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Elections Stall Nabucco Pipeline Plans

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  • Elections Stall Nabucco Pipeline Plans

    ELECTIONS STALL NABUCCO PIPELINE PLANS
    By Vincent Boland in Ankara, Kerin Hope in Athens, and Peggy Hollinger in Paris

    FT
    April 6 2007 17:11

    Plans to build the â~B¬4.6bn ($6.2bn) Nabucco pipeline to transport
    Caspian gas to western Europe have almost ground to a halt after
    becoming embroiled in electoral politics in France and Turkey.

    Turkey has refused to approve extending the construction project to
    include Gaz de France, the French utility. The move, which officials
    said might be revised after the French presidential elections in May,
    reflects simmering anger in Ankara over France's support for Armenia's
    claim of genocide by Ottoman Turks during the first world war.

    A threatened boycott of French goods in Turkey after the French
    parliament voted last year to make denial of the genocide claim a
    crime has not had much success. But the Turkish government warned at
    the time that it might exclude French companies from contracts. The
    face-off with GdF may be a result of that, some diplomats in Ankara
    said on Friday.

    The 3,300km Nabucco project is designed to bring gas from the Caspian
    region to Europe through Turkey, Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary and
    Austria. It is backed by the European Union and the US as a way of
    reducing Europe's dependency on Russian gas supplies, but has hit a
    series of hurdles that have delayed the start of construction.

    The dispute over the participation of GdF, the favourite to join the
    consortium building Nabucco, could complicate matters further. Industry
    observers said the negotiations with a new investor had taken longer
    than expected, with some blaming the strained relations between Ankara
    and Paris.

    Extracting the project from politics could take some time. Turkey
    is holding a general election later this year, and the Armenian
    issue has exploded onto the political agenda. But some analysts said
    the stand-off between Turkey and GdF could have as much to do with
    negotiating tactics as with politics.

    Turkey is keen to sell its part of its excess gas supply to western
    European buyers, in addition to receiving transit fees for shipping
    central Asian and perhaps Middle Eastern gas through Nabucco.

    "The Nabucco project is an opportunity for Turkey to unload its
    excess supply," a Sofia-based analyst said. "But if talks with a
    French buyer aren't going well, it doesn't cost anything to bring up
    the Armenian issue."

    --Boundary_(ID_myRr4k9rxnUn7hHeWnEho g)--
    From: Baghdasarian
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