07-06-06
The Commission and Javier Solana have issued a joint paper proposing
immediate actions that would allow EU nations to handle the growing dependence
on foreign energy suppliers such as Russia.
The European Commission opened the debate on a future common European Energy
Policy with the publication of a “Green Paper” in March 2006. Completing the
opening of European gas and electricity markets and stepping up relations with
major suppliers such as Russia and OPEC, figured among the key proposals.
At the EU summit 17 June EU heads of states and governments will discuss a
joint paper by the Commission and EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana
proposing immediate actions to step up relations with key energy supplier,
consumer and transit countries.
The 5-page document, entitled "facing external energy risks", seeks to create
"stable legal conditions for energy investments and trade" at EU scale and
globally. Among other ideas it proposes to build up strategic gas reserves along
the oil stocks currently required under EU law. It also calls for diversifying
gas supplies by completing infrastructure projects to "create new energy
corridors" to Europe.
Algeria, for instance, currently covers about 10 % of EU gas consumption, a
EU official said.
"If we double it, Algeria could be compared to Russia," he pointed out. Turkey
is also mentioned as a potential future "major energy transit hub" if it is
rapidly integrated into the Energy Community Treaty of South East European
countries.
"Russia is obviously a crucial part," an EU official said as he unveiled the
paper on 2 June.
He brushed away recent threats that Russia might divert its flows of natural
gas to other consumer countries such as the US or China, saying the EU and
Russia are "interdependent in the energy sector".
"Having [oil and gas] reserves is not enough," the official said, pointing to
the "billions of euros" that Russia needs to tap them. "Money for Russia is
crucial," he insisted.
The paper proposes to "work towards a comprehensive agreement with Russia"
that would cover "all energy products" and aim for "the integration of the EU
and Russian energy markets in a mutually beneficial, reciprocal, transparent and
non discriminatory manner".
However, a comprehensive agreement seems a long way off with Russia still
refusing to sign the 1994 Energy Charter Treaty without a revision of the
treaty's transit protocol. But EU officials are confident that a broader
agreement "will make it easier for Russia" to sign the treaty. In particular,
they say an agreement on trade in nuclear products could help break the
stalemate. "Getting a mandate to negotiate an agreement would help," an official
said.
The agreement, the paper says, should be negotiated in the framework of the
Partnership and Cooperation Agreement (PCA) with Russia that entered into force
in December 1997.
"We should not pretend that we can solve everything in Brussels," the official
said. But he added there is "a lot to do by private industry and governments".
Source: euractiv.com