13-10-06
Terrorists are setting their sights on the global energy infrastructure, the
head of Germany's foreign intelligence service (BND) said.
Ernst Uhrlau told a Berlin seminar on energy and security there had been a
marked increase in the number of terrorist attacks directed at energy targets in
recent years. Groups like al-Qaeda, he said, had improved their capability and
were concentrating on global energy supplies instead of local attacks of fuel
depots or pipelines.
Uhrlau said dwindling supplies of oil and natural gas could lead to new
conflicts and even wars.
"It is important, therefore, to identify potential conflicts over access and
distribution and defuse them before they come to a head," the BND president
said. One of the ways to achieve this was for states to increase cooperation, he
said, citing the example of Pakistan and India.
The head of Germany's federal chancellery, Thomas de Maiziere, told the
gathering that energy was increasingly becoming a factor in the wielding of
power. He cited the example of Russia's Gazprom, which he said had made a series
of threats if obstacles were placed in the way of its international expansion.
Last winter Gazprom temporarily cut off supplies of natural gas to Ukraine after
the government in Kiev balked at paying higher prices for the fuel.
De Maiziere also warned of the dangers of abuse by emerging economies where
nuclear power was seen as a way of lowering their reliance on non-renewable
energy sources. North Korea, which recently tested an atomic device, was an
example to the international community that it needs to be firm in dealing with
violations of international treaties, he said.
Otherwise there is a threat of a nuclear arms race with dramatic consequences,
de Maiziere said.
Source: DPA