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  • Russia, Iran tighten the energy noose

    Russia, Iran tighten the energy noose


    Dec 22, 2007

    Asia Times
    Hong Kong

    By M K Bhadrakumar

    Foreign ministers are busy people - especially energetic, creative
    diplomats like Russia's Sergei Lavrov and Iran's Manouchehr Mottaki,
    representing capitals that by tradition place great store on
    international diplomacy.

    Therefore, the very fact that Lavrov and Mottaki have met no less than
    four times in as many months suggests a great deal about the high
    importance attached by the two capitals to their mutual understanding
    at the bilateral and regional level.

    Moscow and Tehran have worked hard in recent months to successfully
    put behind them their squabble over the construction schedule of the
    Bushehr nuclear power plant in Iran. The first consignment of nuclear
    fuel for Bushehr from Russia under the International Atomic Energy
    Agency safeguards finally arrived in Tehran on Monday. "We have agreed
    with our Iranian colleagues a timeframe for completing the plant and
    we will make an announcement at the end of December," said Sergei
    Shmatko, president of Atomstroiexport, which is building Bushehr.

    At a minimum, the gateway opens for Russia's deeper involvement in
    Iran's ambitious program for civil nuclear energy. But nuclear energy
    is not the be-all and end-all of Russo-Iranian cooperation. Iran is a
    crucially important interlocutor for Russia in the field of
    energy. The Bushehr settlement is a necessary prerequisite if the
    trust and mutual confidence essential for fuller Russo-Iranian
    cooperation is to become reality. Evidently, Moscow is hastily
    positioning itself for the big event on the energy scene in 2008 -
    Iran's entry as a gas-exporting country.

    Russia consolidates in 2007

    In fact, how Moscow proceeds with the reconfiguration of Russo-Iranian
    relations could well form the centerpiece of the geopolitics of energy
    security in Eurasia during 2008. The dynamics on this front will
    doubtless play out on a vast theater stretching well beyond the
    Eurasian space, all the way to China and Japan in the east and to the
    very heart of Europe in the west where the Rhine River flows.

    What places Russia in an early lead in the upcoming scramble is its
    fantastic win in the Eurasian energy sweepstakes in 2007. But 2007 as
    such began on an acrimonious note for Moscow when two minutes before
    the clock struck midnight on December 31, Russia signed a gas deal
    with Belarus whereby the latter would have to pay for Russian gas
    supplies at full market prices on a graduated scale stretched over the
    next five-year period. President Vladimir Putin's critics seized the
    moment with alacrity to portray him as a whimsical megalomaniac.

    Moscow-based critic Pavel Felgenhauer rushed to condemn Putin's
    "highly aggressive, unscrupulous and revengeful" mindset as a
    dictator, and prophesied that the "pressure on Belarus will most
    likely misfire ... This may undermine the Kremlin's authority ... and
    provoke internal high-level acrimony [within the Kremlin]". Other
    Western critics warned European countries not to count on Russia's
    dependability as an energy supplier.

    Much of the vicious criticism might seem in retrospect to be either
    prejudiced and self-interested, or downright laughable, but that
    didn't prevent the acrimony from setting the tone for the geopolitics
    of energy during 2007. Prima facie, Russia was making a transition to
    market prices for its energy exports, which was quite the proper thing
    to do if it were to integrate with the world economy in a manner
    consistent with the broad orientations of its liberal economic
    policies.

    Indeed, the Kremlin had no reason to continue with the Soviet-era
    subsidies to former Soviet republics like the Ukraine or Belarus.
    Efficiency demanded that Russia allowed market forces to
    prevail. Actually, that was also the capitalist world's advice to the
    Kremlin.

    What incensed Western critics was that combined with the state control
    of oil and gas (and indeed the pipelines), the Kremlin was also
    maneuvering its way to a commanding position on the energy map of
    Europe. From its own viewpoint, Russia could claim it was merely
    pursuing a coordinated strategy aimed at integrating itself with
    European economies.

