Strategic Trust-Building

Daily Ukraine Crisis Updates – May 2, 2014

EWI offers a daily situation report on Ukraine.

Internal Security News:

  • An “anti-terror” operation was launched to clear the city of Sloviansk of pro-Russian militants. During this operation, militants shot down two of Ukraine's army helicopters; the Ukrainian government said that a pilot and serviceman had been killed, four suspected separatists held and 10 rebel checkpoints seized. Four insurgents in Sloviansk were later detained by Ukrainian law enforcement under suspicion of involvement in the helicopter shooting. 
     
  • The Ukrainian Interior Ministry announced that the National Guard had “practically cleared Sloviansk of the terrorists” following the military operation in the city. A source within the pro-Russian militant groups claimed that the Ukrainian military controlled only a few streets in the suburbs of Sloviansk, and that the “self-defense” fighters continued to remain in control of the majority of the city. 
     
  • (RIA Novosti) a representative of the self-proclaimed "people's mayor" of Sloviansk said that negotiations on the exchange of captive OSCE observers for arrested militia leaders were held but were halted due to the military operation in Sloviansk. 
     
  • A 1,000-person rally for Ukrainian unity in Odessa was attacked by pro-Russian activists. Shots were fired, and some noise grenades were used in the clash. Police were seen interfering in the clash.
     
  • The Interior Ministry said that pro-Russian separatists left the prosecutor's office and television center in Luhansk.
     
  • (Interfax Ukraine) Ukrainian President Turchynov signed a decree reinstituting military conscription for male citizens aged 18-25. The decree cites “undisguised aggression” of pro-Russian armed groups and the “exacerbation” of the sociopolitical situation in southeastern Ukraine as impetus and stipulates that the draft campaign will be conducted in May-July 2014.
     
  • Ukrainian PM Yatsenyuk said that his country was entering its "most dangerous 10 days" since independence in 1991 and was struggling to counter pro-Russian separatists on the verge of taking over the industrialized eastern heartland.
     

Diplomacy:

  • (RIA Novosti) A Kremlin spokesman called the Ukrainian military’s operation to clear Sloviansk “a punitive operation that destroyed the last hope for Geneva Accords to be effective.”
     
  • The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry rejected the Russian side's accusations that Ukraine is not fulfilling the Geneva agreements.
     
  • (RIA Novosti) A statement from the Central Committee of the Communist Party in Russia said that the Ukrainian military’s operation in Sloviansk was, “fully sanctioned by the U.S. and its NATO allies.” The statement also asserted that, “all this poses a threat to Russia's security."
     
  • Russia's Foreign Ministry called on Western powers to give up their "destructive" policy on Ukraine and urged Kyiv to stop its "punitive operation" in the south-east of the country. "This will allow a real process of de-escalation to begin," the ministry said in a statement.
     
  • (ITAR-TASS) Ukraine banned Russian passenger airline flights to Donetsk or Kharkiv. 
     
  • A spokeswoman for EU Foreign Policy Chief Catherine Ashton told reporters that, “We are following with growing concern the events in eastern Ukraine.”
     
  • (ITAR-TASS) The European Commissioner for Energy said that the EU believes the price of Russia’s gas should be the same for all member countries and noted the need to create a pan-European gas and electricity distribution networks. "We want a single price for (Russian) gas on the common European market.”
     
  • (RIA Novosti) Russian, Ukraine and the EU failed to agree on gas supply issues at a meeting in Warsaw. Further tripartite meetings were expected to take place in subsequent weeks.
     

Governance: 

  • The leader of the Third Ukrainian Republic movement, former Ukrainian Interior Minister Yuriy Lutsenko, said that there are legal grounds to ban the Regions Party and the Communist Party.

Daily Ukraine Crisis Updates – April 30, 2014

EWI offers a daily situation report on Ukraine.

Internal Security News:

  • Unrest continued in eastern Ukraine. Pro-Russian militants seized the Alchevsk city council building in Luhansk. Militants also took over the government tax collection office and eastern customs office in Donetsk and kidnapped a Donetsk Electoral Commission member. In Horlivka, armed pro-Russian men stormed a city council building.
  • (Interfax Ukraine) Ukrainian armed forces were placed on combat alert due to the threat of Russian hostilities said Oleksandr Turchynov, Ukraine’s acting president.
  • In a meeting with regional governors, acting Ukrainian President Oleksandr Turchynov said that the country is "helpless" to quell pro-Russian separatist movements in the east.

Constitutional Reform News:

International Observation News:

  • (ITAR-TASS) A German Foreign Ministry spokesman stated that negotiations with those holding OSCE members hostage in Sloviansk are difficult as “there is still no direct contact.”
  • (Interfax Ukraine) Austria’s Foreign Minister said that Austria hopes the OSCE hostages will be released “without any additional conditions.”

Diplomacy News:

  • (ITAR-TASS) German Chancellor Merkel stated that further sanctions against Russia could be imposed if the situation with Ukraine does not de-escalate.
     
  • European Council President Herman Van Rompuy stated that the Ukrainian government has taken a number of steps to fulfill its obligations as part of the Geneva accords.
  • (RIA Novosti) Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Deshchytsia stated that he hopes to hold talks with his Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, on the release of OSCE military observers detained in eastern Ukraine.

