Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

All Europe To Benefit From South Stream

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

  • All Europe To Benefit From South Stream

    ALL EUROPE TO BENEFIT FROM SOUTH STREAM
    Pyotr Iskenderov

    en.fondsk.ru
    14.03.2009

    The signing of the agreement on Hungary's joining the South Stream
    project in Moscow this week constitutes an important step in the
    implementation of the unprecedented energy initiative which is
    sure to benefit the Balkans and entire Europe. Likewise deals with
    Slovenia and a number of other countries are expected in the nearest
    future. Moreover, there are indications that several countries whose
    involvement was not planned originally - Bosnia and Herzegovina,
    Montenegro, and even Albany - will also choose to participate. Not
    surprisingly, the pro-opposition Albanian Gazeta Shqiptare has reacted
    to the expectations by featuring papers expressions of concern over
    the possibility of the West's "strategic pact" with Russia that would
    allegedly perpetuate Russia's energy monopoly...

    Hungarian Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany told the media on March 10
    that if the process unfolds as planned the South Stream construction
    would be complete by 2015. The statement expresses more than just
    Hungary's own expectations, as the country is taking an increasingly
    important role in the energy politics of Central and South-East
    Europe. Currently Russia supplies natural gas to Serbia, Montenegro,
    and Bosnia and Herzegovina across the territory of Hungary. Budapest's
    position is traditionally respected in Austria, Serbia, Bosnia and
    Herzegovina, and=2 0 other countries of the region whose ties with
    Hungary are deeply rooted in history.

    The recent conflict between Russia and Ukraine over the gas transit
    across the territory of the latter as well as the complications bred by
    the global financial crisis highlighted the importance of elaborating
    new approaches and schemes to ensure the European energy security. In
    this respect, the interests of Russia and the Balkan countries merge
    harmonically, and Russia is motivated not by the alleged "quest for
    energy monopoly" but by normal economic considerations pertinent to
    risk reduction, transit reliability, and profits.

    Explainably, the South Stream is one of the most divisive issues in
    today's Europe. The Brussels bureaucracy and financial structures favor
    an alternative - the Nabucco project, a transit route bypassing both
    Russia and Ukraine. Russian Prime Minister V. Putin says there are
    more questions than answerers concerning Nabucco. Meeting Hungarian
    Prime Minister Gyurcsany he stressed that Nabucco is no solution for
    a wide range of reasons. The Nabucco route does circumvent Ukraine,
    but it passes across Azerbaijan, Turkey, and Georgia - overall a
    greater number of countries than the currently existing pipelines
    do. Besides, Nabucco is going to lack the resource base adequate to
    its transit capacities unless the project is joined, for example,
    by Iran, but this is politically problematic. The last but not the
    least pertinen t circumstance is that the South Stream is several
    billion Euro cheaper than Nabucco.

    In the above context the cooperation between the Balkan countries and
    Russia in the energy sphere is strategically important and beneficial
    to all European consumers. President of the economic Council of the
    Democratic Party of Serbia Nenad Popovic opines that this is the
    reason why Russian energy projects meet with such serious opposition
    in Europe. In 2008 Serbia was among the first countries to join the
    South Stream project. In our conversation Popovic said that influential
    forces both in national administrations of the EU countries and in
    Brussels are ready to sacrifice Europe's energy security to their own
    interests: "There are several lobbies of the kind. The most powerful
    and dangerous one has close ties with two major energy companies from
    the EU countries neighboring Serbia".

    Obviously he meant the Hungarian MOL and the Austrian OMV
    group. Throughout 2008 they have been struggling against the energy
    deal between Russia and Serbia drawing the latter into the South
    Stream project and allowing Russia's Gazprom Neft to buy Serbia's
    NIS. Popovic says the two companies are monopolies and their objective
    is to get rid of Gazprom as the competitor. Their strategy is to buy
    the Balkan oil refineries and other energy infrastructures - even
    if they are overpriced - just to have them shut down subsequently to
    eliminate comp etition. Currently they are doing all they can to bar
    Gazprom and the Russian money in general from Serbia and other Balkan
    countries where Russian players have legitimate interests. "But the
    national interests do prevail", says Popovic.

    His colleague from Vojvodina, Deputy President of the autonomy's
    parliament Igor Mirovic sees the situation in the same light. In
    our recent conversation he said: "I regard Russian investments as an
    opportunity for the entire Balkan region. For us, the deal between
    Serbia and Russia will make it possible to construct new generating
    capacities such as hydro-stations and gas-powered co-generation
    plants. I have already discussed the possibility with representatives
    of Russia's Tekhnopromexport.

    The agreement opens Serbia for other Russian companies including those
    from the financial sector. By getting linked to the South Stream and
    constructing the Banatski Dvor natural gas storage facility jointly
    with Russia our country will switch from the role of a major gas
    importer to that of the regional leader in gas distribution. Serbia
    can and should go further in its cooperation with Russia. Similar
    schemes might be realized in selling Serbia's electric equipment and
    railroad companies and in restoring the country's military technology
    potential, which was originally based on Russian standards and suffered
    severe damage during the 1999 NATO air strikes. Having worked in the
    economic administration and the financial sector for twenty years I
    am convinced that Russian investments will be extremely beneficial to
    Serbia's economy. It took many European nations - for example, Bulgaria
    and Germany - the recent gas crisis to appreciate the importance
    of eliminating Ukraine's transit monopoly. This objective can be
    accomplished by realizing the Russian South Stream and the Nord Stream
    pipeline construction projects". A perfectly adequate explanation...
Working...
X