Tag Archives: gas

Georgia charges transit fee

APRIL 8 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – After months of negotiations, Georgia and Russia’s Gazprom retained a deal that will give Georgia 10% of Gazprom’s gas throughput to Armenia. The deal was heralded by the Georgian side as a victory. They said that Gazprom had wanted Georgia to charge it a transit fee for hosting a pipeline to Armenia and then pay for its own gas.

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(News report from Issue No. 276, published on April 15 2016)

 

Armenia receives gas discount

APRIL 8 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – A week after agreeing to a price cut for its gas exports to Kyrgyzstan, Russian state-owned Gazprom said it would give Armenia a similar discount for this year’s supplies.

Gazprom’s CEO Alexei Miller and Anatoly Yanovsky, Armenia’s deputy energy minister, signed the agreement after Russian PM Dmitri Medvedev visited Yerevan and discussed the price cut with President Serzh Sargsyan.

Gazprom agreed to give a 9% discount for the gas it pumps to Armenia, the same percentage discount as Kyrgyzstan, lowering the price to $150 per 1,000 cubic metres.

The long-awaited discount, importantly, fell short of Armenian officials’ expectations, having seen Gazprom’s prices to Europe fall by an average of 40% in the past 18 months.

“Any decline in prices is positive, but in this case, a $15 drop cannot be considered a serious help to reducing the prime cost of Armenian goods,” Artsvik Minasyan, minister of economy, said.

Armenian officials had said they hoped to get a 12% discount.

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(News report from Issue No. 276, published on April 15 2016)

 

Azerbaijan- Armenia fighting over N-K threatens Europe’s plans

APRIL 2 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – For Europe, the fierce fighting this week between Azerbaijani forces and Armenian-backed forces was a reminder that their plan to bring the South Caucasus firmly into its economic sphere is a risky one.

Eight years ago Russia and Georgia fought over the rebel region of South Ossetia. Now Azerbaijan and Armenia are close to all-out war over another sliver of land.

Wedged between these two scruffy, mountainous regions is the trade corridor that Europe relies on to transport goods to and from the Caspian Sea and Asia.

Theodoras Tsakiris, assistant professor for energy, geopolitics, and economics at the University of Nicosia in Cyprus told RFE/RL that two major pipelines pumping oil gas to Europe which lie just north of the conflict zone could be effected.

“A potential conflagration over Nagorno Karabakh is quite likely to affect both of these pipelines,” he said. “They are of critical significance primarily for Azerbaijan, then Turkey and, to a lesser extent, Europe and the global economy.”

European officials have avoided mentioning trade and gas exports from the South Caucasus in their comments on the fighting and have instead focused on calling for a full ceasefire but bureaucrats across Europe’s capitals will be troubled by the conflict.

Central to their plan is to build a network of pipelines stretching from the Caspian Sea across Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey into Europe. Gas from this route, dubbed the Southern Gas Corridor, would start to compete with Russian supplies.

Sections of the pipeline, after all, run only 40km north of the frontlines in Nagorno-Karabakh.

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(News report from Issue No. 275, published on April 8 2016)

 

Four members, including Turkmenistan agree on TAPI investment

APRIL 7 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – State-owned Turkmengaz, Interstate Gas Systems of Pakistan, Afghan Gas Enterprise and India’s GAIL agreed to invest $200m in engineering studies for the TAPI gas pipeline project. The four members of the consortium forecast that TAPI will cost around $10b. Construction works started last December. Once built, TAPI will pump gas from Turkmenistan’s Galkynysh gas field to India.

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(News report from Issue No. 275, published on  April 8 2016)

Mitsubishi sends turbines to Turkmen power plant

APRIL 1 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Mitsubishi Hitachi Power Systems (MHPS) will supply gas turbines and generators to the 400MW Zerger gas-fired power plant in Turkmenistan. Under a $300m contract signed last year, Japan’s Sumitomo is building the plant in the Lebap region of Turkmenistan, 600km north-east of Ashgabat.

