Gazprom's European Web

Gazprom's European Web

This occasional report by Roman Kupchinsky examines Russia's state-owned gas monopoly Gazprom, exposing the threat this organization poses to European energy security.

Russian LNG - The Future Geopolitical Battleground

Russian LNG - The Future Geopolitical Battleground

This occasional report addresses the historical shift in the global natural gas industry away from overland pipeline deliveries and toward liquefied natural gas, as well as Russia's move toward becoming a leader in the emerging LNG market.

Beyond the Afghan Trauma: Russia's Return to Afghanistan

Beyond the Afghan Trauma: Russia's Return to Afghanistan

As Russia grapples with the Afghan question and its security implications, this report takes a closer look at Russia's re-entry to the region after a twenty-year absence.

Chancellor Merkel Says Nein to Nabucco

Publication: Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 6 Issue: 45
March 9, 2009 11:31 AM Age: 337 days
Category: Eurasia Daily Monitor, Energy, Europe, Vlad’s Corner, Home Page

German Chancellor Angela Merkel

Shifting gears from an ostensible equidistance between pipeline projects, German Chancellor Angela Merkel has come out against proposals to use European Union funds to kick-start the Nabucco pipeline project for bringing Caspian gas to Europe.

Although Germany was never interested in this project in a national capacity and prioritized bilateral arrangements with Russia over the imperatives of EU common energy security, Berlin had not opposed Nabucco. Germany has, however, moved against EU financing of this project in the wake of the January 26 and 27 high-level meeting in Budapest, where the European Commission and EU-funded lending institutions for the first time announced serious plans to support Nabucco (see EDM, January 29, 30).

Merkel announced her opposition to this plan during the European Union's informal summit of heads of state and governments on March 1 in Brussels. The summit discussed EU funding in 2009 and 2010 for a wide range of energy security projects and anti-crisis stimulus measures, in the context of a €5 billion ($6.3 billion) package soon to be finalized. Under the existing proposals, the EU's new member countries would end up badly short-changed. Although these countries face the most severe challenges to their energy security, and some (including Nabucco participant countries) are hardest hit by the financial crisis, the EU's Central-East European countries would only receive a disproportionately small portion of the package. Conversely, certain West European countries would receive disproportionately large portions, including funding for some projects that are not directly related to either EU energy security or anti-crisis stimulus.

The EU Commission had managed in January (after difficult political bargaining in Brussels) to set aside € 250 million ($316 million) for construction of the Nabucco pipeline. Although paltry when compared with the project's estimated cost is €8 billion ($10 billion), this start-up credit could at least help kick-start the project and boost the confidence of other possible investors. Even this small amount would come from the EU's unspent agriculture-support funds, which would normally be returned to national governments. Thus, Nabucco funding to the extent proposed would not place additional burdens on the EU budget (New Europe, March 1-7).

Following the January summit in Budapest, Nabucco participant countries sought to have that start-up credit (and any possible subsequent funding) separated from the overall €5 billion package, knowing that "new" member countries could hardly compete with the EU's "old" members' lobbying for funds from that package. The summit just held in Brussels, however, placed the Nabucco funds in the overall pot; and Merkel proceeded to block EU funding for the Nabucco project.

Merkel offered the following arguments at the concluding press conference: 1) "There is no need whatsoever for this [EU financial support for Nabucco]. There are enough private [lending] offers for it." 2) "Nabucco's problem is where the gas would come from—not an insufficiency of investment funds." 3) Nabucco funding can not qualify for the 2009-2010 anti-crisis stimulus package because, in Merkel's view, Nabucco's construction would not fit within that time frame; 4) Germany already contributes a large share of EU budget funds (German Government press release: Chancellor Merkel Press Conference, March 1; EurActiv, March 3).

These arguments are factually inaccurate, however, with regard to this project. Private lending offers for Nabucco are actually lacking, all the more during the present financial crisis and not least due to the absence of seed money from the EU to boost private-sector confidence in the project. Gas for the pipeline's first phase is actually ensured thanks to Azerbaijan; and there are also short-to-medium-term offers from Iraq and Egypt, as these countries pledged at the Budapest summit. (These prospects could disappear, however, if further delays on Nabucco would force Azerbaijan and, in the second phase, Turkmenistan to sell the available volumes to Germany's privileged partner, Russia). Nabucco's construction start would be pushed beyond 2010 (by Merkel's potentially self-fulfilling prophecy) only if the anti-crisis stimulus funding for Nabucco is denied now (at Merkel's suggestion). And while Germany, with the single largest economy, is indeed the single largest contributor to the EU budget (complaining about this plays well in the current election year), the EU has after all defined Nabucco as a top priority project within a top priority policy, that for EU energy security.

Not for the first time, such arguments cast doubt on the quality of advice on a range of issues beyond energy that is available to the Chancellor with regard to policy on Europe's East.

Merkel has shifted tactical gears with this nein to Nabucco. Barely five weeks before she had written to European Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso and the EU's incumbent Czech presidency, urging EU support for three projects simultaneously: Gazprom's Nord Stream, Gazprom's South Stream, and Nabucco. Merkel's toughly-worded confidential letter found its way to the press (Financial Times Deutschland, January 29; Le Monde, February 3; see EDM, February 4). Concerned at the EU's move to single out Nabucco for support, Merkel's letter sought to elevate Nord Stream (of interest to Germany) and South Stream (lobbied by Gazprom and Italy) to an equal footing with Nabucco in terms of EU support.

The European Commission, however, takes the position that Nord Stream and South Stream are business projects whereas Nabucco is a strategic priority of the EU. Since Berlin could not elevate Nord Stream and South Stream to the same level as Nabucco in EU policy, Merkel's shift of gears seems designed to downgrade Nabucco to the same level as Gazprom's two projects, which do not qualify for EU support.


