Tag: ITGI

  • Turkey to gain in Europe gas pipeline race

    Turkey to gain in Europe gas pipeline race

    Turkey to gain in Europe gas pipeline race

    By REUTERS

    Published: Jan 13, 2012 01:44 Updated: Jan 13, 2012 01:44

    LONDON: Turkey stands to gain most from major movements in Europe’s gas supply infrastructure expected in 2012 as both Russia and Azerbaijan negotiate pipeline contracts to ship gas to the European Union through the Bosporus.

    BP and Statoil lead Azerbaijan’s Shah Deniz II gas project which is expected to declare a winner in April to transport its 10 billion cubic meters (bcm) of gas per year to Europe.

    The three projects competing for the contract are Nabucco, TAP, and ITGI.

    At the same time, Russia’s Gazprom is pushing ahead with its huge South Stream gas pipeline project that aims to pump over 60 bcm of gas a year to Italy.

    Whatever the outcome of these developments, Turkey stands to gain as all projects would pass through it, offering prospects of healthy transit fees and new gas supply sources.

    Analysts say that Turkey has positioned itself well at the negotiating table with Russia, Europe and Azerbaijan, and that its decisions would likely make or break projects.

    “Turkey is probably playing its gas hand very well. It picks the winners and knows when to decide whether they’re going to go forward with something. I would think they have decided South Stream is going to be more viable,” said Steven Wardlaw, a partner at law firm Baker Botts, which advises the gas marketing entity for participants in the Shah Deniz project.

    “We always thought that Nabucco was going to be a fairly marginal project. It’s a pipeline designed by people who want the gas, rather than South Stream, which is designed by people who have the gas,” he added.

    Turkey gave Russia permission last December to build the South Stream pipeline through its territory, supplying the missing piece needed by Moscow to secure markets for its gas in Europe, possibly at the expense of the Brussels-backed Nabucco project. The South Stream pipeline plans to transport 63 bcm of Russian gas a year into Europe by crossing the Black Sea and Turkey.

    This is equivalent to about 15 percent of the European Union’s annual gas consumption.

    While South Stream’s prospects improve, support for Nabucco is waning.

    The pipeline project, led by Austria’s OMV and Germany’s RWE, plans to ship gas from Central Asia through Turkey and southeastern Europe into Austria.

    Its critics say that its costs of over $12 billion have risen too high and that there is not enough gas available to fill such a big pipeline with non-Russian supplies.

    As a result, the tone in Brussels and with some of the project’s major partners is changing.

    Asked in an interview in late 2011 whether he was confident Nabucco would go ahead, EU Energy Commissioner Guenther Oettinger would say only that he was confident the Southern Corridor would open.

    “I’m confident of opening the Southern Corridor, but it’s primarily up to the Shah Deniz Consortium to decide to whom they want to sell their gas,” he said.

    Sources at RWE and OMV have also suggested that their impression was now that Nabucco would not be built in its original form.

    “We’re looking for easier and cheaper alternatives to secure our future gas needs than from the ever more expensive Nabucco,” one source at RWE said. “Given that we haven’t spent much money on Nabucco yet, it would be easy to get out of it.”

    Instead of one of the three single pipeline projects getting the heads-up from Azerbaijan, it seems more likely that a system of regional existing and future pipeline infrastructure could ship the gas to Europe.

    “The Shah Deniz project team are evaluating a fourth potential export option which would transport gas to markets in South-Eastern Europe through a system of regional existing and future interconnector infrastructure,” the consortium said.

    The pros and cons of each project mean that analysts think a merger is the only viable solution.

    “We might see a consolidation of projects before any single route is decided upon,” energy consultants JBC Energy said.

    TAP said it would be open to such consolidation talks.

    This could also mean that Nabucco is downsized and merged with other projects in order to create a complex Southern Gas Corridor system of pipelines, with Turkey at its centre.

    Sources in Brussels said this was the European Commission’s preferred option as it would mean it could save face by not having to officially kill off Nabucco, but instead present a coherent Southern Gas Corridor that would offer Europe diversification of supplies.

    These pipeline projects running through Turkey add to plans in Ankara to exploit recent gas discoveries in the eastern Mediterranean Sea.

    Although most discoveries have so far been made in Greek Cypriot or Israeli waters, Cyprus has said it is willing to share the revenues from any gas find with Turkish Cypriots.

    But whichever pipelines get built, and even if Turkey gets some proceeds from Cypriot gas, non-Russian gas supplies to Europe will still be dwarfed by Russia’s gas flows.

    Russian exports currently around 150 bcm a year could reach a maximum of 230 bcm by 2017, a report from the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies said in January. In its lowest scenario, Russian exports to Europe would still be around 100 bcm a year.

    This compares with a maximum of less than 30 bcm a year which Europe is likely to receive from Azerbaijan and the Caspian region, according to the Oxford Institute.

    via Turkey to gain in Europe gas pipeline race – Arab News.

  • Turkey Reiterates Commitment to Southern Corridor with Trans-Anatolia Pipeline

    Turkey Reiterates Commitment to Southern Corridor with Trans-Anatolia Pipeline

    Turkey Reiterates Commitment to Southern Corridor with Trans-Anatolia Pipeline

    Publication: Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 9 Issue: 1
    January 3, 2012
    By: Saban Kardas
    Turkey and Azerbaijan signed a memorandum of understanding that will facilitate the transit of Azerbaijani natural gas to Europe, changing the calculations over the EU-backed Southern Corridor concept. In October 2011, the two countries signed numerous agreements regulating the volume and price for Turkey’s gas imports from Azerbaijan as well as the transit terms for Azerbaijani gas exports to Europe through Turkish territory (EDM, November 1, 2011). Among these documents they agreed to work on a dedicated pipeline that will transport gas from the second phase of the Shah Deniz gas field through a pipeline from Turkey’s eastern frontier to its western border, in addition to using the existing Turkish grid for transiting Azerbaijani gas.