    But the United States viewed the implications of the Russian strategy
    to be very severe for trans-Atlantic relations on the whole, as it
    cast a shadow on the entire range of goals, strategic objectives and
    security policies that Washington has been pushing within the
    framework of the Euro-Atlantic alliance in the post-Cold War
    years. Plainly put, Washington fears that Europe's strategic drift may
    become a reality unless Russia is stopped in its tracks.

    Europe's dependence on Russian energy

    After much US prodding for a coordinated European energy security
    policy, European Union (EU) members adopted at their spring summit in
    Brussels an action plan for energy security for 2007-2009, which
    emphasized the need to diversify Europe's energy sources and transport
    routes. But the ground reality continues to be that Europe's
    dependence on Russian energy supplies is growing. In 2006, Europe
    imported from Russia 290.8 million tonnes of oil and 130 billion cubic
    meters of gas.

    With Europe's energy consumption rapidly rising, its import dependency
    on Russia is also set to increase. Europe, which imported around 330
    billion cubic meters of gas in 2005, will require an additional 200
    billion cubic meters per year by 2015. And Russia has the world's
    largest natural gas reserves, estimated to be 1,688 trillion cubic
    feet, apart from the seventh largest proven oil reserves, exceeding 70
    billion barrels (while vast regions of eastern Siberia and the Arctic
    remain unexplored).

    On the other hand, Europe's self-sufficiency in energy is sharply
    declining. By 2030, the production of oil and gas is expected to
    decline by 73% and 59% respectively. The result is that by 2030,
    two-thirds of Europe's energy requirements will have to be met through
    imports. In Europe's energy mix, the dependence on oil imports by 2030
    will be as high as 94% of its needs, and on natural gas as high as
    84%.

    As supply becomes concentrated in Russian hands, the Kremlin will find
    itself in a position to dictate oil and gas prices. There is also the
    possibility that the supply and demand situation itself might become
    less elastic - Russia's own demand for gas, for instance, is growing
    by over 2% annually.

    Clearly, the economics of energy supply to Europe are getting highly
    politicized. Ariel Cohen, a prominent Russia specialist at the US
    think-tank, Heritage Foundation, who is closely connected with the
    George W Bush administration, wrote recently, "It is in the US's
    strategic interests to mitigate Europe's dependence on Russian
    energy. The Kremlin will likely use Europe's dependence to promote its
    largely anti-American foreign policy agenda. This would significantly
    limit the maneuvering space available to America's European allies,
    forcing them to choose between an affordable and stable energy supply
    and siding with the US on some key issues."

    Cohen warned, "If current trends prevail, the Kremlin could translate
    its energy monopoly into untenable foreign and security policy
    influence in Europe to the detriment of European-American
    relations. In particular, Russia is seeking recognition of its
    predominant role in the post-Soviet space and Eastern Europe ... This
    will affect the geopolitical issues important to the US, such as NATO
    [North Atlantic Treaty Organization] expansion to Ukraine and Georgia,
    ballistic missile defense, Kosovo, and US and European influence in
    the p ost-Soviet space."

    US-Russia rivalries escalate

    Thus, through the past 12-month period, the Bush administration has
    been pressing for the development of new energy transit lines from the
    Caspian and Central Asia that bypass Russia. Washington has robustly
    worked for advancing its proposals for the construction of oil and gas
    pipelines linking Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan to Europe across the
    Caspian Sea; new pipelines that would connect the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
    oil pipeline with the Baku-Erzurum gas pipeline (making Turkey an
    energy hub for Europe); and the so-called Nabucco pipeline that
    proposes to link Azerbaijan and Central Asian countries with southern
    European markets.

