Turkmenistan Pledges to Open Up Gas to All
Turkmenistan Pledges to Open Up Gas to All
On June 5, President Gurbanguly Berdymuhammedov announced plans to diversify Turkmenistan’s energy exports via all the routes that are now at the planning stage – leading to China, Iran, India and Europe.
The announcement comes one month after Berdymuhammedov signed an agreement with Russia and Kazakstan to build a new Caspian gas pipeline which experts say will strengthen Moscow’s hold on Central Asian gas and ruin the European Union’s plans for a Transcaspian pipeline bypassing Russia.
Most Turkmen gas is sold to Gazprom via the existing Central Asia-Centre pipeline, and the Russian firm then sells it on to Europe.
NBCentralAsia analysts say that Turkmenistan will not be ready to diversify gas exports until it can give investors accurate information about the state of its reserves, and until it can demonstrate its ability to overcome Russian resistance.
“Any free gas on the market that hasn’t been secured by Gazprom could upset pricing policy,” said an NBCentralAsia economic expert. “Russia is fully aware of this and will try as hard as it can not to let its [Central] Asian partners get access to gas markets.”
It is unlikely Turkmenistan will live up to Berdymuhammedov’s pledge any time soon because the authorities are still not prepared to declare what reserves the country actually has or give potential buyers free access to information, the expert argues.
“If it invests in Turkmenistan’s gas sector, Europe, for example, will definitely require transparent deals and transfers, but the Turkmen leadership does not welcome such demands,” he said.
Rovshan Ibrahimov, head of the international relations department at Qafqaz University in Azerbaijan, says Turkmenistan will be unable to supply several different customers at once for the immediate future, because it is currently only producing enough gas to honour the gas deals signed with Russia.
Energy experts believe that once Turkmenistan overcomes the economic and technical hurdles to diversifying gas exports, it will have to deal with the political aspects of an expanded pipeline network.
“When there are really big reserves, the problem of which pipelines to fill arises, since the issue of pipeline quotas - how much gas should go via each route - it is not so much economic as political,” said Kazakstan-based analyst Petr Svoik.
(News Briefing Central Asia draws comment and analysis from a broad range of political observers across the region.)