Governance News:

  • (ITAR-TASS) The Party of Regions called for the removal of Interior Minister Arsen Avakov from an investigation into the attempted assassination of Kharkiv’s mayor, citing known hostility between the two.

 

 

Daily Ukraine Crisis Updates – April 29, 2014

EWI offers a daily situation report on Ukraine.

Internal Security News

  • The self-declared mayor of a separatist-held town in eastern Ukraine said he would discuss the release of detained military observers with the West only if the EU dropped sanctions against rebel leaders.
  • (Interfax Ukraine) Police freed participants in a Donetsk rally for Ukraine's unity who were detained by pro-Russian activists.
  • Ukraine's deputy foreign minister, Danylo Lubkivsky, said that Ukraine and the OSCE have jointly devised a plan to liberate OSCE military inspectors from captivity in Sloviansk.
  • The mayor of Kharkiv, who was targeted in an assassination attempt on April 28, was flown to an Israeli hospital where he remained in critical but stable condition.

Constitutional Reform News

  • (Interfax Ukraine) Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatseniuk urged MPs to prepare and agree on a bill of constitutional amendments by May 25.
     
  • (ITAR-TASS) Ukrainian Prime Minister Yatsenyuk said that constitutional reform should be aimed at power decentralization and transferring authority to the local level.
     
  • An all-Ukrainian referendum could be held during the second round of presidential elections when there is the “necessary legal framework for its holding,” according to acting Batkivschyna faction leader Serhiy Sobolev.

International Observation News

Diplomacy News

  • (RIA Novosti) Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said that Moscow has drafted its response to Western sanctions imposed this week, with a range of measures expected to be introduced soon.
  • Ryabkov also stated that Russia was "not at all inclined to repeat the so-called Crimea scenario in southeastern Ukraine".
  • Moscow voiced concern over an "unprecedented" increase in U.S. and NATO military activity near Russian borders.
  • Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said that the U.S. had "essentially lowered an 'Iron Curtain'" by targeting Russia's high-tech sector.
  • U.S. credit card firm Visa said it would suspend network services to two Russian banks sanctioned by the United States.
  • (Interfax Ukraine) EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton expressed concern over the deteriorating security situation in southeastern Ukraine, and the "downward spiral of violence and intimidation" undermining the functioning of the legitimate state institutions.

Governance News

  • (RIA Novosti) Pro-Russian presidential candidate Oleg Tsarev withdrew from the race ahead of the May 25 referendum.

Daily Ukraine Crisis Updates – April 28, 2014

EWI offers a daily situation report on Ukraine.

Internal Security News:

  • (Interfax Ukraine) Ukraine’s Security Services (SBU) announced that pro-Russian militants were holding approximately 40 people hostage in Sloviansk, including seven OSCE inspectors who were abducted on April 25 and an unknown number of Ukrainian SBU officers. The OSCE hostages were featured in a press conference organized by the militants. An eighth OSCE inspector was released on medical grounds.
  • (RIA Novosti) The self-proclaimed mayor of Sloviansk proposed an exchange of captured pro-Russian militants for the abducted OSCE inspectors. 
  • The pro-Russian mayor of Ukraine's second-biggest city, Kharkiv, was in serious condition after he was shot in the back. Acting Ukrainian President Turchynov ordered an investigation into the alleged assassination attempt.
  • (RIA Novsoti) A Ukrainian SBU member and an Interior Ministry official were injured during a shootout near a Kramatorsk airfield.  
  • (RIA Novosti) Pro-Russian activists in Konstantinovka (southeastern Ukraine) declared a rally inside a seized government building, stating that they would continue until there is a referendum on the region’s status.

International Observation News:

  • (RIA Novosti) The OSCE announced that it will hold an emergency meeting on April 28 to discuss the southeastern Ukraine situation after protesters detained several OSCE observers. Russia indicated that it would participate in the talks.

Diplomacy News:

  • The U.S. announced a new round of sanctions on Russia that includes two members of Russian President Vladimir Putin's "inner circle," and measures that prevent Moscow from obtaining military technology.
     
  • The EU is expected to announce new sanctions targeting individuals and companies close to Russian President Putin, according to U.S. President Obama.
  • (ITAR-TASS) Ukraine halted canal water supply to Crimea, shutting off 85% of the region’s fresh water.
  • (ITAR-TASS) Vitaly Churkin, Russia’s ambassador to the UN, said that Russia “may remember its permission to use its army” if events turn bad in southeastern Ukraine.
  • China's foreign ministry restated its opposition to placing sanctions on Russia in response to the Ukraine crisis.
  • (ITAR-TASS) Foreign ministers of Russia and Germany discussed the detention of OSCE observers in Ukraine by phone.

Governance News:  

  • (Interfax Ukraine) The European Commission reported that signing a memorandum on reverse gas supplies through Slovakia will enhance Ukraine's energy security and help the country gain access to a variety of supply sources.
  • (Interfax Ukraine) Ukrainian PM Yastenyuk stated that Ukraine and its national oil and gas company, Naftogaz Ukrainy, have confirmed their readiness to immediately pay gas debts totaling $2.2 billion. They will make on-time payments for subsequent deliveries if Gazprom agrees to maintain the price of natural gas at the Q1 level: $268.5 per 1,000 cubic meters.