    On December 26, 2011, Turkey’s Energy Minister Taner Yildiz and his Azerbaijani counterpart, Natig Aliyev, signed a memorandum of understanding on the construction of the Trans-Anadolu natural gas pipeline. The Trans-Anadolu consortium will be formed by the State Oil and Gas Company (SOCAR) and Turkey’s BOTAS and TPAO. While the Azerbaijani side will hold 80 percent of the shares, the Turkish participants will control the remaining 20 percent, but the stakes might change over time, as the consortium will be open to participation by other international energy companies. The construction work is scheduled to start in 2012 and be completed in 2017, when the Shah Deniz-II is also expected to become operational. The pipeline will have an initial annual capacity of 16 billion cubic meters (bcm), which could be increased to 24 bcm. The 6 bcm capacity will be used for consumption in Turkey’s western regions, while the rest of the throughput will constitute Azerbaijan’s exports to Europe. Since Turkey will retain the re-export rights for its imports from Azerbaijan, the total volume of gas available for European markets could increase depending on the market conditions. Though the construction costs will be determined after feasibility studies, Yildiz estimated these costs at around $5 billion (Anadolu Ajansi, December 26, 2011).

    This development raises many interrelated issues about the future of bilateral relations, as well as the EU’s Southern Corridor project seeking to diversify European natural gas supplies tapping into Caspian basin reserves.

    With this decision, Turkey and Azerbaijan took another step to cement their evolving strategic partnership, while Ankara also reconfirmed its Baku-centered South Caucasus policy. Energy occupies a major place in both countries’ ambitious foreign policy agendas. While Azerbaijan is eager to capitalize on its developing hydrocarbon reserves to emerge as a major regional actor in the South Caucasus, Turkey has sought to use its geographic location as an asset to establish itself as a major transportation corridor for oil and gas from the Caspian basin and Central Asia as well as the Middle East.

    Given Azerbaijan’s need for a reliable export route and Turkey’s interest in sustainable throughput to feed its ambitions to become an energy hub, there are economic and strategic imperatives forcing the two countries to forge a closer partnership in the energy sector, which is further strengthened by overlapping perspectives on regional issues. Such a shared vision led to the construction of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline marketing Azerbaijani oil globally and the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum pipeline exporting Azerbaijani gas to Turkey, part of which is re-exported to Greece by using the Turkish grid. With the successive energy deals signed in recent years, including a rising volume of Azerbaijani investments in Turkey’s energy sector, and deepening political dialogue such as the establishment of a high level strategic cooperation council, the two countries are healing the frictions caused by Turkey’s thwarted normalization efforts with Armenia.

    Currently, there seems to be a strong determination to develop joint energy projects and turn this partnership into a solid axis in the South Caucasus and beyond. Natig Aliyev’s remarks that with the trans-Anatolia project the two countries will work in European energy markets together reflected this shared vision (www.ntvmsnbc.com, December 26, 2011).

    Moreover, the implications of this development for the EU-backed Southern corridor remain a matter of controversy. The competing projects including Nabucco, Interconnector Turkey-Greece-Italy (ITGI) and Trans-Adriatic Pipeline (TAP) submitted their bids to the BP-led consortium operating the Shah Deniz field in October 2011. While Azerbaijan and the consortium were expected to make their decision, the trans-Anatolian project has altered the equation in the ongoing competition to secure access to Azerbaijan’s export volumes.

    To complicate these calculations even further, Turkey also moved to sign an accord with Russia by the end of 2011. An agreement finalizing Turkey’s approval for the construction of South Stream in its territorial waters in the Black Sea was signed in Moscow by the heads of BOTAS and Gazprom, overseen by Yildiz and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin. With this decision, which Russia had been expecting for over one year, Turkey removed its objections to the South Stream project, which Russian sources expect to be completed by 2015. In return, Yildiz claimed that he secured guarantees from the Russian side to resolve the dispute over the western pipeline in terms favorable to Turkey, especially including a reduction in the price for gas imports from Russia (Anadolu Ajansi, December 29, 2011).

    The Turkish government has faced the criticism that by taking these controversial steps it is effectively killing the Nabucco project, which it claimed to have deemed as a strategic priority (Hurriyet, December 31, 2011). For its part, the Turkish government has been arguing that the trans-Anatolian project was in fact complementary to Nabucco and Southern corridor projects, as it will reduce the costs of the other projects (Anadolu Ajansi, December 26, 2011; Yeni Safak, November 19, 2011).

    Ankara considers that it has fulfilled its responsibilities towards the Nabucco project by granting the necessary permissions earlier for its construction on its territory. The recent deal on the trans-Anatolian project in that context reiterates that Turkey would not be the deal-breaker in Southern corridor projects, as it effectively resolves issues pertaining to the transit of Azerbaijani gas. More importantly, the willingness of the BP-led Shah Deniz consortium, for Azerbaijan and Turkey to undertake a major portion of the transportation corridor might allow Nabucco and other projects to redesign themselves on scalable terms. Now it will be up to other Nabucco partners to do their part, readjust to the new conditions, and find a supply source, which remains the main obstacle before the project.

    https://jamestown.org/program/turkey-reiterates-commitment-to-southern-corridor-with-trans-anatolia-pipeline/