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France Ready To Leap On The South Stream Bandwagon

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  • France Ready To Leap On The South Stream Bandwagon

    FRANCE READY TO LEAP ON THE SOUTH STREAM BANDWAGON
    By Vladimir Socor

    Eurasia Daily Monitor
    Oct 31 2008
    DC

    French Minister of Foreign Affairs Bernard Kouchner said on October 28
    that France, the current holder of the EU presidency, was interested in
    both the Nabucco and South Stream gas projects and was willing to join
    either. Kouchner suggested, moreover, that Russia be included in the
    Nabucco project (Kommersant, October 28). His statement contradicts
    the EU's declared policy of supporting Nabucco against its rival,
    Gazprom's South Stream. Furthermore, participation of Gazprom in
    Nabucco would defeat that project's basic rationale, which is to
    reduce Europe's dependence on Russian gas. Nabucco with Russian
    participation would virtually become a "South Stream Lite."

    Kouchner's Kommersant interview coincided with his talks in
    St. Petersburg with Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergei
    Lavrov. In those talks, Kouchner called for a quick start to EU-Russia
    negotiations on a partnership agreement, signaling a return to
    business-as-usual after Russia's recent invasion of Georgia.

    The French government seeks access to Russian gas
    (Russian-delivered, Central Asian gas in this case) for the Gaz de
    France company. State-controlled Gaz de France had earlier proposed
    joining the Nabucco consortium but was ruled out by Turkey in 2006,
    following a French parliamentary vote that had recognized "the Armenian
    genocide." Paris is apparently now switching sides to South Stream
    (or looking to change Nabucco's rationale in Gazprom's favor).

    The EU's French presidency is the second consecutive presidency
    consorting with South Stream. In June of this year, Slovenia
    completed its presidency of the EU by signing up with Gazprom for
    South Stream. Flouting EU policy becomes all the easier when even
    the presiding countries do so without apparent compunction.

    EU support for Nabucco is admittedly largely declarative, and even
    those declarations sound trembling. The EU Commission's standard line,
    as repeated most recently by Energy Commissioner Andris Piebalgs'
    spokesman Ferran Tarradellas, is that the EU supports Nabucco as a
    priority project but does not oppose South Stream and leaves it up to
    member countries to choose one project or the other (NewsIn, October
    29). The implication is that the EU (or at least the commission) has a
    preference rather than a clear policy and does not insist on carrying
    it through. Publicly at least, the commission does not seem to make a
    strong case for Nabucco on the basis of a comparative analysis with
    South Stream from the standpoint of EU energy security. Instead,
    the European Parliament has had to take the lead in that regard
    (see Zeyno Baran, "Security Aspects of the South Stream Project,"
    Hudson Institute, October 2008).

    South Stream's perceived bandwagon is screeching to a halt,
    however. The anticipation of shortfalls in Russian gas production,
    drying up of international credit, and Gazprom's own precarious
    financial position are now delaying the project. Moscow has now
    decided to postpone not just the start but even the detailed planning
    for this project.

    On October 23 and 24 Gazprom announced that it would postpone the
    technical and economic assessments for South Stream's sections
    through Greece and through Serbia from 2009 until 2010. Those
    assessments are supposed to be included in the final assessment of
    the overall project. Construction is now envisaged for the period
    from 2012 to 2015 instead of 2010 to 2013. There is no agreed cost
    estimate for this project thus far. According to Gazprom's Foreign
    Economic Relations Department chief Stanislav Tsygankov, the company
    has yet to choose among various options for pipeline routes through
    a number of countries and possible branch offs from those sections
    (RosBusinessConsulting, RIA Novosti, Interfax, October 27, 28).

    Gazprom has hinted that it might invite Romania into the project,
    instead of Bulgaria or Serbia, or perhaps alongside them (see EDM,
    October 22, 24). Such hints are designed to induce various countries
    to compete against each other for future access to limited amounts
    of Russian gas. As Sergei Emelyanov, first deputy head of Gazexport
    (Gazprom's export arm), has made clear, Gazprom is involved in
    discussions with multiple countries about their participation in South
    Stream, so as to have a clear picture about the market potential and
    political situation in each customer country (NewsIn, October 28).

    At the moment, Bulgaria seems to be raising objections to Gazprom
    owning South Stream's pipeline section on Bulgarian territory. For its
    part, Serbia (where pro-Europe parties are on the ascendancy) has four
    issues in dispute with Gazprom: the annual capacity of the proposed
    pipeline (Belgrade had expected more than 10 billion cubic meters);
    the price of future supplies of gas; the valuation of the state company
    Serbian Oil Industry (NIS, which Gazprom Neft wants to acquire on the
    cheap, as part of the South Stream package); and Belgrade's effort
    to eliminate the Gazprom-created intermediary YugoRosGaz, which is
    now at the center of a corruption scandal in Serbia.

    Facing those problems in Bulgaria and Serbia, Gazprom hinted that
    it might circumvent both of them by offering to include Romania
    in the South Stream project. While some elements in the Romanian
    government seemed receptive, President Traian Basescu and Prime
    Minister Calin Popescu-Tariceanu have publicly turned down the
    suggestion. Both leaders cited considerations of energy security and
    supply diversification in reaffirming Romania's unambiguous choice
    of the Nabucco project (Evenimentul Zilei, Cotidianul, October 30, 31).
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