Category: Cyprus/TRNC

  • Turkish Ship Explores Off Southern Cyprus

    Turkish Ship Explores Off Southern Cyprus

    By MARC CHAMPION

    ISTANBUL—A Turkish oil and gas research ship is exploring off southern Cyprus in an area near the exploration rig operated by U.S. independent Noble Energy Inc., a Turkish foreign ministry official said, in a further escalation of a conflict over drilling rights.

    European Pressphoto Agency Turkey's oil exploration vessel Piri Reis leaves from Urla Port to the Mediterranean in Izmir, Turkey, on Friday.
    European Pressphoto Agency Turkey's oil exploration vessel Piri Reis leaves from Urla Port to the Mediterranean in Izmir, Turkey, on Friday.

    Turkey’s oil exploration vessel Piri Reis leaves from Urla Port to the Mediterranean in Izmir, Turkey, on Friday.

    The official said Tuesday that the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus was “trying to send a message” to the government in the divided island’s Greek south that it, too, believes it has a right to oil and natural gas reserves in Cypriot waters.

    “The TRNC issued a license to [Turkiye Petrolleri A.O.] to explore all around the island,” said Selcuk Unal, a spokesman for the Turkish foreign ministry. The ship, called the Piri Reis, “is 60 to 70 nautical miles away from the area where Noble Energy is drilling, and is just off Limassol.”

    Limassol is a town on the southern edge of Cyprus. The island has been divided between Greek and Turkish halves since 1974, when Turkey’s military invaded in the wake of a Greek military coup. Turkey still keeps thousands of troops on the island.

    Turkey is the only country to recognize the Northern Cypriot government, while the Cypriot government in the south is internationally recognized as the legitimate government for the island as a whole. It is also a European Union member. However, Ankara argues that neither side should begin exploiting the island’s oil and natural gas reserves until talks aimed at reunifying the island are complete.

    Cyprus says it has a right to exploit its sovereign waters and is motivated solely by the likely availability of natural gas—known since a major field was discovered in nearby Israeli waters. Turkey says the Cypriot move to start drilling is a ploy to undermine the reunification talks.

    In order to increase pressure on the Cypriot side, Turkey last week signed its own bilateral agreement with Northern Cyprus to delimit the continental shelf between Cyprus and Turkey. That agreement mirrors similar agreements that the Greek Cypriot government has made with Israel, Egypt and Lebanon. In addition, the North’s de facto government agreed that Turkiye Petrolleri could explore throughout Cypriot waters.

    It wasn’t clear whether the Piri Reis, named after a 16th century Ottoman admiral and cartographer, on Tuesday was inside Block 12, the area that Noble Energy has contracted to explore.

    Ankara also sent naval vessels to protect the Piri Reis and threatened to blacklist any foreign companies that drill under license from the Cypriot government, meaning that they would be banned from winning any exploration licenses in Turkey’s extensive Mediterranean waters.

    Northern Cyprus has said it will stop exploring for oil and gas in the island’s waters as soon as the Greek Cypriot side does. Ankara has alleged bad faith on the part of the Cypriot government, since the Greek south rejected a United Nations reunification plan put to referendum in 2004. The North accepted. Soon afterward, Cyprus joined the EU and has since been instrumental in blocking Turkey’s efforts to join the bloc.

    Write to Marc Champion at marc.champion@wsj.com

    via Turkish Ship Explores Off Southern Cyprus – WSJ.com.

  • Christofias Says Turkey’s Moves on Cyprus Oil Risk New Conflict

    Christofias Says Turkey’s Moves on Cyprus Oil Risk New Conflict

    By Bill Varner – Sep 22, 2011 7:16 PM GMT+0200

    Cypriot President Demetris Christofias said Turkey’s moves to extract oil and gas from waters off the divided Mediterranean Sea island are illegal provocations that risk a renewal of hostilities.

    “Turkish naval maneuvers in the region of Cyprus’s Exclusive Economic Zone, where exploration is being carried out, are provocative and a real danger for further complications in the region,” Christofias said in a speech today to the United Nations General Assembly.

