Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey Sends Blunt Message To France

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

  • Turkey Sends Blunt Message To France

    TURKEY SENDS BLUNT MESSAGE TO FRANCE
    by Judy Dempsey - The New York Times Media Group

    The International Herald Tribune
    April 6, 2007 Friday

    Ankara, angered by Armenian bill, halts pipeline talks

    Turkey said Thursday that it was suspending talks with Gaz de France on
    joining a major natural gas pipeline consortium, a political move aimed
    at putting pressure on both Paris and Brussels that European Union
    officials said could further delay one of the biggest energy projects.

    Turkey, which is angry about a pending French bill that calls the
    mass killing of Armenians during Ottoman rule a genocide, said that
    it would await the outcome of presidential elections next month
    in France before deciding if it would allow Gaz de France into the
    five-nation consortium that is leading the project, the Anatolia news
    agency reported, citing the Energy Ministry.

    "We will decide according to policies to be followed after the
    elections," a senior Turkish Energy Ministry official, who declined
    to be identified, was quoted by Reuters as saying in Ankara.

    Turkey's blunt message to France was also seen as a reminder to
    Brussels of the strategic importance of the country for the EU's
    energy ambitions at a time when talks on Turkey's application for
    membership to the bloc are going badly. Negotiators are about to
    tackle the energy section of the discussions.

    One European Commission official, speaking on condition of anonymity
    because of the sensitivity of the talks, said Turkey "knows its value
    as the major transit country for this project and is making the most
    of it."

    The official said that the suspension had more to do with politics
    than the economics of the project, conceived in 2002 as the EU's
    first attempt at forging a common energy policy.

    The consortium wants to build the ¤4.6 billion, or $6.2 billion,
    Nabucco pipeline, which would bring natural gas from Iran and the
    Caspian sea across Turkey to Western Europe, bypassing Russia. The
    project is already a year behind schedule, with completion now planned
    for 2012.

    OMV, the Austrian energy company that heads the Nabucco consortium,
    said Thursday that a feasibility study had been carried out, and
    confirmed that it was seeking another partner to share the costs.

    "Financing possibilities are currently being evaluated," said Andrea
    Hof, a spokeswoman for OMV. The other consortium members include
    MOL of Hungary, Transgaz of Romania, Bulgargaz of Bulgaria and Botas
    of Turkey.

    But she would not confirm that the consortium was holding talks with
    Gaz de France, after talks with Total, also based in France, collapsed
    this year. "There are ongoing talks with several possible partners,"
    she said.

    Reached by phone, a spokesman for Turkey's Energy Ministry confirmed
    that the consortium had been holding talks with Gaz de France. But
    he declined to comment on any suspension, or if Gaz de France had
    been notified.

    "We do not want to comment on this because it is a political issue,"
    the ministry spokesman said.

    Turkey says that claims by Armenia that the Ottoman empire committed
    genocide against 1.5 million Armenians during World War I are greatly
    exaggerated.

    Ankara protested loudly last year after the National Assembly of
    France passed a bill that would make it a crime to deny that the
    killings amounted to genocide. The bill still has to be approved by
    the Senate before becoming law.

    In Paris, a spokeswoman for Gaz de France would not comment on
    Turkey's decision, or even confirm that it was negotiating to become
    part of the 3,300 kilometer, or 2,050 mile, Nabucco pipeline. "What
    we can say is that we are interested in the project," Sabine Wacquez
    said. By joining the Nabucco consortium, Gaz de France would be able
    to further the diversification of its natural gas supplies.

    Gaz de France this year agreed to a contract with Russia's giant
    state-owned energy company Gazprom. Gazprom will for the first time
    use Gaz de France's distribution network to sell Russian natural gas
    directly to French consumers. In return, Gaz de France will receive
    more Russian natural gas in the form of long-term contracts. France
    already gets 16 percent of its total natural gas needs from Russia.

    Natural gas accounts for 15 percent of all energy consumption; most
    of the country's energy needs are met by nuclear power.

    Turkey, which is almost completely dependent on energy imports, hopes
    Nabucco will give it the chance to become an energy hub in Europe. At
    the same time, it wants to diversify its energy imports away from
    Russia, on which it - like most of Europe - is very dependent.

    Because of its location between Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia,
    Turkey has become strategically important for the energy ambitions
    of both the EU and Russia.

    Russia has already built the Blue Stream natural gas pipeline that
    reaches Turkey by running under the Black Sea. Gazprom now plans to
    extend this pipeline up through Romania and Serbia into Hungary with
    Hungarian support, even though Hungary is a member of the Nabucco
    consortium.

    Ferenc Gyurcsany, the prime minister of Hungary, and Vladimir Putin,
    Russia's president, agreed last June to extend the Blue Stream pipeline
    to Hungary.

    During an interview last month, Gyurcsany said Nabucco was "a dream.
    An old dream. We cannot heat apartments with dreams." He also said
    that an extended Blue Stream project was much better organized.

    Turkey has made threats against France before. After the vote in the
    National Assembly, Turkey's armed forces said that they would freeze
    bilateral ties with its NATO ally. But officials at NATO say that
    there has been no sign of any change in French-Turkish relations.

    --Boundary_(ID_Y7yxxmNl+IB7xbgt7DPfHQ) --
Working...
X