Translate

Posts mit dem Label nabucco south stream eni gazprom werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Posts mit dem Label nabucco south stream eni gazprom werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen

Freitag, 26. März 2010

Gas Supplies Will Empower Balkan Integration

Secure Gas Supplies Will Empower Balkan Integration

| 25 March 2010 | By Dr. Theodoros Tsakiris and Professor Kostas Ifantis
 
Energy projects in the Western Balkans have the potential to act as an important catalyst for regional integration – but also, if mishandled, to reverse positive trends. After more than a decade of wars and structural volatility the prospect of European integration offers an unprecedented degree of political stability to the Western Balkans. Europe is now the principal security guarantor in the region, providing for the bulk of police and peacekeeping forces in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo.

But while the European presence, and equally importantly, the European prospect, play a critical role in reducing the potential for new conflicts, regional gas geopolitics, and in particular the perceived antagonism between the Nabucco and South Stream projects, are factors threatening to reverse this positive trend.

Given the rising importance of the area as the principal transit corridor for the export of Caspian and Middle East natural gas to Europe, it would be unfortunate if such a zero-sum game mentality again characterized the region’s geopolitics.

These same projects could also constitute a catalyst for regional integration if a series of small-scale interconnectors were constructed so as to create the necessary conditions for the reverse flow of natural gas throughout the region.

Such a development would constitute a major step forward in integrating energy systems and markets in the Western Balkans, diversifying regional import sources and routes while promoting the penetration of natural gas in the region’s energy mix. The Western Balkan states face two intertwined energy challenges. The security of gas supply is pertinent to their resolution.

Too dependent on coal:


Today, the region is too dependent on oil and coal in terms of its Total Primary Energy Supply, TPES, in particular its electricity generation. Contrary to average EU energy consumption patterns, which show a steady reduction in the use of petroleum and coal/lignite at the expense of natural gas, nuclear energy and renewables, the Western Balkans is moving in the opposite direction.
........................
Pipeline Geopolitics – The ‘New Great Game’:

Although Southeast Europe as a whole is considered the most critical transit region for the diversification of EU natural gas imports away from Russia and the problematic Ukrainian gas transit corridor, the Western Balkans would have remained a mere sidekick of this “New Great Game” were it not for Gazprom’s South Stream project.

Neither Nabucco nor ITGI - the projects to connect Caspian Sea natural gas to Europe via Turkey - cross the Western Balkans. Neither Nabucco nor ITGI considered extending interconnectors linking their nominal combined transit capacity of 42 bcm/y to any of the Western Balkan states in close proximity. Nor was there any suggestion by the respective consortia developing these two major infrastructure projects to interlink the ITGI with Albania or FYROM, or Nabucco with Serbia or Croatia.

Apart from South Stream and a planned reverse flow gas interconnector of 2 bcm capacity between Serbia and Bulgaria, announced on March 2010, the only inter-regional projects that appeared to increase the level of market integration within the Western Balkans area are the Western Balkans Gas Ring Project and the Trans-Adriatic & Ionian-Adriatic Pipeline.

The Greek and Turkish Public Natural Gas Companies, DEPA, and Botas launched the now moribund idea for the Western Balkans Gas Ring Project in 2003. The plan was to construct several small to medium capacity natural gas interconnectors between the whole of former Yugoslavia, which could be fed with Caspian Sea gas via the ITGI.

Early in 2003 DEPA, Botas and their counterparts from all the former Yugoslav states, and Albania, signed a Memorandum of Understanding. But the project never moved forward. It became evident that there was not enough demand in the region and there was uncertainty over the availability of Caspian gas, an enigma that still bedevils both Nabucco and ITGI. Finally, both DEPA and Botas lost interest as a result of their participation in much more financially viable and nationally advantageous projects, such as ITGI and, or, Nabucco.

The Trans-Adriatic and Ionian-Adriatic Pipeline:

The second alternative that appeared to hold the promise of genuine market integration was the Trans Adriatic Pipeline, TAP, system and its eventual extension in the form of the Ionian-Adriatic Pipeline, IAP. The TAP, owned on a coequal basis by the Swiss-based utility company EGL and Norway’s Statoil, aspires to export around 10 bcm/y of Caspian and Iranian gas to Italy and Switzerland via Turkey, Greece, and Albania.

