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E.U. – Iran Energy Partnership: Hurdles and Incentives. Clement Therme 21 November 2008 Conference on Energy Security and the Geopolitics of Energy Cyprus . Introduction. The reasons why Iran could be an energy partner for E.U. countries. Introduction (cont ’ d).
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E.U. – Iran Energy Partnership:Hurdles and Incentives Clement Therme 21 November 2008 Conference on Energy Security and the Geopolitics of Energy Cyprus
Introduction • The reasons why Iran could be an energy partner for E.U. countries
Introduction (cont’d) • The reasons why Iran could be an energy partner for E.U. countries: • Economic Logic: Iran is the only country which could offer an alternative to the Russian gas production
Introduction (cont’d) • The reasons why Iran could be an energy partner for E.U. countries: • Economic Logic: Iran is the only country which could offer an alternative to the Russian gas production • E.U. countries oil and gas companies are present in Iran (Total, ENI, Repsol, OMV…)
Introduction (cont’d) • The reasons why Iran could be an energy partner for E.U. countries: • Economic Logic: Iran is the only country which could offer an alternative to the Russian gas production • E.U. countries oil and gas companies are present in Iran (Total, ENI, Repsol, OMV…) • Increase of gas demand in E.U. countries
Introduction (cont’d) • The reasons why Iran could be an energy partner for E.U. countries: • Economic Logic: Iran is the only country which could offer an alternative to the Russian gas production • E.U. countries oil and gas companies are present in Iran (Total, ENI, Repsol, OMV…) • Increase of gas demand in E.U. countries • Diversification of energy providers
Introduction (cont’d) • The reasons why Iran could be an energy partner for E.U. countries: • Economic Logic: Iran is the only country which could offer an alternative to the Russian gas production • E.U. countries oil and gas companies are present in Iran (Total, ENI, Repsol, OMV…) • Increase of gas demand in E.U. countries • Diversification of energy providers • Geographical proximity
Introduction (cont’d) • Despite this obvious potential for cooperation, Iran is not an energy partner for E.U. countries at the moment.
Introduction (cont’d) • This presentation will focus on: • The reasons for the lack of E.U.-Iran energy partnership
Introduction (cont’d) • This presentation will focus on: • The reasons for the lack of E.U.-Iran energy partnership; • Whether Iran could be a reliable partner.
Main Themes Developed • Historical Background of Iran-Europe Energy Cooperation • Current and Potential Energy Cooperation • Political and Economic Obstacles to a Partnership
Historical Background of the Iranian Oil and Gas Sector • British imperialism in Iran: 1908-1953 • American-Iranian alliance: 1953-1979 • Iranian perception: Mistrust of Western energy policy • 1970: First Iranian gas export towards Europe (swap with Russia) • 1979: Suspension of cooperation until the end of the Iran-Iraq war
Historical Background (cont’d) • 1990-2005: Investment of European energy companies in Iran; Increase of Iranian oil and gas production • 2005: Increased American pressure to stop Iran-E.U. energy cooperation • Nov. 2007: Gordon Brown favors international or E.U. sanctions against the Iranian energy sector • Summer 2008: Electricity cuts in Tehran
Current Energy Cooperation • Effective Cooperation: • Gas production: South Pars • Petrochemical field • CNG (Compressed Natural Gas) • Oil production • Contract negotiations • German gas deal • Swiss gas deal
Potential Energy Cooperation • The Nabucco Project: • One of the main projects of the E.U. Commission • Azerbaijan gas not sufficient to fill up the gas pipeline • Alternative to Russian gas: The “raison d’être” of the project (diversification) will be altered • The most logical solution: Opting for Iranian gas provided E.U. companies invest in the Iranian gas sector so that both domestic and international demands can be met
Potential Cooperation (cont’d) • Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) • 1st project: Pars LNG (Total/Petronas) • 2nd project: Shell/Repsol/NIOC • 3rd project: Iran • Privatization of the Iranian energy sector: closer to the E.U. model compared to the Russian model (State control of energy resources) • Technological advantage of European energy companies
Potential Cooperation (cont’d) • Iran as transit country for Caspian oil and gas production • For the first time since the fall of the Soviet Union, Iran has become a transit country for Azeri oil after the BTC attack (August 2008); Swap: Iran gets Azeri oil for its domestic consumption and in exchange Iran exports the same amount of oil from Khark island • Neka /Jask pipeline project: Connection between Caspian Sea and Oman Gulf • Azerbaijan/Turkmen gas export towards Europe through Iranian territory
Political Challenges • Iranian energy nuclear program • U.S./E.U. strategy: Economic sanctions targeting LNG and refinery technology • U.S. containment policy vis-à-vis Iranian energy development • Cutting off Iran gasoline imports • Islamic Republic of Iran Israel Policy
Political Challenges (cont’d) • The Eastern trend of Iranian foreign policy : Political will to increase oil and gas cooperation with Russia, China and India (Peace Pipeline) • The new oil and gas administration after Ahmadinejad’s presidency: Ideological objectives supersede Realpolitik • Iran imports gas, Iranian priorities still have to be defined: • Domestic consumption • Gas injection in oil fields • Exports: Pipelines or LNG
Economic Challenges • Increase in domestic oil and gas demand • Lack of investment in Iranian oil and gas sectors • Iran-Turkey energy relationship • Lack of cooperation between E.U. countries regarding energy policy
Economic Challenges (cont’d) • Dual use technology: Oil and gas/nuclear program • Increased financial costs and difficulty to finance oil and gas projects in Iran (U.S. unilateral financial sanctions)
Conclusion: The International Context • The so-called Gas OPEC Project: • “Troïka” between Iran, Qatar and Russia • Iranian technological dependency vis-à-vis Western technology (refinery, LNG) • Prospects: • Hypothesis: Coalition of countries willing to sanction Iran will lead to a rapprochement between Iran and Russian/Chinese oil and gas companies
Conclusion (cont’d) • Need of an independent strategy of the E.U. vis-à-vis the U.S. • Iran has to act in accordance with its national interest (Western technology favored) • E.U. countries can use the energy threat against the Iranian nuclear program but risk of failure if the international community is divided • Need to avoid ideological strategies and rather focus on the E.U.-Iran common interest as political leverage to solve the Iranian nuclear issue