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Turks Shun Gas Project In Genocide Row

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  • Turks Shun Gas Project In Genocide Row

    TURKS SHUN GAS PROJECT IN GENOCIDE ROW
    Carl Mortished, International Business Editor

    Times Online, UK
    April 6 2007

    Turkey has pulled out of talks with Gaz de France over a [email protected] billion
    (£3 billion) gas pipeline project in protest over a French law that
    prohibits denial of the massacre of Armenians during the Ottoman
    Empire.

    The Nabucco project, a 3,300km pipe, which would bring central Asian
    gas to Europe, is seeking support from leading gas utilities, but
    the project is becoming embroiled in political difficulties.

    Botas, the Turkish state pipeline company, is reported to oppose the
    participation of Gaz de France because of the French Government's
    stance on the Armenian issue.

    The controversial Bill, passed last year in the French parliament,
    makes it a crime to deny that a genocide of Armenians took place in
    Turkey during the First World War.

    The row with Gaz de France occurs as the Nabucco promoters prepare
    to announce an "open season" for gas buyers interested in a share of
    the Nabucco gas. A slate of potential buyers is needed if the project
    is to secure financing.

    The Nabucco project is led by OMV, the Austrian energy group, and is
    vigorously promoted by the European Commission, which wants to lessen
    Europe's reliance on Russian and Algerian gas.

    The Commission is expected soon to appoint a high-level official
    to promote and coordinate the project. Gaz de France would join a
    consortium that, in addition to OMV, includes Hungary's MOL, Botas,
    Bulgargas and Romania's Transgas.

    Rival firms that might seek a stake in Nabucco as the sixth partner
    include Total, E.ON and RWE of Germany.

    Turkey has ambitions to become a hub for the collection of gas from
    the Caspian and the Middle East and its onward transport to Europe.

    However, the promoters of Nabucco face a greater political obstacle in
    Gazprom, which has the lion's share of the Eastern European gas market
    and has voiced its strong opposition to a rival transit pipeline.

    The first link in the chain is the Shah Deniz project, a pipeline
    recently completed by a BP consortium that traverses the Caucasus,
    bringing gas from the Caspian Sea to Erzurum, a gas hub in Eastern
    Turkey.

    In February Greece and Italy agreed to work together on a 212 km
    pipeline across the Adriatic. Talks have also commenced between Shell,
    Botas and the Iraqi Government over the export of Iraqi gas to Europe,
    via Turkey. At the same time, negotiations continue between Azerbaijan
    and Turkmenistan over a sub-sea pipeline that would link with gas
    reserves further east.

    War of words

    The French National Assembly sparked a diplomatic clash with Turkey
    when it approved a Bill that would make it a criminal offence to
    deny that the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Armenians in 1915
    amounted to genocide (Adam Sage writes).

    The Bill infuriated the Government and public opinion in Turkey,
    where the issue is highly sensitive and mention of the term genocide
    is seen as a slight on the national honour. Feelings were already
    running high after the French parliament approved an initial law in
    2001, which formally described the tragedy as genocide. The Bill goes
    further, threatening negationists with a year in prison and a fine
    of ~@45,000 (£30,600). Although the text would have to be approved by
    the National Assembly to become law, it has already damaged relations
    between Ankara and Paris.

    The Turkish Army, for instance, announced that it was suspending all
    cooperation with the French military. Christine Lagarde, the French
    Foreign Trade Minister, said that French businesses, which export
    an annual total of [email protected] billion products and services to Turkey,
    could be hit.

    --Boundary_(ID_LuSL0ErMFsZ5w8XvLAzykg)--
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