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  • Baku Banks On Independent Energy Policy

    BAKU BANKS ON INDEPENDENT ENERGY POLICY
    Rovshan Ismayilov

    EurasiaNet, NY
    Dec 13 2006

    As winter approaches, Azerbaijan appears to be strengthening its
    support for Georgia in the South Caucasus' ongoing chess game of energy
    alliances, despite a reported earlier overture by the Kremlin for
    cooperation. A December 1 order by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev
    that the Azerbaijani government consider suspending the country's use
    of a Russian-run pipeline to transport Azerbaijani oil to overseas
    markets - a sign Baku wants to be an independent energy player.

    The order came in response to an announcement by Gazprom that it would
    increase gas prices for Azerbaijan in 2007 from $110 to $230 per
    1,000 cubic meters. The Russian supplier would also cut the volume
    of supplies exported to the South Caucasus state from 4.5 billion
    cubic meters (bcm) to 1.5 bcm. Azerbaijani officials have indicated
    that Baku is disinclined to buy any gas at all from Russia in 2007
    at Moscow's proposed price.

    Gazprom representative Sergei Kupriyanov stated that the 1.5 billion
    cubic meters "will fully meet Azerbaijan's needs because the country
    will increase its own gas production next year." Kupriyanov said that
    Azerbaijan is getting ready to become a gas exporter. "We are not
    against competition with Azerbaijan, but we are not going to support
    this competition. It does not make sense," he said.

    Aliyev directly linked his decision with Gazprom's plans. Gazprom's
    price hike and its reduction in gas exports to Azerbaijan will require
    the Caspian Sea state to make use of additional energy supplies to
    keep its electric power stations running this winter, he said.

    While the economic loss to Russia from Baku severing this relationship
    would not be large - about $25 million per year in transit fees
    are collected from the 1.5 million tons of Azerbaijani oil that
    pass through Russian territory -- the diplomatic fallout could be
    more severe.

    The fact that the order came on the eve of Russian Prime Minister
    Mikhail Fradkov's December 4 visit to Baku was interpreted as a
    sign that Azerbaijan is priming for a long-term deterioration in
    its relations with Moscow, local experts believe. In early November,
    President Aliyev reportedly rejected a proposal by Russian President
    Vladimir Putin to take part in a "coordinated policy" for energy
    exports to the West, emphasizing that Baku wanted an independent
    policy line, according to the influential Russian newspaper Kommersant.

    The proposal has been widely interpreted as a request for Azerbaijan to
    side with Russia in its dispute with Georgia, Ukraine and Belarus over
    Gazprom's efforts to increase gas prices. In this game of strategy,
    commented one analyst, Azerbaijan's state interests would be better
    served if Baku aligned itself with Georgia.

    "Ilham Aliyev has shown that he is unhappy with Russia's pressure
    and he does not have plans to coordinate Azerbaijan's energy policy
    with Moscow," commented Rasim Musabekov, an independent Baku-based
    political analyst. "And this is a justified decision: [any] energy
    blockade and crisis in Georgia will have a negative impact on the
    national interests of Azerbaijan."

    By damaging its relations with Georgia, Azerbaijan would lose its
    only non-Russian-controlled energy transport corridor to the West,
    Musabekov said. "All of Azerbaijan's strategic energy projects such as
    BTC [Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline], Baku-Supsa [oil pipeline] and
    the South Caucasus [gas] pipeline run through Georgia. Another large
    regional project, the Kars-Akhalkalaki-Tbilisi-Baku railroad, is in
    the works," he said. "Therefore, stability in Georgia and relations
    with this ally are of even greater importance for Azerbaijan than
    relations with Russia."

    After meeting with President Aliyev on November 28 at the Commonwealth
    of Independent States summit in Minsk, Georgian President Mikheil
    Saakashvili announced that Azerbaijan will render "brotherly
    assistance to Georgia in the winter." Georgia has refused to pay
    increased prices for Russian gas - $230 per 1,000 cubic meters, up
    from $110 per cubic meter - saying that the price hike is politically
    motivated. Georgia's arrest of Russian military officers on charges of
    espionage this September led to a complete shut-down of transportation
    and communication links between Georgia and Russia, the withdrawal of
    Russian embassy staff from Tbilisi, and the deportation of hundreds
    of Georgian citizens from Russia. [For background see the Eurasia
    Insight archive].