 

Daily Ukraine Crisis Updates – April 25, 2014

EWI offers a daily situation report on Ukraine.

Internal Security News:

  • Ukrainian Interior Minister Arsen Avakov stated that the military would continue operations, despite Russian military drills near the eastern border. The interim government also warned that any Russian troop crossings would be seen as an invasion.
  • Serhiy Pashinskiy, aide to acting Ukrainian President Oleksandr Turchynov, said that the anti-militant operation had now entered its "second stage," aimed at encircling Sloviansk and cutting off additional supplies or support.
  • An explosion at an Odessa checkpoint injured seven people and is being investigated as a “terrorist attack”.
  • (RIA Novosti) Dozens of Russian special service agents have been detained in Ukraine, according to Sergei Pashinsky, acting head of the Ukrainian presidential administration.
  • Ukrainian National Security and Defense Council Secretary Andriy Parubiy did not rule out the possibility of Russian troops invading Ukraine.

International Observation News:

  • (Interfax Ukraine) The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry said that it had lost contact with members of an OSCE military verification mission in Donetsk. “According to preliminary reports, they could be captured by terrorists,” said the ministry's information policy department.
     
  • (Interfax Ukraine) An International Criminal Court prosecutor started a preliminary inquiry into crimes committed before and during Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych was removed from office.

Diplomacy News:

  • According to a White House statement, the U.S. is prepared to enact new sanctions against Russia. President Obama said that he will speak with key European leaders to ensure they share “his assessment in terms of what has happened since the Geneva talks.”
  • Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov accused the West of wanting to "seize" Ukraine, amid escalating rhetoric between Russia and the U.S. RIA Novosti reported that Lavrov stated: “We won’t force anyone; we won’t blackmail anyone with threats that if you don’t vote like we want you to, we’ll cut your aid. That’s how the Americans do it when they collect votes from around the world.”
     
  • Standard & Poor’s downgraded Russia’s foreign currency rating from BBB to BBB- with ‘negative’ outlook. Russian Minister of Economic Development Alexei Ulyukaev said the move was expected and partly politically motivated.
  • (ITAR-TASS) The Russian State Duma appointed parliamentary elections in Crimea on September 14, 2014.

Governance News:  

  • U.S. President Obama said that Kiev authorities are doing their part to uphold the deal reached in Geneva. “What we see from the conclusions of the Geneva agreement is that the Ukrainian authorities are implementing its provisions.”
  • The Regions Party will not nominate a candidate for Kyiv mayor, said the Regions Party head of city branch, Nestor Shufrych.

 

Why the Ukraine Crisis is a Political Earthquake and not an Energy Quake

EWI’s Danila Bochkarev busts some prevailing myths.

There is a common feeling that the ongoing Ukraine political crisis could negatively impact European energy supplies, and therefore worsen the post-2008 European economic malaise.

This is somehow a false perception based on misinterpretations of recent trends in European energy markets, and is leading to miscalculations of existing and potential risks. Ukraine certainly plays a central role in transiting Russian natural gas to Europe. In 2013, 86.1 billion cubic meters (bcm) or 52 percent of Russian gas sold to Europe and Turkey went through Ukraine’s territory. Kiev is also an important client of Gazprom, purchasing significant volumes of Russian gas. In 2013, the country has bought 27.7 billion cubic meters (bcm) of gas. The issue of gas pricing and debt to Russia’s Gazprom has complicated bilateral energy relations between the two countries. This friction began years before the current political crisis. In 2009, there was a two-week long interruption of Russian gas supplies, preceded by another supply crisis in 2006. Tensions amidst the current political crisis and the inability of Ukraine’s national gas company Naftogaz to pay its bill could indeed potentially lead to a temporary full-scale interruption of gas supplies. But this is unlikely due to the complexity of economic links between Russia and Ukraine.

The likelihood of a European gas crisis from supply cuts is also low, and if it were to happen, it would be short-lived. Any cuts would not significantly impact Europe’s security of supply and economic growth. There are two myths to dispel regarding Europe’s economic vulnerability.

Myth 1: Europe is critically dependent on Russian gas.

ExxonMobil’s Outlook for Energy 2014 estimates that Europe’s gas imports from outside of the European Economic Area (EU plus Norway) will rise to 60 percent of Europe’s entire gas consumption. European countries will need to look for new pipeline and liquefied natural gas (LNG) supplies elsewhere in the world to satisfy its energy hunger.

LNG alone might be too expensive to cover the supply gap and the EU Member States will have to look for additional pipeline imports from the Caspian and Russia. On one hand, one might think that this trend will increase dependence on Gazprom’s supplies. Indeed, last year Gazprom managed to improve its position by cutting prices. The company set a new record by selling 162.7 bcm of gas to Europe and Turkey, thus raising its market share to 30 percent. This represented a 16 percent year-on-year increase in Gazprom’s sales outside the FSU. 

