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Colin Chilcoat

Colin Chilcoat

Colin Chilcoat is a specialist in Eurasian energy affairs and political institutions currently living and working in Chicago. A complete collection of his work can…

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Russia’s Move In Syria Threatens Energy Deals With Turkey

Russia’s Move In Syria Threatens Energy Deals With Turkey

Not that Russia was ever a slouch, but there’s no denying the recent uptick in activity. As we approach the juicy middle of President Vladimir Putin’s third term, Russia is extending, and fighting for, its interests in nearly every corner of the globe. Somewhat lost amid the bombing in Syria – though hardly unaffected – is Russia’s Turkish gambit.

Putin has long valued Turkey as a territorial and ideological play against NATO and the EU. The strategic partnership has taken time to develop, but 2014 was a particularly notable year for the Eurasian nations. Cross border trade exceeded $31 billion – good for sixth among Russia’s major trading partners – and U.S. and EU sanctions have expanded the horizons for further trade between the two nations.

Natural gas in particular forms the backbone of this growing trade relationship. In 2014, Gazprom delivered 27.3 billion cubic meters (bcm) of gas to Turkey via its Blue Stream and Trans-Balkan pipelines. Gas exports from Russia are up some 34 percent since 2010, and Turkey – now Russia’s second largest market after Germany – is only getting hungrier. By 2030, gas demand in Turkey is expected to expand 30 percent, reaching 70 bcm per year. Related: Energy Storage Just Got A Massive Vote Of Confidence

With European demand projected to grow by just over 1 bcm per year in the same period, Russia’s South Stream pipeline proposal was as misguided as it was non-compliant with the EU’s Third Energy Package. Routed through Turkey however, Russia’s newest pipeline, TurkStream, promised to add greater utility. Turkey gets its gas and partly fulfills its transit aspirations; Russia bypasses Ukraine while opening windows to Europe and the Middle East; and Europe, if it wants it, will have gas on demand.

It sounds good – okay, at least – but as so often happens in Russia, the tale has taken a turn for the worse. TurkStream has stumbled out of the gates and larger happenings in Syria look to significantly damage Russia-Turkey relations.

Originally intended as a four-pipe 63-bcm project, TurkStream will now top out at 32 bcm, if it gets off the ground at all. As it stands, the parties have agreed to draft the text of an intergovernmental agreement, with a targeted signing date of early next year, following Turkey’s general election. And that’s it. Related: How Russia Is Deploying Its Military In Syria

The primary sticking point remains the price. Gazprom conceded a 10.25 percent gas discount in February, but Turkey would like to see that figure reach 15 percent by the time TurkStream makes its first deliveries. Moreover, Ankara is wary of handcuffing its energy future to Russia; Gazprom delivered roughly 57 percent of Turkey’s gas imports in 2014.

Should TurkStream fail to get off the ground, Turkey will not be short on options. Its regasification facilities can handle greater LNG imports and domestic fixes could increase the efficiency of current piped imports. Long-term, the country is well positioned to receive gas from Israel and Turkmenistan. That being said, the country’s current, and future, imports through Azerbaijan, Iran, and Iraq are far less sound from a security perspective.

A failed TurkStream doesn’t particularly threaten Europe’s energy security either. Nord Stream-2, another Gazprom project, which has the backing of Shell and Wintershall among others, looks to provide an additional 55 bcm of capacity beneath the Baltic Sea. Related: Oil Fundamentals Improve But Inventories Will Keep Prices Low

The current commercial stalemate is also affecting existing infrastructure. Gazprom’s Blue Stream pipeline will do well to boost throughput by 1 bcm, after originally targeting a 3-bcm expansion. Russia’s breakthrough nuclear work in the country is also experiencing delays.

To be sure, energy is hardly Turkey’s primary concern at the moment. Russia’s bombing campaign in Syria has stoked fires in a region that was already burning. Russia’s air offensive – viewed principally as a veiled attempt to support Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad – was never going to win over Turkey, who supports the uprising, but extracurricular activities in Turkish airspace have brought the once promising relationship to a standstill.

Commercially – and barring any direct conflict, which remains unlikely – the Turkish gambit may still bear fruit, but politically, Putin failed to bring Turkey into his fold, an opportunity that now appears lost.

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By Colin Chilcoat of Oilprice.com

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Leave a comment
  • Alex on October 12 2015 said:
    "Russia is extending, and fighting for, its interests in nearly every corner of the globe".
    Are you really serious about it?! I am sure it is United States is fighting in every corner
    of the globe. U.S. has A LOT of military bases in the World, Russia- does not!
    It is U.S. who destroyed Iraq and Libya totally and destabilized the situation in ME.
    Europeans are witnessing the results of such vise politics at they homes now. It was not Russia!... So I'd advise to the author to mind the role of U.S. in global politics!
  • Kremlin BS Buster on October 13 2015 said:
    Don't mind "Alex" above. Just another Kremlinbot doing the dirty work of the former KGB thug in running the Kremlin with the height issues.
  • Amvet on October 16 2015 said:
    Since Turkey has been a key cog in the NATO transportation of, the arming of, and the financing of terrorists trying to overthrow the government in Syria, I doubt that Russia expected any cooperation from Turkey.
    Foreign fighters were brought by NATO planes from Libya to Turkey for fighting in Syria from the beginning of this falsely labeled "civil war" which is just another US regime change war that is destroying Syria and flooding Europe with refugees.

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