Tag Archives: Turkmenistan

Turkmenistan pushes the TAPI gas pipeline forward

DEC. 12 2010 (The Conway Bulletin) —  It is still a long way off, but Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan and India took a determined step forward on Dec. 11, 2010 to turning a 15-year-old pipe dream into reality.

The four countries finally signed an accord which binds them to building a 1,700km gas pipeline from the Dauletabad gas field in southeast Turkmenistan across Afghanistan and Pakistan to Fazilka, an Indian border town. It has been talked about since 1995 but war in Afghanistan and a lack of political will delayed the project.

Now, they want the so-called TAPI pipeline operating by 2014 even though the route goes through Taliban controlled parts of Afghanistan. Estimates put the cost of the pipeline, which will have a capacity of 33b cubic metres a year, at between $3.3b and $7.5b.

For the US, the pipeline is important because it acts as an alternative to a proposed pipeline running to Pakistan and India from Iran.

TAPI has gained momentum, largely because India has pushed to increase its energy import options and because of a leadership change in Turkmenistan. Turkmenistan’s leader Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov, president since Dec. 21 2006, has been eagerly courting Western, Chinese and Iranian investors since an argument over gas prices with Russia in 2009.

Turkmenistan, which holds the world’s fourth largest gas reserves, has a growing list of clients and an expanding web of pipelines feeding these customers directly with its gas. If TAPI goes to plan, Turkmenistan is set to become an important energy supplier to South Asia.

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(News report from Issue No. 19, published on Dec. 13 2010)

Pipeline from Turkmenistan to India takes shape

DEC. 11 2010 (The Conway Bulletin) — The leaders of Turkmenistan, Afghanistan and Pakistan and the Indian energy minister struck a deal in Ashgabat to build a pipeline carrying Turkmen gas 1,700km across Taliban-held territory to India. The cost and timing of the so-called TAPI pipeline have yet to be agreed.

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(News report from Issue No. 19, published on Dec. 13 2010)

WikiLeaks uncovers US views on Turkmenistan and Azerbaijan

DEC. 6 2010 (The Conway Bulletin) — The latest from WikiLeaks revealed US diplomatic cables from Turkmenistan which described leader Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov as vain and not very bright and another from Azerbaijan which compared President Ilham Aliyev and his father to the mafia bosses in the film The Godfather.

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(News report from Issue No. 18, published on Dec. 6 2010)

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WikiLeaks publishes US embassy cables from Astana and Bishkek

NOV. 29 2010 (The Conway Bulletin) – WikiLeaks has released 291 out of a promised 251,287 US diplomatic cables.

Of those 291 documents, five originated from Astana, two from Bishkek and four from Ashgabat. Perhaps the most inflammatory revelation is the Feb. 2009 cable from the US ambassador in Bishkek who confronted the Chinese ambassador over Kyrgyz claims that China had offered them $3b to close the US airbase outside Bishkek.

The base is vital for resupplying NATO forces in Afghanistan. According to the leaked cable, the Chinese Ambassador’s denial was unconvincing.

A cable from Jan. 2010 documented a lunch between the U.S. ambassador in Astana and the vice president of Kazmunaigas, Maksat Idenov, who named the men he thought were closest to Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev.

They were Chief of the president’s staff Aslan Musin, the Chief of administration of the president’s office Sarybai Kalmurzayev, foreign minister Kanat Saudabayev, PM Karim Masimov and Mr Nazarbayev’s son-in-law Timur Kulibayev.

A cable from Kazakhstan in April 2009 written by the US ambassador on Kazakh officials said: “they’re stealing directly from the public trough”, another cable detailed the elite’s drinking habits and another cable described a fractious meeting between executives from Chevron and Kazmunaigas.

One cable also gave a detailed account of a meeting with the Chinese ambassador in Astana and his views on Central Asia, China’s energy policy in the region and his description of Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili as “not a mature statesman”.

From Ashgabat, a cable described an arms find at the border with Iran.

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(News report from Issue No. 17, published on Nov. 29 2010)

Turkmenistan completes gas pipeline to Iran

NOV. 28 2010 (The Conway Bulletin) – Turkmen leader Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad officially opened the final half of a 1,000km pipeline pumping gas from Turkmenistan to Iran. The pipeline doubles annual Turkmen gas exports to Iran to 20b cubic metres.

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(News report from Issue No. 17, published on Nov. 29 2010)

The Caspian Sea feud continues

NOV. 22 2010 (The Conway Bulletin) – Control of the Caspian Sea and its resources are worth arguing over.

It is the biggest inland body of water in the world, covering an area about the size of Germany, and dominates trade routes between Europe and Asia. The Caspian Sea also holds vast stocks of sturgeon which produce the lucrative caviar. Most tantalising, though, is the oil potential.

Its reserves are difficult to estimate but the US Energy Information Administration puts them at between 17b and 44b barrels of oil — equivalent to the oil reserves of Qatar at the bottom end of the scale and to the United States at the upper end.

The five states which border the Caspian Sea — Azerbaijan, Iran, Kazakhstan, Russia and Turkmenistan — have argued over its ownership for years. On Nov. 18 in Baku the heads of these countries met for their third summit in eight years on how to divide the Caspian Sea and its treasures between them. Once again much was promised but little agreed.

Writing for Asia Times Online, Robert Cutler, a Canada-based academic, commented: “While the framework for a relatively minor security cooperation agreement was endorsed, the summit’s real significance lay in the agreements not reached and documents not signed.”

Before 1991, ownership of the Caspian Sea was less complex as it only needed an agreement between the Soviet Union and Iran. Now, with five countries, it’s far more difficult. Add into the mix the Caspian Sea’s emergence as an energy transit route to Europe and the debates heat up.

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(News report from Issue No. 16, published on Nov. 22 2010)

Caspian Sea countries meet

NOV. 18 2010 (The Conway Bulletin) – The leaders of the five countries that border the Caspian Sea met for a summit in Baku to discuss the sea’s disputed ownership but they failed to sign any major agreements. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had arrived on Nov.17 for separate bilateral talks with Azerbaijan’s President.

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(News report from Issue No. 16, published on Nov. 22 2010)

Turkmenistan wants to supply Nabucco

NOV. 19 2010 (The Conway Bulletin) – Turkmenistan has won the support of neighbouring countries to build a gas pipeline under the Caspian Sea, said deputy PM Baymyrad Khozhamuhamedov. He also said Turkmenistan would be able to supply the EU-backed Nabucco pipeline project with gas.

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(News report from Issue No. 16, published on Nov. 22 2010)

Turkish President visits Turkmenistan

NOV. 11/12 2010 (The Conway Bulletin) – Continuing a busy diplomatic period, Turkmen President Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov hosted talks with Turkish President Abdullah Gul on future energy supplies. Turkey needs extra supplies for the EU-backed Nabucco pipeline which will carry gas from Turkey to Europe.

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(News report from Issue No. 15, published on Nov. 15 2010)

Russian Pres. Medvedev visits Turkmenistan

OCT. 21 2010 (The Conway Bulletin) — Russia’s President Dmitri Medvedev visited Ashgabat for talks with Turkmen leader Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov focused on gas contracts. Mr Medvedev said that due to low global demand, Gazprom did not need to restore its 40b cubic metres (bcm) annual order for Turkmen gas which it cut to about 11bcm after an argument over pricing in 2009.

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(News report from Issue No. 13, published on Nov. 1 2010)