On the other hand, European buyers preferred Gazprom’s gas to non-Russian suppliers for price reasons only, not due to a lack of alternative supplies. Many buyers benefited from the price reduction and increased the share of Gazprom’s gas in their supply portfolios. The Gazprom price was 20-30 percent lower than the average LNG import price. LNG capacity built to contribute to EU’s energy security and to reduce dependence on Russian gas therefore stayed idle. Its utilization was also very low—well below 30 percent. In 2013, Europe had the lowest level of LNG imports since 2004—European countries imported only 46.5 bcm of liquefied gas, well below the record set in 2011 - 88 bcm of LNG imports. These dynamics prove the relativity of Europe’s dependence on Russian gas.

Myth 2: Ukraine transit is vital for Europe’s security of natural gas supplies.

While a significant portion of Russian gas supplies to Europe are still transported via Ukraine’s pipeline system, the importance of this transit route has significantly decreased in the past decade. This trend is likely to continue in the years to come as alternative pipelines have come on stream. 

The share of Russian gas supplies to Europe transiting via Ukraine already decreased from 95 percent in 2008 to 52 percent in 2013, mostly due to the construction of new direct pipelines such as the Blue Stream to Turkey, Nord Stream to Germany and Yamal–Europe to Poland and Germany. One of the routes, Nord Stream, is still half empty, mostly due to unresolved regulatory issues between Brussels and Moscow. The full utilization of direct pipelines might further reduce the share of Russian gas transiting via Ukraine to 35 percent of Gazprom’s sales in Europe and Turkey.

Furthermore, the construction of interconnectors in the European Union allowed connecting “energy islands,” such as the Czech Republic, which exclusively depended on Russian gas, to the alternative gas supplies. This process is one of the key priorities of EU’s energy policy, and is expected to be completed within the next three-to-five years, so buyers will have the ability to choose from a large variety of supplies. New interconnectors will also allow customers to access Gazprom’s gas from alternative pipelines, avoiding Ukraine’s territory.

Last but not least: European energy companies also have enough gas in underground storage to survive a total interruption of supplies via Ukraine’s territory for at least a month.

There is also a commonly held belief that energy supply issues will worsen Russia-Ukraine relations. In fact, economic interdependence is more likely to contribute to conflict reduction.

Myth 3: Russia-Ukraine economic relations will be hostage to political turmoil.

Economics might indeed become hostage to political tensions. However, while political links between Moscow and Kiev are virtually nonexistent, business contacts continue even though they are not always smooth. Nagtogaz’s CEO Andrey Kobolev is in regular contact with Gazprom’s CEO Alexei Miller. Both managers recently met in Moscow. 

Despite the non-payment issue, Ukraine keeps receiving Russian gas. For numerous reasons, including internal non-payment issues and a (relatively) high price level set by Gazprom, Naftogaz accumulated substantial debt to Gazprom. The price discount agreed in December 2013—$268.5 per 1000 cubic meters or roughly 70 percent of EU average price—was conditioned, on timely payments of Ukraine’s gas bills. The lack of progress in repayment of Ukraine’s debt (currently $2.2 billion) gave Gazprom a formal pretext to cancel the discount beginning April 1, 2014. Nagtogaz is struggling to pay its bills at the discounted price and is currently unable to pay Gazprom. 

This has not lead to a cut in gas. As requested by the Ukrainians, from April 1 through April 12, Naftogaz received 0.81 bcm of Gazprom’s gas. This shows that even serious tactical disagreements between the two companies did not impact the economic relationship. Indeed, long-term commercial interests are more important than temporary disagreements. 

Economic interdependence has the potential to help Russia and Ukraine overcome political disagreements. Ongoing industrial cooperation in aeronautics, machinery and civil nuclear areas are key examples. “Fixing” the economy, urgently necessary for both Russia and Ukraine, will help to “fix” politics and promote more stable and prosperous societies. 

_

Read an abridged version of the article on The Moscow Times

Read an abridged version of the article on Natural Gas Europe

Read an abridged version of the article on EurActiv

 

Photo credit: World Bank Photo Collection/Flickr 

Daily Ukraine Crisis Updates – April 24, 2014

EWI offers a daily situation report on Ukraine.

Internal Security News:

  • Anti-separatist military actions in Sloviansk were ‘temporarily’ halted in response to reported Russian troop increases along Ukraine’s eastern border. Ukrainian intelligence indicated that the risk of Russian troops crossing the border had increased dramatically. Moscow indicated that it would begin military drills in response to escalations in eastern Ukraine.
  • Ukrainian forces repelled an overnight attack on an Artemivsk military base.
  • Ukrainian forces recaptured the city council building in Mariupol, which had been held by pro-Russian militants since April 13.
  • (Interfax Ukraine) Fighting in Sloviansk between government troops and pro-Russian militants resulted in the deaths of five separatists and prompted a warning from Russian President Putin.
  • The leadership of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic announced a general mobilization of separatist forces and said that "a combined arms operation has been launched in Sloviansk. This means only one thing: a civil war."
  • The Ukrainian Interior Ministry claimed that the self-proclaimed mayor of Sloviansk threatened to shoot civilians if they cooperate with Ukrainian law enforcement authorities, who are distributing flyers warning people to remain peaceful.
  • Ukraine’s Security Service released a YouTube video that it says implicates high-ranking Russian Military Intelligence officers in the April 17 abduction and subsequent killing of Horlivka City Councilman Volodymyr Rybak.