Email this article to a friend

Publications

Eurasia Daily Monitor

Eurasisa Daily Monitor

Global Terrorism Analysis

Global Terrorism Analysis

China Brief

China Brief

North Caucasus Analysis

North Caucasus Weekly Recent From Turkey

Donate To Jamestown

Click Here To Donate Now

New From Jamestown

Breaking News:

Britain & the North West Frontier: Strategy, Tactics and Lessons

By:Jules Stewart

December 17, 2009 10:21 AM

The tribal areas of Pakistan’s North-West Frontier Province (NWFP) fully deserve President Barack Obama’s description as “the most dangerous place in the world”. This remote and inhospitable region is only nominally under Pakistan's administration and its Pashtun tribesmen have a long history of opposing outside rule on their homeland. The Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) have today become a haven for the most vicious and desperate elements of the Islamist insurgency. This includes Os...


Cat: Report, Book

The South China Sea Dispute: Increasing Stakes and Rising Tensions

November 20, 2009 11:14 AM

Tensions are on the rise in the South China Sea. Longstanding sovereignty disputes over the profusion of atolls, shoals and reefs that dot the 1.2 million square miles of sea, allied to extensive overlapping claims to maritime space, have been a source of serious interstate contention over the years, especially during the 1990s. A brief easing of tensions occurred in the first half of this decade due in part to China’s more accommodating and flexible attitude, which was part of a diplomatic “cha...


Cat: Report, Book, China and the Asia-Pacific, Featured, Home Page

Who's Who in the Somali Insurgency: A Reference Guide

September 30, 2009 02:45 PM

The ongoing struggle for control of Somalia is one of the world’s most complicated. With the country already effectively split into three parts, it may be too late to speak of a Somali nation. While the popular conception of this conflict pits al-Qaeda associated Islamists against a presumably Western-friendly Transitional Federal Government (TFG) that has the support of major Western powers and the United Nations, the reality is far more complex. Somalia is beset by separatist forces, clan riva...


Cat: Report, Book, Home Page, Featured

China's Quasi-Superpower Diplomacy: Prospects and Pitfalls

September 2, 2009 11:19 AM

The year 2009 will go down in history as a watershed for the epochal expansion of China’s global influence. With its economy tipped to grow at 8 percent despite the world financial crisis, the People’s Republic of China (PRC) is widely regarded as a prime locomotive for economic recovery worldwide. The People’s Liberation Army (PLA) is building nuclear submarines and aircraft carriers, and the country’s first astronaut is expected to set foot on the moon before 2015. Taking advantage of the dama...


Cat: Book, Report, Featured, Home Page

Beyond the Afghan Trauma: Russia's Return to Afghanistan

By:Marlene Laruelle

August 11, 2009 04:06 PM

Russian authorities are extremely divided about the right position to take as Moscow increasingly concerns itself with the Afghan question. They have continually criticized NATO’s decisions though, at the same time, many Russian politicians recognize that the coalition’s failure to stabilize Afghanistan would place Russia in great danger. To carry out its re-entry policies, Moscow is seeking to revitalize Russophile lobbies in Afghanistan. Russian economic stake in Afghanistan is also showing si...


Cat: Report, Book
go to Archive ->

Azerbaijan and the West: Strategic Partnership at Eurasia's Crossroads

August 3, 2009

Jamestown presents a complete summary of the May 14, 2009 event entitled Azerbaijan and the West: Strategic Partnership at Eurasia's Crossroads featuring discussions by Senior Fellow Vladimir Socor, Dr. Brenda Shaffer and Daniel...

Category: Report

Russian LNG - The Future Geopolitical Battleground

June 26, 2009

The global natural gas industry is undergoing a historical shift away from overland pipeline deliveries of gas and gradually towards Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG), shipped by seaborne tankers designed to supply distant markets...

Category: Report, Book

The Changing Face of Islamist Militancy in North Africa

March 17, 2009

The Changing Face of Islamist Militancy in North Africa contains the proceedings of a panel from Jamestown's December 2008 conference entitled "The Expanding Geography of Militant Jihad."

Category: Report, Book

The Impact of the Russia-Georgia War on the South Caucasus Transportation Corridor

March 3, 2009

 

*Click here to view the full PDF of this report

Executive SummaryThe August 2008 war in the Caucasus revealed the new strategic realities that have emerged in the Black Sea / Caspian Region in recent years. These realities...

Category: Report, Georgia

Gazprom's European Web

February 18, 2009

For over a decade the proliferation of so-called “Gas Trading” companies in Europe has destabilized the EU energy market and possibly criminalized it as well. The appearance of such companies as RosUkrEnergo, the Centrex group of...

Category: Book, Russia, Energy, Report

The Georgia Crisis and Russia-Turkey Relations

November 26, 2008

*Click here to order a copy of this report online!*

 

The August 2008 Russia-Georgia war has triggered some major shifts in regional geopolitics. The Caucasus crisis also directly affected the relationship between the two main...

Category: Turkey, Russia, Report

Who's Who in the Azerbaijani Opposition

November 3, 2008

On October 15, Azerbaijanis will go to the polls to elect their next president. Seven candidates are running for the most prestigious and powerful position in the country. Who will become Azerbaijan’s president for the upcoming...

Category: Report

Arming for Asymmetric Warfare: Turkey’s Arms Industry in the 21st Century

June 19, 2008

 

Located at the strategic crossroads of Europe, Asia, the Caucasus and the Middle East, Turkey still maintains a vast conscript army of over one million men, the second-largest in NATO and the largest in Europe. Major reforms to...

Category: Report

"Turkey and Northern Iraq: An Overview"

February 29, 2008
Category: Report