    However, as the year draws to a close, it becomes clear that the
    Kremlin has either nipped in the bud or frustrated one way or another
    the various US attempts to bypass Russia's role as the key energy
    supplier for Europe. Indeed, Moscow's counter-strategy aims at
    augmenting even further Russia's profile and capacity to be Europe's
    dependable energy supplier and thereby forcing the European consumer
    countries to negotiate with Russia as a partner with shared or equal
    interests.

    The month of May stood out as the watershed when the geopolitics of
    energy in Eurasia decisively turned in Russia's favor. At a tripartite
    summit meeting in the city of Turkemenbashi (Turkmenistan) on May 12,
    Putin and his Kazakh and Turkmen counterparts signed a declaration of
    intent for upgrading and expanding gas pipelines from Kazakhstan and
    Turkmenistan along the Caspian Sea coast directly to Russia. The
    president of Uzbekistan, Islam Karimov, also signed up separately on
    May 9 for a modernization of the
    Turkmenistan-Uzbekistan-Kazakhstan-Russia pipeline. Both pipelines are
    components of the Soviet-era Central Asia-Center pipeline system bound
    for Russia. The quadripartite project essentially aims at the
    transportation of Turkmenistan's gas output, which almost in its
    entirety would be bought up by Russia for a 25-year period.

    Subsequently, the US and EU have made herculean efforts to get
    Ashgabat to resile from the commitment to the project with Russia, but
    have failed. During the past year, 16 high-level delegations from
    Washington visited Ashgabat in this regard. Thus, when Russian Prime
    Minister Viktor Zubkov finally signed the agreement relating to the
    Caspian littoral pipeline on December 12 with his Kazakh and Turkmen
    counterparts, the curtain came down on one of the grimmest struggles
    of the great game in the post-Soviet era. Moscow came out the winner
    by far, reasserting its pre-eminent position in the Caspian.

    The commitment of Turkmen gas to Russia has broader implications. For
    one thing, the fate of the US-supported proposals for a trans-Caspian
    pipeline and the Nabucco pipeline depended significantly on the
    availability of Turkmen and Kazakh gas. Their future is now up in the
    air. That, in turn, means Europe is increasingly left with only one
    serious option for diversifying its gas imports - Iran.

    In May, Putin struck a second time when he visited Vienna and in a
    dramatic breakthrough drew Austria into a key energy partnership,
    placing that country as a base for Gazprom's future expansion into EU
    territory. The agreements signed in Vienna on May 23 outlined
    Gazprom's plans to build a Central European gas hub and gas transit
    management center, the largest in continental Europe, at Baumgarten
    near Vienna; expansion of Gazprom's market share in Austria; delivery
    of gas directly by Gazprom to Austrian consumers - for the first time
    in Europe; and plans to use Austria as a transit corridor for Russian
    gas exports aspiring to capture new EU markets.

    Austria's "defection" to the Russian camp virtually dealt a coup de
    grace to Washington's strategy to cut Russia's share of Europe's
    growing need for gas. But Moscow pressed ahead. On June 25, Gazprom
    signed with Italy's Eni a memorandum of understanding (which on
    November 22 was finalized as an agreement) on a US$5.5 billion project
    for building a 900-kilometer gas pipeline ("South Stream") with an
    aggregate annual capacity of 30 billion cubic meters. The pipeline
    will run from Russia's Beregovaya on the Black Sea to Bulgaria, where
    it will split, with the two branches fanning out to reach southern
    Italy, Greece, Austria, Slovenia, Bulgaria, Romania and Hungary.

    A Gazprom statement highlighted the deep implications of the South
    Stream project when it said in a studied undertone, "This is another
    real step in the implementation of Gazprom's strategy to diversify
    routes of Russian natural gas supplies to European countries and a
    considerable contribution to the energy security of Europe."

    What was unfolding was indeed a spectacular string of successes by
    Russia, running ahead on the one hand in the transit and downstream
    races of the great game over Caspian energy, while running way ahead
    in the upstream race for Central Asian gas to feed these projects.