International Observation News:

  • (Interfax Ukraine) In a statement, the head of the OSCE Special Monitoring Mission in Ukraine said that escalation of violence in Donetsk violates the April 17 Geneva agreements.
  • The OSCE monitoring mission in Ukraine will increase to 500 people by summer, Russia's Permanent Representative to the OSCE Andrei Kelin said.
     

Diplomacy News:

  • (ITAR-TASS) Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu announced that the military is undertaking drills near Ukraine’s border, in response to Ukrainian operations against pro-Russian separatists, and NATO exercises in Eastern Europe. The Kyiv Post reported that citizen journalists in Novoshakhtinsk (Russia) had captured video of Russian forces mobilizing 10 kilometers from the Ukrainian border.
  • (ITAR-TASS) Referring to Kiev’s military actions against protesters in Sloviansk, Russian President Putin said: “If the regime has begun using the army against the population inside the country, then this is undoubtedly a very serious crime.” Putin referred to the Ukrainian government as “a junta, some kind of clique,” and stated that the move will have “consequences.”
  • U.S. President Obama announced that implementation of a new round of sanctions against Russia may be only a matter of days, “not weeks,” away, and noted that such measures were already “teed up.” He accused Russia of failing to abide by the “spirit or letter” of the Geneva accord.
  • (Interfax Ukraine) The EU, via diplomacy chief Catherine Ashton’s spokesman, reiterated that it trusts Ukrainian leadership in protecting the country's sovereignty, and called on all parties to implement the Geneva agreements.
  • The first contingent of U.S. troops landed in Poland for military exercises amid tensions with Russia over Ukraine.
  • (ITAR-TASS) Sweden announced that it will increase its defense spending over the next 10 years in response to the situation in Ukraine.

Governance News:

  • (ITAR-TASS) The head of Ukraine’s Central Election Commission stated that despite tensions in the east, the country will still hold presidential elections on May 25.
  • (Interfax Ukraine) The quadrilateral gas talks involving representatives of the EU, Ukraine, Russia, and Slovakia, scheduled for 24 April in Bratislava, will not be held, according to Energy and Coal Industry Minister Yuriy Prodan.

Daily Ukraine Crisis Updates – April 23, 2014

EWI offers a daily situation report on Ukraine.

Internal Security News: 

  • (RIA Novosti) Ukrainian armed forces restarted active antiterrorist operations in eastern Ukraine, ending a truce implemented over Easter weekend.
     
  • American journalist Simon Ostrovsky was abducted by pro-Russian militants in Sloviansk. A Sloviansk city councilman was also abducted. The tally of individuals kidnapped by pro-Russian militants in eastern Ukraine grew to 13.
  • The body of pro-Ukrainian Horlivka city councilman Volodymyr Rybak was identified after it was found in a river, bearing signs of torture.  A second body remained unidentified. Rybak was abducted by pro-Russian militants on April 17. Ukraine’s Security Services blamed Russian military intelligence officers.
  • Ukrainian military prosecutors opened a criminal case on terrorism charges after an aircraft came under fire in Donetsk.

International Observation News:

  • OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media Dunja Mijatovic expressed deep concern about new cases of detention and journalist attacks in eastern Ukraine, and in particular, the abduction of Simon Ostrovsky.
     
  • (ITAR-TASS) Russia's permanent representative to the UN Vitaly Churkin said a UN peacekeeping mission in Ukraine is “completely unrealistic” because of Ukraine’s size. He asserted that OSCE observation is sufficient.

Diplomacy:

  • The U.S. announced that it will send hundreds of troops for military exercises in four Eastern European countries, in order to assure them of its commitment to regional defense amid ongoing tensions in Ukraine.
     
  • (ITAR-TASS) The Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs called for the withdrawal of Ukrainian army units in the southeast.
     
  • (RIA Novosti) U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry called Russian FM Sergei Lavrov and “urged Russia to tone down escalatory rhetoric, engage diplomatically in the east with the OSCE and Ukrainian government, and issue public statements calling for those occupying buildings to disarm and stand down in exchange for amnesty.” Kerry warned that further sanctions would be implemented against Russia if tensions do not de-escalate in eastern Ukraine.
     
  • Russian FM Sergei Lavrov stated that U.S. authorities have a direct impact on the actions of Kiev authorities. Lavrov also stated that Russia would retaliate if its citizens' interests were threatened and its territory came under attack.
  • "We call on all parties to the joint Geneva statement on Ukraine to ensure its terms are fully implemented, and in particular on Russia to use its leverage to ensure an immediate end to kidnappings and killings in eastern Ukraine," Michael Mann, a spokesman for EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said.

Governance News:  

  • (Interfax Ukraine) Quadrilateral gas talks involving representatives of the EU, Ukraine, Russia and Slovakia could be held as soon as Thursday, April 24, Ukrainian Energy and Coal Industry Minister Yuriy Prodan said.
  • (Interfax Ukraine) Ukrainian authorities are doing their best to restore the economy and stabilize government, despite Russian aggression, said Acting Ukrainian President Turchynov.

 

Bochkarev Participates in Caspian Sea Dialogue

EWI Senior Fellow Danila Bochkarev participated in "Defining the Caspian Sea: Aspirations, Opportunities and Challenges," an Eastern Promises Policy Dialogue hosted by the European Policy Centre. Bochkarev discussed the region's rich energy resources and an ongoing struggle to control them, with China as a growing regional influence. 

Defining the Caspian: Aspirations, Opportunities and Challenges

Eastern Promises Policy Dialogue – March 25, 2014

Summary
The Caspian is the largest inland body of water in the world, stretching from the shores of the Black Sea to the heart of Central Asia; it is a region rich in energy resources, with huge economic potential, and a meeting point between cultures and civilizations. Given the region’s geographic position between powerful states, for much of its history it has been at the heart of global confrontations.

Today there is still an on-going struggle. Russia remains very present, there is an increasingly powerful China, the EU is trying to make some inroads - Azerbaijan has made it possible for Caspian gas come to EU markets; Turkey is also trying to increase its role and of course there is Iran - isolated but ever present and if normalization takes place Iran’s role can become much more large in scale. Yet this region continues to face a number of significant challenges including economic under-development, security threats/frozen conflicts, corruption, inadequate governance and weak rule of law.

Full Report
Amanda Paul, EPC Policy Analyst, opened the dialogue by describing EPC and BSCSIF’s new project Defining the Caspian, which is designed to analyse and discuss geopolitical, energy and economic issues in the Caspian region and its neighbourhood

Alev Balgi, Executive Director of the Black Sea-Caspian International Fund, presented BSCSIF describing it as an international non-governmental non-profit organization, established in 2009 by the initiative of various representatives of influential non-governmental organizations from Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Republic of Moldova, Romania, Russia, Turkey and Ukraine.
Balgi expressed her satisfaction over the launch of the project Defining the Caspian, and stressed that it is important to launch actions that enhance democratic processes, economic development and dialogue among civilizations by using transportation territories, developing trade and creating a sustainable energy network.

Svante Cornell, Director of the Institute for Security and Development Policy, described the Caspian as Europe’s entry point to the heart of Eurasia and stated that without access through the Caucasus and the Caspian, there is no Western presence in Central Asia and Afghanistan. He outlined Western interests in the Caspian region, which he summarised as energy, military and trade-related interests.

On energy, he noted that Europe is well connected to Western Caspian oil and gas reserves through the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan and the soon to be built, Trans-Anatolian pipeline, but not well linked to the much larger East Caspian oil and gas reserves of Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan respectively. Over the past years, Europe has not been particularly active in East Caspian and since the establishment of the East-West corridor – brought together by the US and of which the EU has been a major beneficiary – there has been remarkably less interest in connecting Europe to the East Caspian reserves. This has allowed China to move in and to build pipelines to bring Turkmen gas to China.

Cornell stated that the West should engage Turkmenistan more actively in order to bring Turkmen gas to Europe, especially since Turkmen official representatives expressed their interest in diversifying their exports. Nevertheless, according to him, “unless and until the Caspian reserves get connected to Europe through the Trans-Anatolian pipeline, Turkmen gas will not be brought to Europe. Europe needs to show Ashgabat that a connection is possible and can work. Turkmenistan will not make a move on its own.”

As for military and security interests, Cornell noted that the Caspian countries proved willing and able to cooperate with the West on counter-terrorism, and have been crucial in enabling the coalition efforts in Afghanistan over the past decade. He also stated that the land corridor across the South Caucasus is the only one that will allow the withdrawal of Western military forces from Afghanistan without relying on Russia or Pakistan. “This is just an example illustrating why it is so important for the West to have a presence in the heart of the Eurasian continent and why it would be foolish to abdicate
the possibility of cooperating with the countries of the Caspian region”, he said. 

On trade and transportation, Cornell mentioned the EU’s Transeca project - a land transport corridor connecting Europe, the Caucasus and Asia, which was never achieved - and described it as visionary. According to him, the market needs a land corridor connecting Europe to Asia, as a land connection is cheaper than air and faster than sea.

According to Cornell, the EU can exert leverage in the Caspian region in two ways: via energy diplomacy and via regional policy. Both instruments are very weak at the moment: since EU member states still hold a prerogative on their energy policy, which makes a concerted EU action in the energy field relatively difficult, and the EU has engaged only Western Caspian countries through the Eastern Partnership (EaP), but has not yet developed a policy for the countries of the Eastern Caspian. According to Cornell, when the future of Turkmenistan’s gas and Kazakhstan’s oil resources and their export will be determined, a higher level of political engagement with the countries of the region will be fundamental, if the West wishes energy commodities from the Caspian to go towards Europe.

