Space Industry and Business News  
Analysis: Europe teams up with Gazprom

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only
by Stefan Nicola
Berlin (UPI) Nov 16, 2007
Two major European energy players have recently linked up with Gazprom for large electricity projects in Russia and Europe. Some politicians fear Europe's energy security is suffering as a consequence.

According to the Financial Times, Eon, the world's largest utility by sales, is considering building gas-fired power plants in Germany, Britain and Hungary with the Russian state-controlled energy giant, after the Germans had already announced they would enter the soon-to-be liberalized Russian power market. And Italy's electricity giant Enel is investing some $6 billion (one of the largest ever foreign direct investments by a singly company) in Russia to gain access to the largest and potentially most profitable untapped electricity market on the continent.

Yet while hopes for immense profits run high in the companies' top management circles, European politicians look with a sorrowful eye to concrete plans with Gazprom, the Kremlin's most powerful energy and sometimes also foreign policy tool.

While investments in Russia aren't the problem (this has been tried in the past by several companies, with varying success), giving Gazprom access to end consumers in Europe has concerned policymakers from Madrid to Berlin.

Russia supplies half of the European Union's natural gas and roughly a third of its oil, and observers have in the past years called for an increased level of diversification instead of deepening old ties.

Yet not all politicians would agree.

In Germany, Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier has long been an advocate of even closer cooperation with Russia. On Friday the minister said one should stop looking at Russia in good-or-bad categories.

"We need a new policy of detente �� through renewed and deepened cooperation," Steinmeier said in a speech at the European Forum conference in Berlin. "We must not gamble away the existing ties with Russia, despite the difficulties, which I am seeing as well."

The two-day conference, funded by the BMW Foundation Herbert Quandt, assembled more than 100 political and economic leaders in Berlin to discuss Europe's role when it comes to energy security.

And some of the company officials present already had established ties with Russia. Eon is already the largest foreign shareholder of Russia and is now trying to enter the Russian electricity market.

"This is the last country that Eon hasn't conquered yet," Roland Goetz, energy expert at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs, told United Press International Friday in a telephone interview. But the plan isn't without risks, neither for Eon nor for Enel, Goetz warned.

"The price increases in Russia for natural gas are hard to predict." He added that Europe's energy companies value the economic risks of investing in Russia much more highly than the political ones.

That's also the reason why Duesseldorf-based Eon didn't shy from opening a new chapter in its relations with Gazprom; Chief Executive Officer Wulf Bernotat earlier this week said Eon would team up with Gazprom to build power plants all over Europe, including in Germany, Britain and Hungary, according to the Financial Times. He added that he was considering giving Gazprom minority stakes in other Eon plants across Europe.

Alexander Medvedev, deputy head of Gazprom, told the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung newspaper that one plant with a generating capacity of 1,000 megawatts will be built in Lubmin, near the Baltic Sea, adding that another project in Germany was also in the "advanced" planning stages.

Such moves would finally give Gazprom access to end consumers in Europe, a strategic expansion the company has long sought after. While Europe's lawmakers in September put forward a new energy strategy that would limit Gazprom's ownership abilities in Europe as it is operating in a state-ensured monopoly, Eon's CEO is less concerned about Russia. Earlier this month, Bernotat told the Financial Times the European Commission, which wants to break up large utilities such as Eon, posed a larger threat than Russia in energy matters.

Yet Eon would hardly offer Gazprom direct access to European customers if it didn't get something valuable in return.

Observers say the plans are linked to the giant Yuzhno-Russkoye natural gas field in western Siberia. Eon has been in negotiations with Gazprom to acquire a stake in the field, but those negotiations have been stalled for the past years. Eon is now much more optimistic. Bernotat said that a deal should be signed "soon."

(e-mail: [email protected])

Related Links
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Japan, China still stuck on energy sea spat
Tokyo (AFP) Nov 14, 2007
Japan and China failed to break an impasse Wednesday in a spat over lucrative gas fields in the East China Sea but agreed to keep talking amid a recent easing of tension between the countries.







  • Electricity Grid Could Become A Type Of Internet
  • Google revs up profits as advertising revenues soar
  • Internet preparing to go into outer space
  • US cities' Wi-Fi dreams fading fast

  • First Soyuz Launch From Kourou Set For 2009
  • Ground Broken For New Test Launch Pad
  • Sea Launch Resumes Countdown for Thuraya-3 Launch
  • Ariane 5 Launches Over Nine Tonne To GEO Transfer Orbit

  • Time Magazine Recognizes The X-48B
  • Virgin to offer carbon offsets alongside drinks and perfume
  • NASA sorry over air safety uproar
  • Airbus superjumbo makes first commercial flight

  • Boeing Demonstrates FAB-T Multi-terminal Link Capability To USAF
  • Successful Second Launch Of Skynet 5 Satellite
  • US And Australia Share New Communications Satellites
  • Northrop Grumman-Built Defense Support Program Flight 23 Satellite Successfully Launched

  • Dawn Checkout Going Out
  • Argonne Scientists Use Unique Diamond Anvils To View Oxide Glass Structures Under Pressure
  • YES2 Team Claims A Space Tether World Record
  • NASA Unveils New Antenna Network

  • Boeing Names Darryl Davis To Lead Advanced Systems For Integrated Defense Systems
  • Northrop Grumman Names John Landon VP Of Missiles, Technology And Space Programs
  • Dr Mary Cleave Appointed To Board Of Directors Of Sigma Space
  • Northrop Grumman Appoints GPS And Military Space VPs

  • Rosetta: OSIRIS' View Of Earth By Night
  • Strange Space Weather Over Africa
  • KAGUYA Captures The Earth Rising Over The Moon
  • Earth Observation Essential For Geohazard Mitigation

  • German chancellor says satnav financing plan to be drafted soon
  • V7 Launches New Portable Navigation Devices
  • GPS Chipset Shipments To Grow From 110 Million To 725 Million Units In 2011
  • Providence Health And Services Chooses WWT and AeroScout For Wireless Asset Tracking Solution

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement