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Azeri gas could save Nabucco, hurt Ukraine

Zimbabwe reforms state-owned oil company
Harare, Zimbabwe (UPI) Jan 14, 2011 - Zimbabwe will divide the state-owned National Oil Company of Zimbabwe into two companies intended to attract foreign investment. In a tacit acknowledgement of the government's mishandling of NOCZIM Energy and Power Development Minister Elton Mangoma said that the new firms would be open to both local and foreign investors, telling journalists: "In terms of partners being local or foreign it's immaterial ... all we want are investors and their money. A business venture with sound capital is far better operational wise than one with no money," the Zimbabwe Independent newspaper reported Friday. Mangoma added that no time frame had been set on the search for partners, noting that "the government is going ahead with the project at the same time seeking partners" and while "several companies have shown interest in the project," no definite bids had been submitted.

Mangoma, who is a senior member of Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change party, said the reform of NOCZIM followed the government's conclusion that it wasn't viable for NOCZIM to be both a regulator and a player. NOCZIM's reform is an element in the unity government of Tsvangirai and President Robert Mugabe to privatize and make commercially viable state companies currently losing money that need Treasury intervention to save them from collapse. The NOCZIM reform isn't the government's first attempt to privatize loss-making government businesses. In November the government sold its controlling stake in the state's Zimbabwe Iron and Steel Company to India's Essar Group in a deal believed to be worth nearly $500 million.

Mangoma added that the government was yet to decide exactly how much investment it would require from potential investors to invest into the oil trading company formed from NOCZIM, saying, "The partner for the infrastructure company will be taken in on an operational basis and they will be assisting in the stock management of the company. For the trading one we are looking for an equity partner though we are yet to come up with the actual figure of the kind of investment we require." According to Mangoma, there are up to eight other government-controlled entities that are earmarked for immediate privatization or restructuring. Under the government's privatization plan for NOCZIM, one of the new entities would solely be responsible for national fuel depots and infrastructure with its primary agenda being managing the importation of petroleum products through different modes, including the Beira pipeline running from Mozambique to Zimbabwe, while the second firm would be devoted to fuel retailing.
by Staff Writers
Baku, Azerbaijan (UPI) Jan 14, 2011
Azerbaijan has pledged to supply "substantial volumes" of natural gas to Europe, in a deal that could be a lifesaver for the EU-backed Nabucco pipeline.

The Central Asian nation is ready to deliver 10 billion cubic meters of gas per year to Europe, Euractiv.com reports.European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev signed the gas commitment, the first in writing from Azerbaijan, Thursday in Baku. Brussels in return for the gas promised to make it easier for Azeri nationals to obtain visas for the European Union.

Barroso, who had traveled to Central Asia with Energy Commissioner Guenther Oettinger, hailed the deal a "major breakthrough."

"This agreement confirms Europe's direct access to gas from the Caspian basin, thus enabling the realization of the Southern Corridor," he said in a statement. "This new supply route will enhance the energy security of European consumers and businesses."

Azerbaijan has signed gas contracts with Russia and Iran but vows that it has enough reserves to also supply one or several of the proposed pipelines opening up the so-called southern corridor, aimed at bringing Central Asian and Middle Eastern gas to Western Europe.

Backed by the United States, the EU has pushed the Nabucco pipeline to diversify its energy import structure away from Russia but the pipeline is expected to be more expensive than some of the smaller alternatives.

And Nabucco not only competes for resources with smaller projects such as the Trans-Adriatic Pipeline, the Turkey-Greece-Italy Interconnector or the Azerbaijan-Georgia-Romania Interconnector, but also with the giant Russian-led South Stream project.

South Stream would move around 60 billion cubic meters of gas per year to Europe (roughly double the amount of Nabucco), bypassing traditional transit country Ukraine. While it's intended to be fed with Russian gas, South Stream could technically also deliver gas from Azerbaijan.

Experts have questioned t whether there is supply and demand for both projects, an analysis that has resulted in what the media has termed the "pipeline war."

The latest deal lends a lifeline to Nabucco, which has been wooing potential supplier nations for years.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has in the past questioned whether Nabucco, backed by Germany's RWE and OMV from Austria, could be realized in an economically viable manner; people close to Nabucco have also said Russia that is pressuring potential Nabucco suppliers in Central Asia -- Russia's traditional sphere of influence -- into committing to South Stream.

While it's not yet sure whether Baku will commit its gas to Nabucco, the situation is looking much more optimistic than a few weeks back.

There's only one real loser in all of this: Ukraine. The traditional energy transit country has unsuccessfully tried to raise Western money for the modernization of its run-down gas grid. With Nabucco potentially getting a go-ahead, it may know have even less chances of keeping its role as a major transit hub.

Several gas price rows with Russia have decreased Europe's trust in Ukraine as a reliable transit country. The Europeans have since pushed the diversification pipelines Nord Stream and Nabucco and are investing in an LNG infrastructure.



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