Denis Daniilidis, EU Chargé d'Affaires in Turkmenistan, outlined Turkmenistan’s history since its independence and the country's energy policy. For many years, Turkmenistan had been relying on Russia as the main customer of its gas exports. This changed in 2009, when the explosion of the Davletbat-Dariyalyk pipeline halted Turkmen exports to Russia and trust broke down between partners after Ashgabat blamed Moscow for the incident. After that, Turkmenistan started investing in energy diversification, mainly by concluding several agreements with China, with whom Turkmenistan is now connected via three pipelines. It is estimated that by the end of 2020, Turkmenistan will export around 60 bcma of gas to China, making Ashgabat the biggest gas supplier to Chinese market via pipeline. “China is the ideal partner for Turkmenistan: both have a highly centralised decision making process, and human rights violations do not play a role in deciding with which partner is right for business,” he noted.

Daniilidis noted that despite being surrounded by countries rigged by ethnic conflicts and radical Islamism, Turkmenistan has managed to have good relations with all its neighbours. According to him, this great accomplishment was achieved by Ashgabat by unilaterally declaring the Permanent Neutrality State of Turkmenistan, which postulates that the country cannot be part of military alliances or engage in military cooperation.

Moscow’s influence in the country is extremely limited. According to Daniilidis, this is due to several reasons: Russia buys only a small percentage of Turkmen gas and does not have large investments in Turkmenistan and military cooperation between the two countries is very limited. In addition to this, not only is there no Turkmen diaspora in Russia, but also the Russian minority in Turkmenistan is decreasing. Despite events of 2009 President Berdimuhamedow is not antagonizing Russia, as Turkmenistan is also attempting to have a minimum participation in the CIS.

On the EU's influence in Turkmenistan, Daniilidis agreed with Cornell, acknowledging that it is extremely difficult for the EU to exert any leverage on Ashgabat, as the country is not anchored to any international institution or agreement. The EU has no Partnership and Cooperation Agreement (PCA) in place with Turkmenistan and in fact, Turkmenistan is also not a member of WTO, the Council of Europe or of any military alliance.

Daniilidis called for an upgrade in EU relations with Turkmenistan and stressed the need to establish an institutional dialogue with Ashgabat. “Not having a PCA with Turkmenistan to protest its bad human rights records is not a solution, instead it is part of the problem. Ratifying the PCA should be a priority in EU relations with Turkmenistan. At the moment, if we want any systemic change in Turkmenistan, we need to work through the UN and OSCE,” he said.

“The EU needs to have political meetings at a high level and a presence on the ground if it wants to upgrade its relations with Turkmenistan. If the pace with other countries is a thousand meters per second, with Turkmenistan it is 1 millimetre per second, but that millimetre is worth investing,” he concluded.

Danila Bochkarev, Fellow at the EastWest Institute, drew an energy map of the Caspian region. As the other speakers, he pointed out the division between East and West Caspian, with on the one side Azerbaijan having limited export routes, very focused towards the EU, and on the other side Iran, Turkmenistan and Iraq being in a more complex situation and more connected to China.

In particular, Bochkarev stressed the growing importance of China as an energy player in the region and mentioned domestic inflation in China, the Blue Sky Initiative of the Chinese government, as well as China's enormous market, financial resources, readiness to provide infrastructure, as elements making China an attractive business partner for East Caspian countries. “For Turkmenistan it is not important if it is the EU, China or Russia buying its gas, as long as they buy its gas and can pay higher prices.”

Comparing gas prices in the region, Bochkarev stated that Turkmen gas is very expensive if compared with Qatari, North Russian or Iranian gas because it is very expensive to extract and difficult to export to Europe at a profitable price. “I don’t think will we see Turkmen gas going to Europe, the question of Turkmenistan’s importance to Europe is overrated, Azerbaijan is more important to Europe than Turkmenistan,” he said.

According to him, Iranian gas offers more advantages than Turkmen, not only in terms of reserves and production costs, but also in terms of export options. In fact, Iran exports to Pakistan and Turkey and it has plans to export to Oman and the United Arab Emirates. “The EU’s scepticism on Iranian gas is surprising, as no one but Iran can be a Gazprom competitor. Whether Iran will try to be a Gazprom competitor or not is an open question, yet there is a need to engage Iran on global gas.”

Diba Nigar Göksel, Editor-in-chief of the Turkish Policy Quarterly, contributed to the discussion analysing Turkey’s role in the Caspian region. According to her, Turkey's recent aspirations in the region were too ambitious and unrealistic for the time-frame they were conceived for. Not only Turkish “zero problems with neighbours” aspirations in the Caspian area were set into action with ill-conceived undertakings–such as the Caucasus Stability and Cooperation Platform or the Turkish-Armenian normalization process–but also Turkey's efforts to redefine its relations with Russia and Iran by minimizing conflict and maximizing economic interdependence were unsuccessful.

According to Göksel, Turkey has realised that its effort to gain traction in the Caspian region together with Iran and Russia while reducing its alignment with the West was not going to yield the results that it hoped for. Ankara finally understood that its interests are not necessarily aligned with Russian and Iranian interests and that its grand ambitions of either leading the Muslim middle-east or being welcomed in the Shanghai Cooperation Organization were unfounded.