The 520km line aspires to utilize the Turkish pipeline system to Greece, which is already in operation and has a final throughput capacity of 11.6 bcm/y, to extend a private pipeline system crossing Greece (186km), Albania (200km) the Straits of Otranto (115km) and Italy (19km).

The cost of the line is estimated at around 1.2 billion euro. The TAP is thereafter projected to extend along the Adriatic coast from Albania to Montenegro, Croatia and Slovenia as an updated edition of the 2003 DEPA-Botas Western Balkan Gas Ring project. But the TAP’s additional vision, to expand through the Western Balkan markets as the Ionian-Adriatic Pipeline project, also lost steam following Croatia’s plans for a Liquified Natural Gas terminal, LNG, on Krk.

.....................
Dr. Theodore Tsakiris, an energy expert, and Kostas Ifantis, Associate Professor at the University of Athens, are members of the EKEM-CSIS Task Force “Transforming the Balkans”.  Balkan Insight is BIRN`s online publication.

http://www.balkaninsight.com/en/main/analysis/26896/

Montag, 15. März 2010

Der immer grössere Einfluss von Russland und China auf dem Balkan

Moskaus fleißige Pipeline-Diplomaten

08.03.2010 | 19:25 |  (Die Presse)
Während Moskau eifrig an der Realisierung der Pipeline zimmert, scheint die von EU und USA favorisierte Nabucco-Pipeline vom Kaspischen Meer nach Mitteleuropa auf der Stelle zu treten.
Belgrad(ros). Zufrieden sprach Kroatiens konservative Regierungschefin Jadranka Kosor nach ihrem Antrittsbesuch in Russland von einer „neu aufgeschlagenen Seite“ in den bilateralen Beziehungen: Wichtig sei, dass sich Kroatien die Möglichkeit größerer russischer Erdgaslieferungen gesichert habe. Im Gegenzug konnte sich Gastgeber Vladimir Putin über einen weiteren Vertragspartner für die russisch-italienische Gaspipeline „South-Stream“ freuen.
.............................
Als Grund für Moskaus problemlose Partnersuche sehen viele die systematische Stärkung russischer Öl- und Gaskonzerne auf den nationalen Energiemärkten der Region im vergangenen Jahrzehnt. „Moskau erntet die Früchte eines langfristigen Plans“, kommentiert die Internetzeitung „Southeast European Times“ Russlands erfolgreiche Balkan-Expansion.

Die Presse

Europa erzittert, weil Gazprom das Balkan Energie Monopol nun besitzt ( 1 2) 

Auf Grund der Unglaubwürdigkeit der NATO Staaten, einer Nonsens Politik auf dem Balkan nun seit 15 Jahren, ist der Einfluss der NATO Staaten auf nahezu Null gesunken im Balkan. Das haben nicht nur die Italiener erkannt, das mit Deutschen oder US Partner auf dem Balkan Nichts mehr zu gewinnen ist. Und das Debakel wild gewordener Österreichischer Banken und Bankrott Firmen ist ja auch nicht gerade die Erfolgs Story. 

China sieht Serbien als Strategischen Partner in Deutschland an, und wer will heute noch etwas von den Bestechungs Firmen aus Deutschland etwas wissen. Zu peinlich sind deren Auftrittte mit den berüchtigsten Drogenhändler und Gangster Clans im Balkan.

Und RWE, einer der grossen Bestechungs Lobby Firmen aus Deutschland, welche auch in Deutschland als Bestechungs Firma Nr. 1 gehandelt wird ist ja in mehreren Ländern im Balkan u.a. auch mit der Tochter Berlinwasser gefeuert worden. RWE ist einer der Haupt Initiatoren von Nabucco und allein deshalb kann es Nichts werden.

Nabucco war entgültig tod, als der Wichtigtuer Joschka Fischer auch noch dort auftauchte, der selbst einfachste Dinge nicht einmal in seiner Amtszeit kapiert hatte.