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(News report from Issue No. 275, published on  April 8 2016)

Gazprom cuts gas price for Kyrgyztan

APRIL 1 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Russian gas company Gazprom cut the price of gas it sells to Kyrgyzstan by 9% to $150 per 1,000 cubic metres. Kyrgyz President Almazbek Atambayev had been lobbying for this for some time, saying that a fall in global prices should mean a price reduction for consumers in Krygyzstan. Gazprom bought the Kyrgyz gas distributor in 2014 for a symbolic $1, promising to clear its debt and invest in infrastructure.

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(News report from Issue No. 275, published on April 8 2016)

 

Kazakhstan’s KMG EP ditches dividend payout for the first time

ALMATY, MARCH 31 2016, (The Conway Bulletin) — KMG EP, a subsidiary of Kazakhstan’s state-owned Kazmunaigas, said it will not pay dividends this year for the first time in a decade, reflecting the impact of low oil prices on the company.

KMG EP had paid dividends each year since its IPO on the London Stock Exchange in 2006.

“The board of directors has recommended not to pay dividends on ordinary shares,” the company said in a statement.

“The decision not to pay dividends is caused by a sharp decline in oil prices since the end of 2014, as a result of which the company’s cash flow and operating profit turned negative.”

The board decided to override an earlier recommendation from the company’s independent directors to pay out dividends this year.

KMG EP’s revenues collapsed by 37% in 2015. Oil prices have fallen from around $120/barrel in June 2014 to around $40/barrel now. Earlier this year oil cost less than $30/barrel.

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(News report from Issue No. 274, published on  April 1 2016)

 

Petronas to start drilling in Turkmen Caspian Sea

MARCH 31 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Petronas Carigali, a subsidiary of Malaysia’s largest energy company, said it is ready to start drilling at the Garagol Deniz West field in the Turkmen section of the Caspian Sea. The company is also about to complete a pipeline connection from the field to the onshore processing facility. Petronas is an active player in Turkmenistan’s gas sector.

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(News report from Issue No. 274, published on  April 1 2016)

 

BPC Engineering and Kazakh gov. make turbine deal

MARCH 29 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – BPC Engineering, the Russian distributor of California-based Capstone Turbine, said it reached an agreement with the Kazakh government to supply seven micro-turbines for the Beineu-Shymkent gas pipeline. Around 50 micro-turbines are needed in the pipeline, part of a $3.5b project to pump gas from west to south Kazakhstan.

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(News report from Issue No. 274, published on  April 1 2016)

 

Business comment: SOCAR & The EU

APRIL 1 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – SOCAR said it hopes to solve the DESFA affair by the end of the year, but should Fluxys’ shareholders officially decide to back out of an earlier plan to buy part of the Greek company, Azerbaijan’s state-owned company will find it hard to comply with EU regulations.

The so-called Third Energy Package is a set of regulations the EU adopted in 2009 with the objective of liberalising its energy market, chiefly by separating the ownership of upstream, midstream and downstream operations, a process known as “unbundling” in Brussels.

According to these rules, SOCAR cannot buy, as it wished, a majority stake in DESFA, the Greek gas distributor.

That would effectively mean that the gas supplier would own the distributor as well.

SOCAR also owns a majority stake in TANAP, a pipeline running across Turkey. SOCAR is allowed to keep its 58% share in TANAP because it lies outside EU jurisdiction.

But when in 2013 it agreed a deal to buy 66% of the debt-ridden Greek company for €400m ($454m), the European Commission stepped in and froze the purchase. It said that SOCAR could own 49% of DESF but no more.

For a year now, SOCAR has tried to find buyers for part of the 66% stake it agreed to buy. If Fluxys flakes, Italian Snam Rete Gas and Dutch Gasunie could be next in line.

Even though SOCAR has become a good friend of the EU for its key role in the completion of the Southern Gas Corridor project, seen by Europe as a viable alternative to gas from Russia, it apparently cannot escape the severe hand of the EU’s army of regulators.

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(News report from Issue No. 274, published on  April 1 2016)