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EU Seeks To Build Energy Ties With Neighbours

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  • EU Seeks To Build Energy Ties With Neighbours

    EU SEEKS TO BUILD ENERGY TIES WITH NEIGHBOURS
    By Tony Barber in Brussels

    FT
    September 4 2007 03:00

    The European Union yesterday identified closer energy co-operation as
    a central -element of its efforts to strengthen ties with more than
    a dozen neighbouring states in eastern Europe, north Africa and the
    Middle East.

    Benita Ferrero-Waldner, EU commissioner for external relations,
    said the European Commission would launch a study into how to make
    energy markets in the region work better for consumers, producers
    and transit countries.

    The EU has become increasingly concerned in the past two years about
    Russia's rising influence over European energy -markets. It hopes to
    rebalance Moscow's role by expanding energy ties with neighbours such
    as Algeria and Azerbaijan.

    The framework for these initiatives is the EU's European Neighbourhood
    Policy (ENP), which embraces 15 countries, from Georgia and Ukraine
    to Lebanon and Tunisia, as well as the Palestinian Authority.

    None of the 15 countries is an official candidate for EU membership
    but it believes warm relations with them will help reduce instability
    on its far-flung borders. It has allocated â~B¬12bn ($16bn, £8.1bn)
    for the ENP from 2007 to 2013.

    Mrs Ferrero-Waldner suggested the ENP fitted in well with the EU's
    goal of promoting less wasteful energy use because some neighbouring
    countries had huge potential in solar and wind power and in biofuels.

    "We know our partners are interested in exporting renewable energy to
    the EU. And that matches our own interest in finding ways of meeting
    our targets on renewable energies," she said.

    The commissioner said that the EU had already reached energy agreements
    with Azerbaijan, Morocco and Ukraine and was hoping to sign memoranda
    of understanding with Algeria and Egypt.

    She was speaking in Brussels at the first conference of foreign
    ministers and senior officials from the EU's 27 member states and the
    16 neighbours to be held since the EU began its neighbourhood policy
    in 2004.

    Her emphasis on energy ties reflected the Commission's desire to
    give a sharper focus to the ENP after three years in which it has
    come under fire for lacking a clear sense of purpose.

    One failing, acknowledged by the Commission in a report last December,
    is that the ENP has done little to solve territorial "frozen conflicts"
    pitting Russia against Georgia and Moldova.

    Another criticism is that the EU, by including countries such as
    Armenia, Georgia and Ukraine in the ENP, is not doing justice to the
    aspirations of these states to become full EU members in the longer
    term. A third criticism is that the ENP is inherently unwieldy.

    José Manuel Barroso, the Commission president, told the conference
    that the ENP worked because EU member states gave neighbours more
    support than when they looked at them in isolation.

    "No longer is the level of attention paid to one country or region
    dependent on the special interest of whatever EU member state happens
    to be holding the [EU] presidency at the time," he said.

    --Boundary_(ID_z5n0Wr1ateGk/h17pxF1fA)--
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