    “I wish, from this esteemed podium, to condemn this illegal act which constitutes a provocation, not only for the Republic of Cyprus but also for the entire international community,” Christofias said. “Turkey and the Turkish Cypriot leadership are trying to create tension and new illegal faits- accomplis.”

    Turkey, which invaded Cyprus in 1974 and is the only country to recognize the Turkish Cypriot north as an independent nation, disputes Cyprus’s right to explore for hydrocarbons in its Exclusive Economic Zone and has sent warships to the area.

    Reunification talks resumed in 2008 after Greek Cypriots, who run the internationally recognized Republic of Cyprus in the south, rejected a UN-sponsored settlement plan.

    A Turkish vessel will sail tomorrow to begin seismic exploration for oil and gas in waters of the Mediterranean north of Cyprus, Turkish Energy Minister Taner Yildiz said today.

    Also today, in a statement released by his government’s press office, Christofias gave a “guarantee” that Turkish Cypriots will benefit from offshore discoveries before the island is unified. The continental-shelf agreement announced yesterday by Turkey and northern Cyprus is “unacceptable,” Christofias said in the statement.

    Christofias also told the General Assembly that the unification talks have been set back by what he described as Turkish Cypriot “retracting on the negotiation table, including from previously found convergences.” The change in the Turkish Cypriot position, he said, “feeds on recent negative and provocative policy of Turkey in the region.”

    To contact the reporter on this story: Bill Varner in United Nations at wvarner@bloomberg.net

    To contact the editor responsible for this story: Mark Silva at msilva34@bloomberg.net

    via Christofias Says Turkey’s Moves on Cyprus Oil Risk New Conflict – Bloomberg.

  • Drilling Off Cyprus Will Proceed Despite Warnings From Turkey

    Drilling Off Cyprus Will Proceed Despite Warnings From Turkey

    By SEBNEM ARSU

    ISTANBUL — In the face of menacing warnings from Turkey on Monday, the Greek Cypriot government said it was proceeding with exploratory drilling for oil and gas off the coast of the disputed island.

    Turkey called the wells an act of provocation, and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in a televised statement that Turkish “frigates, gunboats and its air force will constantly monitor developments in the area.” He later added that Turkey would start its own seismic exploration program in the area, the site of major natural gas deposits claimed largely by Israel.

    Cyprus has been divided since 1974 into an internationally accepted Greek Cypriot south and a Turkish Cypriot north that is recognized only by Turkey. While the Greek Cypriots say the drilling is taking place south of the island, in their exclusive economic zone, Turkish officials do not accept the Greek Cypriots’ claims to the area.

    “We have different attitudes for the region that they have declared as an exclusive economic region,” Mr. Erdogan said. “This is a disputed exclusive economic region, and we have earlier conveyed to them that taking such a step in this disputed region would be incorrect.”

    This is the second time recently that Mr. Erdogan has vowed to send the Turkish Navy into an international dispute. Earlier this month, he said that Turkish naval vessels would escort aid ships headed to Gaza to avoid a repetition of a confrontation last year, when eight Turks and one Turkish-American were killed by Israeli commandos.

    Turkey claims that the natural resources around Cyprus belong to both the Turkish and Greek sectors, and that any development projects should be shelved until the dispute over the political status of the island is resolved.

    Prime Minister Erdogan said the Turkish Petroleum Company would soon begin exploring for hydrocarbon reserves off northern Cyprus, in line with a continental shelf agreement between Ankara and the breakaway Turkish Cypriot state.

    Cyprus is a member of the European Union, which on Monday urged the parties to focus on a comprehensive solution to the island’s political dispute, the Anatolian Agency reported.

    A version of this article appeared in print on September 20, 2011, on page A11 of the New York edition with the headline: Drilling Off Cyprus Will Proceed Despite Warnings From Turkey.

    via Drilling Off Cyprus Will Proceed Despite Warnings From Turkey – NYTimes.com.

