Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Not Enough Silk For Nabucco

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

  • Not Enough Silk For Nabucco

    NOT ENOUGH SILK FOR NABUCCO
    Pyotr Iskenderov

    en.fondsk.ru
    19.05.2009

    Energy of the Future

    The organizers of the new "Drang nach Osten" in Brussels were
    disappointed with the results of the "Southern Corridor-new Silk
    Road" conference, which was held in Prague on May 8 as part of the
    Eastern Partnership Summit Format. It was expected that former Soviet
    republics, which yet had not been invited to join the Partnership
    (EU wants Azerbaijan, Georgia, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan,
    Kazakhstan, Egypt and Iraq to comprise the 'new silk route'), would
    confirm their intention to approve the EU`s energy policy (in which
    Russia is not viewed as partner). The key moment of the conference
    would have become the ratification of a political declaration on
    Nabucco, which says that all EU members countries involved in the
    project, EU membership candidate Turkey and former Central Asian
    republics of the Soviet Union should undertake all necessary efforts
    to sign an intergovernmental agreement on Nabucco by June 2009.

    But Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan, the countries which are
    expected to supply gas to the EU through the Nabucco pipe, refused
    to sign the anti-Russian declaration. The authors of the document did
    not even mention Moscow as a key EU`s energy partner but attempted to
    torpedo the agreements Russia had already signed with its partners
    on purchasing natural gas an its transportation to Europe via the
    existing pipe lines and the construction of the South Stream gas pipe
    (from the Black Sea to Bulgaria and further to Italy and Austria).

    Why they were in such a hurry? The reason is quite clear. Brussels
    expects to put the Nabucco gas pipe in operation in 2014 in order
    to outrun the South Stream, at least for a few months. But since
    some Balkan states (Bulgaria,Hungary and Serbia) had already signed
    bilateral agreements with Russia, the EU planned to achieve a deal
    between a greater number of countries to repudiate the already existing
    agreements (if not de jure, at least de facto).

    The scenario for bandoned their Cold War thinking and continue to
    play geopolitical games which show 'zero result'.

    On May 14 President of Bulgaria Georgy Pyrvanov published an article
    in the country's most circulated Trud newspaper daily. Although the
    article says nothing about either the Eastern Partnership or the "new
    Silk Road", it is obvious that Mr. Pyrvanov wrote it after the EU had
    failed to press former Soviet republics on the Nabucco project. He
    emphasizes the need of cooperation with Russia and suggests that the
    South Stream project be as important for the EU as Nabucco.

    "When we talk about energy security, we can`t ignore Russia. It
    is necessary to decide whether the diversification policy will be
    implemented without Russia's participation, or will Russia, EU and
    other countries rich in energy resources develop their strategic
    cooperation. Russia will remain Europe's major energy supplier, and
    thus any attempts to 'isolate' Russia would have undermined the process
    of diversification and hampered Russia-EU cooperation in many other
    spheres. In the meantime, partnership with Russia would have put the
    international energy cooperation on a brand new level",- President of
    Bulgaria writes. Mr. Pyrvanov says both projects are necessary in the
    interests of energy security and due to anticipated gas demand until
    2025 and further. "Bulgaria makes its own contribution to the process
    and will continue the implementation of both projects since for the EU
    Nabucco is a project of high priority. But I also believe the South
    Stream must be on the agenda as well. We cannot make far-reaching
    plans on energy security without Russia. However, we want Moscow to
    understand that we are going to defend our national interests-like it
    was during the talks in January 2008, when we signed an equal agreement
    on the South Stream, and like it was this spring. We should stick
    to the agreements which have been made". The Eastern Partnership and
    the Nabucco project in particular have already faced some financial
    difficulties. Although the EU leaders were all smiles on 7-8 May in
    Prague and looked optimistic, the initiators of the Nabucco project say
    the pipeline is estimated to $7,3billion (about 5,4 billion euros), and
    all the money will be from the EU budget. At the conference in Prague,
    the sides approved a program which stipulates a 600-million euro aid to
    Azerbaijan, Armenia, Belarus, Georgia, Moldavia and Ukraine until 2013.

    Apparently, the Eastern Partnership aims to isolate Russia from the
    process of energy cooperation despite the likelihood of financial and
    political loses. However, not all countries in Eastern Europe, to say
    nothing about the leading energy producing countries, are ready to step
    on this slippery path. Although maybe too cautious, the conclusions
    made by the President of Bulgaria in his article prove this quite well.
Working...
X