    But that wasn't all. It was very obvious that the Kremlin strategy was
    not just about energy, but kept in view the overall agenda of
    integrating Russian business and industry with important western
    European partners. Commenting on the South Stream project, The Wall
    Street Journal noted: The Italian government has bucked Europe's
    concerns about Gazprom, aggressively endorsing Russia as a strategic
    partner in energy and other areas, such as aviation. Just last week
    [mid-June], Italy's Foreign Minister Massimo D'Alema, held court in
    Rome with Dmitry Medvedev, Russia's first deputy prime minister and
    also Gazprom's chairman, to discuss cooperation on a range of
    sectors. An Italian airline, for example, recently announced its
    intention to purchase Russian commercial aircraft and an Italian
    defense contractor, Finmeccanica SpA, is jointly developing a fighter
    jet with a Russian company. Nothing could have brought home the shift
    in the geopolitical templates more dramatically than the first energy
    summit of the Balkan countries - a region where the US consistently
    sought to exorcise Russia's historical influence - at Zagreb on June
    24. Putin was invited as a special guest. Addressing the summit, Putin
    outlined the Russian objectives in energy cooperation with Europe. He
    said cooperation should be based on a "balance of interests"; "equal
    responsibility of suppliers, transit countries and energy consumers";
    "transparent and fair business relations"; and "long-term
    relations". He virtually gave notice that mutuality of interests must
    involve Europe dismantling its discriminatory regimes directed against
    Russian companies in trade and investment.

    The Russian daily Izvestia reported that in 2006 European governments
    blocked deals worth a total of $80 billion involving Russian
    companies. In its commentary in July, the daily noted, "The relations
    between the European Union and Russian investors are coming to
    resemble armed combat ... The European Parliament maintains that
    foreign companies have no right to acquire Europe's gas and
    electricity distribution networks. Europe is increasingly fearful
    about being bought up by foreigners: the prospect of Dutch consumers
    receiving gas and electricity bills bearing Gazprom's logo; gas
    stations in Switzerland painted in LUKoil's colors, red and black; and
    kitchenware in Greece marked 'Made by Russian Aluminum'."

    Indeed, Russian strategy also correspondingly hardened. Russia
    presented yet another project when it proposed the construction of a
    Burgas-Alexandropolis oil pipeline. The proposed pipeline would start
    at Russia's Novorossiysk port on the Black Sea; it would cross over to
    Bulgaria's Burgas and then proceed to the Greek port of
    Alexandropolis. It is in essence a rival to the trans-Caspian pipeline
    (CPC) that Washington has been pushing for almost a decade. The
    capacity of the Russian pipeline will be 15 million tonnes annually in
    the first stage and 35 million tonnes in the second stage. The great
    irony is that it is a carbon copy of the CPC insofar as it is also
    predicated on growing volumes of Kazakh oil being extracted by Western
    companies.

    In other words, Moscow is planning that the volumes of oil coming on
    stream (thanks to massive investment by American oil majors Chevron,
    ConocoPhillips and Exxon Mobil) in some of Kazakhstan's richest fields
    (Tengiz oil field, Karachaganak oil, gas and condensate field,
    Kashagan oil field, etc) would be absorbed into the Russian-controlled
    transit route for marketing in Europe. An American specialist wrote
    bitterly, "This could defraud the [American] companies and their
    shareholders, reinforce Russia's quasi-monopoly on the transit of oil
    from Kazakhstan, defeat the US-promoted east-west Caspian energy
    corridor, and create instead a Russian-controlled oil export axis
    stretching from Kazakhstan to Greece and further afield."