Turkey has therefore downgraded its ambitions in the region and started focusing on the East-West corridor and on integration between Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey in terms of energy and transportation corridor. Nevertheless, according to Göksel, Turkish foreign policy has not yet been re-articulated and various possibilities are open.

While some argue that Turkey will revert to a Western strategic assurance framework in light of its own vulnerabilities, Göksel believes that this is not likely to happen any time soon, given the Turkish government’s efforts to spread scepticism and animosity towards the West among Turkish society and the poor democratic track record of the Turkish government, which reduces its credibility in the eyes of the West.

Göksel stated that Ankara needs to reconceptualise its foreign policy but underlined the existence of a “clash between Turkish economic interests, geopolitical interests and domestic political interests” that will make redefining Turkish foreign policy harder.

As for challenges to Turkish influence in the region, Göksel identified the biggest obstacle to Turkish leverage in the Caspian in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and acknowledged the limited progress so far achieved. Russia’s influence in the region poses a challenge to the Turkish presence in the area as well, especially as Ankara is trying to compete with Russia while not upsetting it–as of this being the fact that Turkey has been very cautious to back the European choice of some countries and at the same time didn’t comment Russia's actions in Ukraine. Finally, Göksel noted that some issues belonging to the Turkish domestic situation undermined Turkish foreign policy on several occasions–such as the battle between Gülen movement and Erdoğan which had repercussions with Turkey’s relations with Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan.

Göksel concluded by stating that recent events in the Crimea might create the opportunity to address the Karabakh issue in more concrete terms and finally bring a solution to this decades-long conflict.

Dennis Sammut, Director of LINKS, stated that the EU has the ability to influence decisions in the countries of the Caspian region, as it can bring investments and it carries a model of relationship that is never built on exploitation, but rather on the basis of mutual benefits. Iran and Russia are still important players in the area–with whom the EU has very complicated relations–and out of the other three countries touched by the Caspian, the EU has most advanced relations with Azerbaijan. Despite not yet signing an Association Agreement, Baku has expressed a desire to upgrade its relations with the EU and Sammut believes that a stronger cooperation with Azerbaijan should be pursued and can yield positive results.

According to Sammut, a dialogue can be established also with Turkmenistan, as long as the EU increases its political engagement with Ashgabat. He warned against the danger of thinking that a relationship with Caspian countries can be built only on energy and economics. “Politics is central to cooperation: we have learnt this the hard way with Ukraine, where a small political problem destroyed an extremely technical agreement,” he said.

Sammut referred to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, stating that a solution has yet to be found not only because the parties involved do not have enough political will to find a solution, but also because the situation they find themselves in does not encourage them to take strong political decisions. “Solutions to crisis are to be found within a context: the EU, Russia and the US are part of the context. The situation in Ukraine has now raised many questions about context and it is only by adopting a long-term perspective that we will be able address conflicts successfully.”

Discussion
Questioned about the EU's role in the region, Daniilidis agreed that the European Union has lost more and more leverage in the Caspian area over the past ten years. He said that in order to change the current situation, the EU needs to have three things: high level political contacts with Turkmen officials; a framework able to bring all the Central Asian countries to the table with the EU; and EU experts on Central Asia, who are able to understand the specifics of this region. Daniilidis added that the EU should present itself as a mediator on water conflicts and border management, since it has already obtained good results on these issues and the countries of the region are particularly sensitive to these topics.

When asked to elaborate further on Iran's possible role as a Gazprom competitor, Bochkarev stated that Iran could be an advantageous source of oil and gas for Europe since “it borders with Turkey, so it is a country with a direct access to the Southern Corridor. Moreover it has access not only to large resources but also to very cheap gas, therefore it can acquire a conditional share by dumping the price, which is not always possible for other countries, like Azerbaijan or Iraq.”

Being asked what will be the solution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, Cornell stated that every side involved knows that a successful settlement will need to involve a multiple stage process, culminating in a Balkan style-normalisation procedure and the involvement of peacekeepers coming from a third country that does not belong to the region.

On why Ukraine has not yet signed the DCFTA, Sammut stated that the new government will need some time to deal with the technical aspects of the agreement and that the choice of postponing a decision on it until after the elections is understandable.

When asked to elaborate further on the possibility of having Turkmen gas flowing to Europe, Daniilidis stated that since the law on hydrocarbons forbids onshore PSIs, any attempt to reach an agreement by linking progresses on the TCP to the concession of PSI onshore for US or EU companies is doomed to failure. “In order to make the TCP operational, large quantities are necessary - at least 20 or 30 bcma - and a long term contract should be drafted. Turkmenistan will not spoil its relations with Russia or Iran without concrete guarantees,” he said.

Asked whether Georgia could become an EU ambassador in the Caspian region, since it has signed the A.A., Göksel stated that the West should stand by the Europeanising voice of the neighbourhood but also the EU should be very clear on what it has to offer.

Cornell downplayed the future importance of Iran as a gas supplier for the West, since Iran is a net importer of gas and it is trying not to become a net importer of oil. According to him, the idea of Iranian gas flowing to Europe in large quantities is only an illusion, as oil and gas are heavily subsidised in Iran and the country is seeing a massive increase in domestic demand.

Photo Credit: Richard Petry

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