  • Dutch euro-parliamentarians blast Turkey

    Dutch euro-parliamentarians blast Turkey

    Expatica 20 September 2011

    The conservative VVD, senior partner in the Dutch coalition government, has launched a fierce attack on Turkey in the European Parliament. The leader of the VVD delegation, Hans van Baalen, said Turkey had disqualified itself as a potential EU member state with remarks made on Sunday by its deputy prime minister, Besir Atalay. He warned that Turkey would freeze its ties with the European Union if Cyprus occupied the rotating presidency of the EU in the second half of 2012 as planned.

    MEP Van Baalen pointed out that Turkey has been illegally occupying northern Cyprus since 1974 and has blocked every attempt at reconciliation between the Greek and Turkish communities. Turkey also refuses to normalise relations with the Greek part of the island.

    The VVD wants the European Commission to ask the Turkish government to explain this behaviour. (…)

    via Dutch euro-parliamentarians blast Turkey | EuropeNews.

  • Turkey Rattles Saber Over Cyprus Oil Drilling

    Turkey Rattles Saber Over Cyprus Oil Drilling

    By MARC CHAMPION

    WO AH063A TURKC D 20110919172404ISTANBUL—Turkey said it was ready to send warships to escort research vessels that would explore for oil and gas off the coast of Northern Cyprus, responding to what it said was a provocation by the island’s Greek Cypriot south.

    Monday’s saber-rattling came as Texas-based Noble Energy Inc. began exploratory drilling farther south between Cyprus and Israel late Sunday, despite Turkish warnings to halt the project, the semiofficial Cyprus News Agency reported. Noble was operating under license from the Republic of Cyprus, the island’s internationally recognized government in the Greek Cypriot south.

    The developments raised the stakes in a dispute over drilling rights around the divided island.

    Turkish leaders say the Republic of Cyprus shouldn’t drill for oil and gas on the continental shelf that it delineated with Israel in an agreement last year. Any drilling or maritime agreements, Ankara says, should wait until the island—divided since 1974, when Turkey invaded Cyprus in response to a Greek-backed coup—is reunified, so both the Greek and Turkish populations can benefit.

    Turkish Energy Minister Taner Yildiz on Monday described the Cypriot exploration project as “a political provocation aimed at consolidating the Greek Cypriot administration’s status,” and so short-circuiting reunification talks for the island, Turkey’s state Anadolu news agency reported.

    Mr. Yildiz also reiterated a Turkish warning that it would make its own agreement with the de facto government of Northern Cyprus to delineate the continental shelf north of the island, if Noble Energy were to proceed with its drilling plans. Ankara would then authorize the Turkish Petroleum Corp. to send research vessels to begin exploration in the Turkish and Turkish-Cypriot waters, he said.

    “The research will be carried out together with a [navy] escort,” Anadolu reported Mr. Yildiz as saying.

    The Republic of Cyprus is a European Union member state, but isn’t recognized by Turkey. By contrast, Turkey is the only country to recognize the administration of the government of the island’s ethnic-Turkish North. The two sides are divided by a United Nations-monitored green line.

    Ankara’s threat of military action came on the heels of similar threats Turkey made in recent weeks to send naval vessels to escort future aid convoys that attempt to break Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza. Those combative policies risk confrontation with Cyprus and Israel, as well tensions with the EU and Washington, diplomats said, noting that Cyprus is an EU member and Noble Energy is a U.S. company.

    A spokeswoman for the European Union’s foreign-affairs service said Monday in Brussels that the EU urged “Turkey to refrain from any kind of threat or sources or friction or action” that could damage relations in the neighborhood or border settlement talks.

    Officials at the Energy Service of the Republic of Cyprus ministry for Commerce, Industry and Tourism didn’t return phone and email requests to comment. A spokesman for Noble Energy didn’t return calls seeking comment.

    Noble Energy is also involved in developing Israel’s Leviathan field, which contains an estimated 16 trillion cubic feet, or about 453 billion cubic meters, of natural gas. Noble’s partner in that project, Israel’s Delek Drilling LP, has applied to the Greek Cypriot government to activate an option to take a 30% share in the Cypriot exploration license, too, said a senior industry executive familiar with the project.

    “The main reason Turkey is reacting so strongly is that it wants to be the gateway for any new gas to come to EU markets,” the executive said. A major Greek Cypriot find would undermine that goal, he said, as Cyprus would then export gas to the EU via Greece.