    How Russia will respond to Aliyev's order is uncertain, although
    analyst Musabekov dismissed the possibility that sanctions similar
    to those imposed against Georgia could come into force. Baku's
    negotiations with Armenia over the breakaway Azerbaijani region of
    Nagorno-Karabakh are a more likely area for pressure, he added. [For
    background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Whether Azerbaijan will be able to cope with reduced gas supplies from
    Russia and still supply Georgia with increased Azerbaijani gas for
    2007 remains unclear. Russia provides gas for thermoelectric power
    stations that meet up to 90 percent of the country's power needs. By
    buying gas from Russia at relatively cheap prices, Azerbaijan has
    been able to export its natural resources at market prices and make
    a good profit. A deficit in the country's energy balance will mean
    that that it will have to reconsider this strategy.

    "Azerbaijan itself will need additional volumes of gas in 2007.

    Besides, Baku has to buy Russian gas for $230 per 1,000 cubic meters,"
    commented Ilham Shaban, editor of the Turan-Energy daily bulletin. "It
    means that the export of its own gas to Georgia for a lesser price
    will mean a straight loss for Azerbaijan." Although the precise
    proposed price has not yet been specified, Georgia hopes to buy gas
    from Azerbaijan at less than the $230 charged by Gazprom.

    To sort out the muddle of gas supplies and demand, the energy
    ministers of Georgia, Azerbaijan and Turkey met in Tbilisi on December
    8. Georgian Energy Minister Nika Gelauri told reporters after the
    talks that "[a] great step forward" had occurred. "[T]he ministers
    have agreed that part of Turkey's share in the Shah Deniz gas will be
    divided between Georgia and Azerbaijan," Black Sea Press news agency
    reported Gelauri as saying. The timing of deliveries and the volume
    of gas supplies from Azerbaijan to Georgia in 2007 are expected to
    be negotiated in a meeting in Baku the week of December 17.

    How much gas Georgia will actually seek from Azerbaijan is a critical
    factor. Tbilisi is also negotiating with Iran for gas supplies to
    Georgia in 2007 to make up for any loss of Russian gas, if price
    talks between Georgian energy distributors and Gazprom fail.

    Technical problems connected with transporting large volumes of
    Iranian gas via Azerbaijan are one obstacle for this gas source,
    however. Strong misgivings expressed by the US ambassador to Georgia
    recently about a Georgia-Iran energy pact could pose a more difficult
    problem. If an agreement cannot be reached with Tehran, Tbilisi could
    turn to Baku and Turkey to make up the difference via Shah Deniz,
    an option favored by Washington.

    For now, though, the start date for exports from the Shah Deniz gas
    field remains a riddle. British Petroleum, the project's operator,
    began gas production at Shah Deniz in early November, and has stated
    that it is ready to start exports at any time. The Azerbaijani
    government has not commented on a start date. The South Caucasus
    Pipeline, which will carry the gas to Turkey via Georgia, remains
    incomplete on Turkish territory, though it is already able to transfer
    supplies to Georgia. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Regardless of the outcome, energy analyst Shaban believes that
    Azerbaijan itself will not suffer an energy crisis this winter. The
    State Oil Company of Azerbaijan (SOCAR) has promised to increase its
    own gas production in 2007 up to 2 billion cubic meters, he noted.

    The company has stated that Azerbaijan could also buy an additional
    1.5 to 2 billion cubic meters of gas from the Shah Deniz gas project
    that Turkey has said it is unable to accept in 2007.

    "That means that Azerbaijan might receive up to 4 billion cubic
    meters of gas additionally in 2007, and this volume would cover the
    3-billion-cubic-meters reduction in the gas supply from Gazprom,"
    Shaban commented.

    Nonetheless, reduced gas supplies from Russia and an increase in
    Russian gas prices could pose a burden for Azerbaijan's residential
    and commercial consumers. As of January 1, 2007, residential gas
    prices could double, the pro-opposition news agency Turan reported
    an unnamed government source as saying.

    "It is already clear that Russia will double the gas price for
    Azerbaijan next year. Before we [the government] supplied part of the
    gas imported from Russia to the population for $55 for 1,000 cubic
    meters. But now we have to reconsider the price and increase it,"
    said the source, the agency reported on November 29.

    Editor's Note: Rovshan Ismayilov is a freelance reporter based in Baku.
    From: Baghdasarian
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