europe, providing a boost to the
    EU's efforts to diversify energy supplies and setting up a bidding
    war for three key pipeline projects.

    The agreement, signed in the Turkish city of Izmir on October 25,
    opens the door to shipments of Azerbaijani, and possibly Turkmen,
    gas to European customers.

    Under the deal, Turkey is to buy gas from Azerbaijan's Shah Deniz-2
    field and transport the gas through its territory to Europe. The
    lack of an agreement on transiting supplies across Turkey has long
    been the major obstacle to the EU's Southern Corridor energy project,
    which aims to develop routes that bypass Russian or Iranian territory .

    Now all that remains is for Azerbaijan to select from three proposed
    pipelines -- the Interconnector Turkey-Greece-Italy (ITGI) pipeline;
    the Trans Adriatic Pipeline (TAP); and the EU's flagship project,
    the Nabucco pipeline. Earlier this month, Azerbaijani President Ilham
    Aliyev said that the bid "most acceptable for both Azerbaijan and
    our partners" would be the winner.

    Representatives of the three projects made their cases at a separate
    meeting on October 25 in Istanbul.

    But it appears now that Turkey and Azerbaijan have gone further than
    simply agreeing on transit terms and will work together to get the
    gas to Europe before any of the three proposed southern corridor
    pipelines are built. From Reuters:

    Azerbaijan and Turkey have started work on a trans-Anatolian gas
    pipeline project costing some $5-6 billion, Azeri state energy company
    SOCAR said on Thursday, adding to an array of planned energy projects
    crossing Turkey.

    Azerbaijan has been receptive to overtures from proponents of a
    so-called "southern corridor", promising to help diversify energy
    sales away from Russia and options are proliferating.

    The latest project, led by Socar and with a Turkish partner to be named
    later, is planned to have a capacity of 16-17 billion cubic metres
    (bcm), a SOCAR official, who declined to be named, told Reuters. It
    could also be open to other partners.

    "Azerbaijan and Turkey have started work on a Trans-Anatolian gas
    pipeline project from Anatolia's eastern border to its western border,"
    SOCAR President Rovnag Abdullayev said at a conference on Thursday.

    Mert Bilgin, an expert on Turkish energy politics at Istanbul's
    Bahcesehir University, says the Azeri gas could very well go to Europe
    even through existing pipelines. "Renovation of existing pipelines
    (with additional pumping stations) will enable Azeri gas reach Greece
    and/or Bulgaria. This is a practical and a very feasible option,"
    he says. "The gas may also be transported to Albania and Italy if
    Azerbaijan agrees with ITGI or TAP consortia. So it is not going to
    be a brand new pipeline for the next 6-10 years. A new pipeline may
    or may not emerge in this period depending on the market conditions
    in Europe." (This approach appears to have Washington's support,
    with Amb. Richard Morningstar, the United States' special envoy for
    Eurasian energy, recently telling an audience in Baku that the best
    way to start getting Azeri gas to Europe could be through the use of
    a smaller pipeline, rather than with the more ambitious Nabucco. More
    on that from Reuters.)

    In an analysis for the German Marshall Fund, Fariz Ismailzade,
    executive vice rector of the Azerbaijan Diplomatic Academy, suggests
    that the transit deal indicates that after their various spats of
    the last few years, Turkey and Azerbaijan are returning to their
    strategic senses. From his GMF piece:

    It is clear that the agreements between Azerbaijan and Turkey once
    again moved bilateral relations to a strategic level, brought a
    visionary approach to regional energy projects, and put aside tactical
    differences for the sake of bigger gains on the political and economic
    map of the region. Turkey and Azerbaijan showed an understanding
    of the importance of this project and a willingness to cut a deal
    despite previous disagreements and a chill in bilateral relations.

    Conversely, it's probably safe to say that this new deal between
    Turkey and Azerbaijan puts perhaps a final nail in the coffin of
    the frozen rapprochement deal signed between Ankara and Yerevan in
    2009, which has since been stalled over the question of the disputed
    territory of Nagorno-Karabakh. At the signing of the transit deal,
    PM Erdogan made it clear that his country and Azerbaijan were back
    to being "brothers." Turkey will "fight shoulder to shoulder with
    Azerbaijan until the occupation of Karabakh comes to an end," Erdogan
    said at the opening ceremony, which took place at an oil refinery in
    İzmir. "The occupation of Karabakh saddens Turkish nationals as it
    does Azerbaijani brothers."

Working...
X