MEDVEDEV-ERDOGAN TALKS TO FOCUS ON GAS, OIL, NUCLEAR PROJECTS
RIA Novosti
January 12, 2010
Moscow
Gas pipelines and a project to build the first nuclear power plant
in Turkey, will dominate talks between the Russian president and the
visiting Turkish premier on Wednesday, the Kremlin said.
"Major projects like the South Stream and Blue Stream [natural gas]
pipelines and the construction of Turkey’s first nuclear power plant
are on the agenda of the talks" between Dmitry Medvedev and Tayyip
Erdogan, the Kremlin said on Tuesday.
Turkey, which seeks to strengthen its position as a transit hub for oil
and gas, issued its approval last August for Russia’s Gazprom to use
its sector of the Black Sea for the $11 billion South Stream pipeline
to pump Russian and Central Asian gas to Europe bypassing Ukraine.
In July, it signed a deal on the EU-backed rival pipeline Nabucco.
Russia and Turkey also plan to build the second leg of the Blue
Stream pipeline, linking the two countries via the Black Sea, to
export Russian gas to Israel, Lebanon, Syria and Cyprus via Turkey.
Turkish media said earlier the talks in Moscow will also focus on
the $1.5 billion Samsun-Ceyhan pipeline to bring Caspian oil to the
Mediterranean via Turkey. Three Russian oil producers joined the
Turkish-Italian project in October.
Turkey’s plans in the nuclear power sector will also be discussed,
after its Electricity Trade Corp canceled a tender for the construction
of its first nuclear power plant late last year. Turkey plans to
announce a new tender for three nuclear power plants later this year.
Russia’s Atomstroyexport, power producer Inter RAO UES, and Turkey’s
Park Teknik had sought to build four nuclear reactors with a capacity
of 1,200 MW each.
The Kremlin said Turkey is one of Russia’s key trade partners, with
bilateral trade hitting an all-time high of $33.8 billion in 2008.
It added that Medvedev and Erdogan will also discuss a "wide range
of international issues," including a new European security system
and the situation in the former Soviet states in the South Caucasus.
Turkey has upset its close ally Azerbaijan by agreeing to open
diplomatic relations with Armenia. The two bitter rivals have been
locked in a dispute over Nagorny Karabakh since before the breakup of
the Soviet Union. Russia has been driving efforts to reach a settlement
in the conflict over the ethnic-Armenian region in Azerbaijan, which
has been de facto independent since the 1990s.