(MENAFN- AzerNews)
By Orkhan Amashov
A long-overdue new gas deal between Brussels and Baku will need
to address, inter alia, two fundamental issues: the investment in
the extension of the existing pipeline network and gas fields in
Azerbaijan, and the substantial increase in volumes delivered to
Europe. The draft memorandum of understanding, dated 11 July, which
is reported to have been submitted as a proposal by the EU
Commission for the consideration of Member States, appears to fit
the bill on both counts.
Nub of the design
As of now, any prediction as to its content is based on the
reports made by Reuters and EU Observer who claim to have seen the
document. On 15 July, President Ilham Aliyev announced that gas
deal negotiations are underway, the substantial part of the work
has been completed and a new agreement will be signed soon, without
delineating its details
On the top of this, given that Ursula van der Leyen, President
of the EU Commission, and Kadri Simpson, EU Energy Security
Commissioner, are to visit Baku next week, and a bilateral meeting
is scheduled in Brussels for 19 July, one could safely assume the
that the wheels are in motion at maximum velocity.
The strategic partnership that the EU and Azerbaijan has
carefully cultivated over the past few decades is a deeply rational
relationship. In the energy sector, its essence is primarily based
on the following: Europe needs gas, Azerbaijan wants to increase
its export capabilities, there must be a clear consensus on
risk-sharing in terms of long-term investment, and the whole scheme
should be in line with the EU's climate change priorities.
These are the main ingredients that will form the bulk of a
future deal, with all other considerations being subservient to
them. The text of the draft memo seems to be guided by these
exigencies, yet certain critical details, such as the exact
delineation of investment shares, are yet to make their way to the
public domain.
Although the document-in-progress does not mention the ongoing
invasion of Ukraine, the fallout from which lies at the very heart
of the EU's current exacerbated predicament, the work on a new deal
is undoubtedly part of the efforts to diversify the Continent's
energy supply sources, routes and overdependence on Russian
gas.
A proposed no-strings-attached agreement aims to increase annual
gas exports from Azerbaijan to Europe, via the westernmost
Trans-Adriatic Pipeline (TAP) segment of the Southern Gas Corridor
(SGC), to 20 bcm by 2027, in accordance with“commercial viability”
and“market demand”. The draft memo recognises that such an
increase is possible by means of investing in the existing pipeline
system.
Investment: Risk sharing
One is given to understand that the risks will need to be
shared. No exact figure has yet emanated from the scant sources
available. President Ilham Aliyev has consistently raised the issue
of funding, with a special reference to the nature of the gas
business, in which investments precede gas exploration and
production. In this vein, the memo's mention of“stable”,“secure”
and“predictable” gas supplies are of heightened significance.
What can be ascertained for now is that the draft outlines the
significance of the encouragement of financing of the expansion of
the pipeline network by both sides. It should not be forgotten that
such an increase, in addition to the investment required for the
purpose of enlarging the SGC's capacity, will require pumping money
into gas exploration itself. In this vein, the memo appears to be
short on detail.
The memorandum of understanding, in line with the spirit of
strategic partnership, refers to“respect for and support for the
territorial integrity, inviolability of international borders,
independence, and sovereignty of each other, including all EU
Member States”.
This provides Azerbaijan with additional diplomatic assurance in
the aftermath of the Second Karabakh War, partially paving the way
to a peace treaty with Armenia, which will incorporate similar
provisions.
The memo also envisages the development of electricity
interconnections between the EU and Baku, via the Black Sea and
through the Nakhchivan exclave of Azerbaijan, this being corollary
to the main provisions.
Environmental considerations
The memo highlights the importance of adhering to Europe's
climate-change objectives. In fact, one of the obstacles, as voiced
by Mikayil Jabbarov, Economy Minister of Azerbaijan, in Davos in
late May this year, that have had negative implications for
EU-initiated investment in Azerbaijan's gas sector over the past
years, is linked with Brussels' currently-shelved policy of a
drastic switch to green energy.
Now, it seems in the face of the present crisis engendered by
the Ukrainian crisis, Brussels is back to a steady and incremental
approach. The current goal is to follow the path of plummeting gas
imports from 2030 onwards and now focus on a wide range of
environmentally-friendly measures satisfying contemporary
exigencies.
The draft memo underlines the import of making existing
infrastructure future-proof and hydrogen-ready, thereby reducing
methane emissions and pollution.
The sides also support the creation of schemes to collect
natural gas that would otherwise be vented, flared, or released
into the atmosphere. The memo also mentions that the aim should be
to incentivise fossil-based natural gas collection through price
mechanisms.
The EU Commission's proposal is subject to subsequent alteration
by the Member States, whose consent is mandatory. Although the
fundamental design and spirit of the document are unlikely to be
changed, it would no doubt benefit from some investment-related
specifications.
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- Southern Gas Corridor
- EU-Azerbaijan
- Trans Adriatic Pipeline (TAP)
- EU energy
- EU Energy Commissioner
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