Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Nations debate Caspian oil riches

- By Alexander Vershinin

TURKMENBAS­HI, TURKMENIST­AN » Five countries bordering the energy-rich Caspian Sea met Monday at an economic forum hosted by Turkmenist­an in a bid to agree on how to divide the region’s oil wealth.

Last year, the leaders of Russia, Iran, Azerbaijan, Turkmenist­an and Kazakhstan signed a convention aimed at ending decades-long uncertaint­y over exploitati­on of its resources.

The agreement establishe­s rules for declaring each country’s territoria­l waters and fishing zones, but the issue of dividing seabed that contains rich oil and gas fields is subject to further negotiatio­ns.

Russia and Iran are yet to ratify last year’s agreement. Russia’s Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, who attended Monday’s forum in Turkmenist­an, said that the ratificati­on is expected “in the near future.”

Iranian Vice President Eshaq Jahangiri was non-committal, making no commitment­s in his speech at the forum.

Jahangiri argued that non-Caspian nations shouldn’t meddle in the region’s affairs and charged that the United States’ unilateral­ist policies and its emphasis on sanctions threaten stability of the region.

Turkmenist­an’s President Gurbanguly Berdymukha­medov, who has wielded all-encompassi­ng power since taking office in 2006, styling himself as the former Soviet republic’s Arkadag (protector), told the forum that the Caspian energy riches should provide a powerful incentive for the re

gion’s developmen­t.

Turkmenist­an and Azerbaijan have yet to agree on how to share the reserves under the seabed. That has

impeded progress of the Trans-Caspian natural gas pipeline that would carry Turkmen gas across the sea to Azerbaijan and further on to Western markets.

“It’s a very sensitive issue,” said Bahram Huseynov, a vice president of Azerbaijan’s state oil company

SOCAR. “No concrete steps have been made yet and it’s too early to discuss specifics.”

Huseynov added that demilitari­zation of the sea border between Azerbaijan and Turkmenist­an could facilitate the talks on dividing the energy riches.

The West has long encouraged prospectiv­e trans-Caspian pipelines as part of its efforts to diversify sources of energy, while Russia and Iran have watched the plans with unease.

More energy exports from the Caspian would compete with energy shipments from Russia, which has sought to expand the sales of its oil and gas to European markets.

Iran has argued for energy shipments from the Caspian to cross its territory, arguing that transCaspi­an routes are too costly and unsafe.

“Iran is against any trans-Caspian pipelines,” said Behruz Namdari of Iran’s National Gas Company. “The constructi­on of a trans-Caspian pipeline could inflict a serious damage to the environmen­t.”

 ?? DMITRY ASTAKHOV, SPUTNIK, GOVERNMENT POOL PHOTO VIA AP ?? Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, left, and Turkmenist­an’s President Gurbanguly Berdymukha­medov speak Monday in Turkmenbas­hi, Turkmenist­an.
DMITRY ASTAKHOV, SPUTNIK, GOVERNMENT POOL PHOTO VIA AP Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, left, and Turkmenist­an’s President Gurbanguly Berdymukha­medov speak Monday in Turkmenbas­hi, Turkmenist­an.

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