    Selcuk Unal, spokesman for Turkey’s foreign ministry, dismissed that claim as “childish,” saying Turkey was already an energy hub. “The question here is why now? Why are the Cypriots hurrying to start drilling now? They could have done it years ago. The reason is that it coincides with a crucial moment in reunification negotiations, which is why we find that this is all a provocation,” he said.

    Turkey has sought to force the pace in Cyprus’s reunification talks lately, threatening to freeze relations with the EU if reunification hasn’t been agreed upon by the time Cyprus takes over the bloc’s rotating presidency in the second half of 2012. Mr. Yildiz repeated that warning on Monday.

    Write to Marc Champion at marc.champion@wsj.com

    Corrections & Amplifications

    An earlier version of this story incorrectly named Noble Energy Inc. as Noble Engineering Inc.

    via Turkey Rattles Saber Over Cyprus Oil Drilling – WSJ.com.

  • UPDATE 2-Cyprus, Turkey spar over gas drilling

    UPDATE 2-Cyprus, Turkey spar over gas drilling

    * Cyprus says to press on with plans to drill

    * Turkey says action “not acceptable”

    * Dispute comes at sensitive time in the region (Adds Turkish foreign ministry, detail, edits)

    By Michele Kambas

    NICOSIA, Sept 13 (Reuters) – Cyprus and Turkey exchanged heated words on Tuesday over Cypriot plans to drill for offshore oil and gas next month, adding to ill temper over peace talks on the divided island at a time when Turkey is also feuding with Israel.

    Following remarks last week by Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan affirming Ankara’s readiness to deploy its navy across the Mediterranean, Cypriot President Demetris Christofias issued a statement denouncing Turkish “threats” and saying EU-member Cyprus would expect a response from its foreign allies.

    A spokesman for Turkey’s foreign ministry hit back by criticising the plan by the Greek Cypriot government to start exploiting oil and gas reserves before having reached a peace settlement with Turkish speakers whose administration in the north of the island is recognised only by Ankara.

    The exchange of rhetoric over the undersea resources of the Levant Basin reflects long-standing territorial disputes over who controls the waters between Cyprus, Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, Israel, the Palestinian Gaza Strip and Egypt.

    It comes as efforts to narrow differences between Greek and Turkish Cypriots on ending the 37-year division of the island are stalled ahead of an October summit called by the United Nations, and as relations between Israel and Turkey have been soured by last year’s Israeli raid on a Turkish ship off Gaza.

    Christofias said in his statement that his government would press ahead with plans to explore for oil and gas: “Concerning the possibility of Turkey committing an unlawful act, something which we hope will not happen, we will expect a strong and effective response from the international community.”

    He added: “In addition to questioning the sovereign rights of the Cyprus Republic, Turkey is also threatening our country and its associates … It is causing tension in the region, sending the message that it acts like a troublemaker and violates international norms.”

    TURKEY SAYS “NOT ACCEPTABLE”

    Texas-based Noble Energy , under licence from the internationally recognised government of Cyprus, is expected to start exploration work in one offshore sector southeast of the island around the beginning of October. Tenders for other offshore blocks are expected later this year or next.

    In response to Christofias, a Turkish foreign ministry spokesman told Reuters: “The Greek Cypriots are creating a fait accompli in the eastern Mediterranean while they are negotiating with the Turkish Cypriots. This is not acceptable because the natural wealth of the island belongs to both sides.”

    Christofias said that Turkish Cypriots, who have largely depended on Ankara since Turkey invaded the island in 1974 after a Greek-inspired coup, would have their share of the resources once there was a political settlement.

    The U.S. Geological Survey last year estimated a mean of 1.7 billion barrels of recoverable oil and a mean of 122 trillion cubic feet of recoverable gas in the Levant Basin Province, although disputes over control have held back exploration.

    Israel has recently reported two major gas finds. (Additional reporting by Daren Butler in Ankara; Editing by Alastair Macdonald)

    via UPDATE 2-Cyprus, Turkey spar over gas drilling | Reuters.