    Meanwhile, a struggle is shaping up for control of the Kashagan field,
    which is billed as the world's largest discovery in the past 30
    years. Kazakhstan wants to increase its share in Kashagan at the cost
    of the Western companies. The renegotiation of the Kashagan
    concession's production-sharing agreement might well lead to Russia
    replacing some of Kazakhstan's western partners, even though reports
    indicate ExxonMobil of the US is furiously lobbying to retain its
    stake of 18.5% as the field's operator. The stakes are obviously high.
    Kashagan has proven reserves of 35 billion barrels of oil and
    potential reserves estimated to be as high as 70 billion barrels. When
    the project commences production, its daily output will be at least
    half a million barrels.

    The Kashagan struggle highlights that the huge lead Russia has
    established in the past 12-month period for the control of Caspian and
    Central Asian energy was possible only by Russian companies investing
    heavily in a way that competing American oil majors would have rarely
    encountered in foreign operations.

    The US's last big hope in 2007 was Turkmenistan. But the December 12
    agreement signals that for the foreseeable future, Ashgabat has
    decided on Moscow as its preferred partner for its gas exports. The
    deepening Russian-Turkmen ties comes as a major blow to US oil majors.

    All in all, therefore, the year 2007 is ending on a sour note for
    Washington. In all likelihood, the US will carry forward into the New
    Year its sense of bitterness. Clearly, Europe is not ready to
    coordinate its energy strategy with the US. Former German chancellor
    Gerhard Schroeder recently blasted Washington's contention that Russia
    is an unreliable energy partner. He said, "Experience has certainly
    shown that Germany has never had a problem with the supply and
    integrity with the energy imported into Germany from Russia, not
    during all of the fickle times of the Cold War, not right now, and I
    personally don't see them in the future."

    Schroeder pointed out that energy rivalries lie at the core of the US
    policy of encirclement of Russia and behind Washington's persistent
    attempts to denigrate and isolate Moscow. He warned of dire
    consequences if Washington persisted with such a course, as Moscow is
    "certainly not happy about it".

    Iran factor becomes important

    In such an overall context, during the months ahead Moscow can be
    expected to make robust efforts to coordinate with Iran over its oil
    and gas output and exports. The rationale for such a coordinated
    strategy involving Iran is very obvious. First, Moscow is intensely
    conscious of the Western awareness of Iran's enormous untapped
    hydrocarbon reserves as an alternative to Russian supplies. Russia
    will strive to stay ahead of the European, and eventually American,
    overtures to Iran.

    Second, the hydrocarbon sector in Iran is firmly under state control
    and Moscow and Tehran are in harmony in this regard. Third, the two
    countries will be coordinating their energy policies for wider
    geopolitical purposes within the broad framework of their strategic
    cooperation. Furthermore, market forces dictate the rationale of
    Russia-Iran cooperation. Moscow would simply like to avoid competing
    with Iran, and vice versa. Russia and Iran control roughly 20% of
    world's oil reserves and close to half of the world's gas reserves,
    and it makes good sense to accommodate each other.

    Iran is indeed an important energy partner for Russia for many
    reasons. Russian oil companies, flush with funds, are keen to invest
    abroad. The Iranian upstream oil and gas sector and Iran's energy
    ventures, such as pipeline projects, offer an attractive proposition
    for Russian investment. Again, Iran's geographical location is ideal
    as an export outlet for expanding Russian energy exports, especially
    its ambitious developing liquefied natural gas (LNG)
    industry. Besides, Iran is an influential member of the Organization
    of Petroleum Exporting Countries, whose decisions have bearing on
    price stability and Russian export volumes.

    But the most important consideration for Russia will be that Iran's
    energy policy should not come into conflict with Russian
    interests. Once the US's engagement of Iran commences, Tehran will
    have plenty of choice while accessing foreign capital and advanced
    upstream oil and gas technology. Iran is bound to probe gas markets
    such as Turkey, the Balkans and central and east Europe. Also, Iran
    is keen to develop a new LNG industry. Over and above, Iran could
    well end up competing with Russia as a major oil and gas route
    connecting the Caspian and Central Asian energy producing countries.

