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BAKU: Europe And Turkey Will Only Have Themselves To Blame If EU Los

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  • BAKU: Europe And Turkey Will Only Have Themselves To Blame If EU Los

    EUROPE AND TURKEY WILL ONLY HAVE THEMSELVES TO BLAME IF EU LOSES ACCESS TO CASPIAN GAS
    By Alexander Jackson

    APA
    www.cria-online.org
    Nov 24 2009
    Azerbaijan

    For all the talk of Turkey moving away from Europe, the real story
    of a Western ally slowly turning East has been ignored. In recent
    weeks Azerbaijan has undertaken a series of moves which could, in the
    long term, lead to the loss of EU access to Caspian gas and a major
    reorientation in the region's geopolitics.

    If this occurs then Europe and Turkey will only have themselves to
    blame. Europe has repeatedly failed to make progress on the Nabucco
    project, which would carry Caspian and Middle Eastern gas to the heart
    of Europe and partially liberate it from reliance on Russian gas. This
    hugely expensive and ambitious project required firm political and
    financial commitments which Brussels has not delivered. Instead,
    individual European governments have been successfully courted by
    Russia's Gazprom for its rival South Stream pipeline under the Black
    Sea. Turkey's obstructionism and failure to acknowledge the links
    between energy and conflict-resolution in the region make it also
    responsible.

    The Nabucco problem has been one of demand - insufficient commitment
    by the EU - but also one of supply. The only confirmed source of gas
    is Azerbaijan. Other possible suppliers - Iran, Central Asia, Iraq,
    and Egypt - have their own specific problems.

    Now it looks as if even Azerbaijan is starting to slip away. In June,
    Azerbaijan's state energy company SOCAR signed a deal with Russia's
    Gazprom. The quantities involved (500 million cubic metres (mcm))
    were insignificant, but this was a warning shot to Brussels and Ankara
    to hurry up with Nabucco. In November Baku has upped the stakes by
    making some serious overtures elsewhere.

    Firstly, SOCAR signed a deal with Iran, promising over 500mcm a year
    from 2010 (Press TV, November 12). Like the Gazprom deal, this is
    another placeholder, since the amounts involved are negligible. The
    significance is political: the agreement holds open the possibility
    of increasing the contracted amount in years to come. Iran is also
    a pariah in the West, and expanding energy ties with it is a clear
    message from Baku. Secondly, Azerbaijan agreed to ship 7 to 8 billion
    cubic meters (bcm) of its gas annually via tankers in a compressed form
    to Bulgaria, bypassing Turkey (Eurasia Daily Monitor, November 16).

    Shortly afterwards, Baku made its bluntest threat yet. "If Europe
    takes too long putting together a solution, then all the gas in the
    Caspian will go to Asia," said a SOCAR official. "It's more serious
    than it seems" (Bloomberg, November 19). China - which has been
    hungrily expanding its energy presence in Central Asia recently -
    is the obvious target market. Currently, the infrastructure to send
    Azerbaijani gas to China does not exist. But SOCAR's threat seems to
    be genuine.

    Ironically, the main obstacle to Azerbaijani gas heading east is also
    the main obstacle to Nabucco. A Trans-Caspian Pipeline (TCP) between
    Turkmenistan and Azerbaijan, long in the planning, is still far from
    being built. Russian and Iranian objections are partly responsible;
    so is a recent dispute between Ashgabat and Baku over the ownership
    of disputed gas fields. Turkmenistan has even threatened to take
    Azerbaijan before a court of international arbitration.

    Alarmed at the prospect of losing Turkmen gas for the foreseeable
    future, the US has taken the unusual step of offering to mediate in
    the dispute (APA, November 18). If the dispute is resolved and a TCP
    is built, it may ultimately be used to send Azerbaijani gas east,
    not Turkmen gas west.

    Why the sudden activity by Baku? Partly, the moves are designed to
    call Europe's bluff and provoke it into action on Nabucco.

    Unfortunately, Brussels doesn't seem to have heard the message. The
    timing of the moves, however, indicates at a deeper and more alarming
    reason: growing disenchantment with Azerbaijan's longstanding ally,
    Turkey.

    For years Ankara has obstructed Nabucco by insisting on preferential
    price tariffs and a share of the allocated gas for its own domestic
    market. Negotiations have continued for some time, and Baku was
    willing to politely discuss the issue - up to a point. This changed
    when Turkey's government decided to press on with normalising relations
    with Armenia, before any progress has been made on the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Turkey's decision has been
    widely viewed in Azerbaijan as a betrayal of the fraternal relationship
    between the two countries, and prompted Baku to take an increasingly
    tough stance on gas negotiations. Ankara needs Nabucco to fulfill its
    goal of being a regional energy hub, and appears unwilling to back
    down. Whilst previously the disagreement was largely commercial,
    Baku's fury over the 'Armenian thaw' has made the pricing dispute
    extremely political.

    There is a very real risk that the sense of inertia created by these
    obstacles will finally kill off Nabucco's prospects. Although a deal
    with Turkey will almost certainly be struck in the end, the long-term
    damage will have been done.

    The implication could well be Azerbaijan's gradual shift away from
    the West's geopolitical orbit. The role of oil and gas pipelines in
    tying states together is sometimes overstated but, in the long run,
    Baku could find itself closely linked with Moscow and Tehran through
    commercial relationships. Oil and gas underpin Azerbaijan's economy:
    its energy ties inevitably influence its foreign policy.

    As always in the Caspian region, business is politics. The tension
    over Nabucco has been building for some time, but the immediate
    trigger of Azerbaijan's energy shift was the Turkish decision to
    negotiate with Armenia without progress on Karabakh. Unless Ankara
    alters its position, there is no reason to doubt that Azerbaijan's
    long-term gas strategy will change.

    Policymakers in Brussels and in Washington should acknowledge the
    dangers involved and commit themselves to resolving this situation
    through serious, frank dialogue with Ankara and Baku. Failure to act
    now will have severe consequences for energy security, and geopolitics,
    in the long term.
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