    Cooperation with Iran is no less important for Russia in terms of
    Caspian Sea issues. True, the two countries have divergent views on
    how the Caspian Sea should be divided. Russia prefers a median line
    solution, whereas Iran has insisted on an equal share (20%) solution
    for each littoral state regardless of the length of coastline. All the
    same, Russia and Iran are in profound agreement in their opposition to
    the US-led trans-Caspian pipeline projects.

    Russia's number one priority in energy cooperation with Iran will be
    for upstream participation by Russian companies. Gazprom has had some
    limited participation so far in the early phases of Iran's massive
    South Pars gas fields with an estimated aggregate cumulative
    production range of a stunning 13 trillion cubic meters. Moscow will
    be keen to promote greater involvement. Gazprom has shown interest in
    the Iran-Pakistan-India pipeline project not only as a contractor but
    also as an investor.

    But the big-ticket item will be the future development phases of South
    Pars, which Tehran has earmarked as feedstock for producing and
    exporting LNG for the European and Asian markets. Without doubt,
    Moscow will be keen to develop a role in Iran's nascent LNG industry
    so that it doesn't end up competing with Russia's own LNG industry.

    Following his talks with Lavrov in Moscow last week, Mottaki stressed
    that the unfolding expansion of relations between Iran and Russia
    stems from a highly strategic decision taken by the leadership in
    Tehran. Specifically, Mottaki proposed the setting up of a joint gas
    company with Russia. Moscow would be favorably inclined towards the
    Iranian proposal, as it broadly aims at eliminating the possibility of
    the two countries competing with each other in the range of activities
    related to gas exports such as production, transportation, sales and
    prices.

    Over and above, Moscow would be pleased at the present orientation of
    Iranian energy exports toward the Asian market. On the one hand, this
    would ease the competition from China for gaining access to Central
    Asian energy producers and on the other, it reduces the likelihood of
    Iranian energy flows to Europe, which may otherwise cut into Russia's
    market share.

    Equally, Russia would actively promote an Iranian gas pipeline to
    China via Pakistan and India. But the project is stalled due to US
    pressure on India. Konstantin Simonov, the chief of Russia's National
    Energy Security Fund, alleged recently that by opposing the
    Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline, the US is principally trying to deny
    China easy access to Iranian energy reserves.

    To be sure, Moscow began anticipating several months ago that with the
    inevitable collapse of the United States' policy of containment of
    Iran and with Iran's ensuing arrival as a gas exporting country, an
    altogether new scenario would shape up on Eurasia's energy map. Moscow
    would also have taken stock of the 1979 Iranian revolution's
    ideological struggle between "black Shi'ism" and "red Shi'ism", which
    has, significantly enough, resumed lately. The West has always been an
    interested party in the outcome of this struggle.

    Two former Western-oriented Iranian presidents - Hashemi Rafsanjani
    and Mohammed Khatami - have joined hands in an unlikely alliance of
    conservatives and liberals. A regime change in Tehran holds out the
    possibility that the two energy superstars - Russia and Iran - could
    find themselves being set against each other by the West, or end up
    treading on each other's toes.

    Thus, Putin's historic visit to Tehran on October 16, the first-ever
    bilateral visit by a Russian leader - Tsarist or Bolshevik - falls
    into perspective as a landmark event in the geopolitics of energy in
    the coming period. On whichever turf he has so far touched on energy
    security, Putin has left his unique personal stamp - that of the keen
    anticipation of a chess player blending with his swiftness as a black
    belt in judo. But the Persian chessboard is no easy turf. Putin's
    moves will therefore be an absorbing sight to watch. Perhaps they are
    destined to form yet another of his fine legacies in post-Soviet
    Russia's historic transformation as a great power in the 21st century.

    M K Bhadrakumar served as a career diplomat in the Indian Foreign
    Service for over 29 years, with postings including India's ambassador
    to Uzbekistan (1995-1998) and to Turkey (1998-2001).

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