Energy Politics:
Russia loses Europe, China looks to Central Asia
-By DR.
ABDUL RUFF COLACHAL
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Energy
politics today dominates the world scene where the western powers invade and
destabilize energy rich and route providing Muslim nations, killing millions of
people and causing serious damage to climate stability. Regional powers like
Israel do their anti-humanity and anti-climate destructions in their own ways
by suing the terror goods of the western powers.
Like
Mideast and central Asia, Russia is also a top energy supplier, mainly to
Europe through Ukraine. Russia holds
the world's largest share of combined oil and gas production,
at 15 percent of global output. Moscow remained the world's
largest exporter of natural gas, producing 22 percent of global
output.
However,
in a global context, Russian gas market is in trouble as Russia's troubles
start coming to light. The fallout from the Crimean annexation,
in terms of sanctions and market reassessment, Russia’s loss has
been not substantial but affected Russian economy.
Annexation
of Crimea by the Kremlin and Russia’s blockage of gas flow into Ukraine seem to
have impacted the economy of EU but also influenced the regional politics to
some extent.
Russia
and China, the two veto members of the notorious UNSC, have strong economic,
military and energy relations for years now, particularly since the onset of
Cold War. However, there have been upset in bilateral ties owing to some
geopolitical reasons.
Russia has been one of the prime providers of gas quenching
Beijing's ever increasing thirst for energy. As Russia is facing supply
deficit in Europe, it expects China to increase its energy intakes from Moscow.
But China looks to central Asia for its energy needs. Instead of turning
to Siberian sources for energy needs, China has recruited Central
Asia to provide the lion's share of its natural gas demands.
China now receives nearly half of its natural gas supply
from Central Asia. Turkmenistan currently supplies nearly 25 billion cubic
meters (bcm) annually, with an additional 2.9 bcm from Uzbekistan
and 0.1 bcm from Kazakhstan. The total represented 45 percent
of China's gas imports last year and looks set to expand
in the months ahead.
Moscow's
focus on the European market allowed China to co-opt Central Asian
supplies and become an influential regional player.
While Russia remained focused on the European market
for the past decade, China began constructing and expanding pipelines
through all five Central Asian states, which had traditionally been Russian
strongholds.
China has also become Central Asia's largest trade partner,
and the region presents arguably the only friendly front
to China's expansionist policies.
The EU continues its divestment from Russia, with new
emphasis on shale exploration, renewable expansion and imports
from North America. With North America and Europe turning
to non-Russian sources for their energy needs, China accounts
for 22.4 percent of the world's energy consumption would be able
to help Moscow stomach the loss of Western business.
While Russia did sign a $400 million, 38 bcm deal with China
recently, the amount remains well below the 65 bcm Turkmenistan has
agreed to provide China by 2020, and looks to be less than
the total that a pair of new pipelines coming online this year
will transit from Central Asia to China. This shift toward Central
Asian gas production has been one of the less publicized aspects
of China's expansion over the past decade and appears to undermine
Russia's regional and economic influence.
And where
the Chinese market has proven a boon to Central Asian economies,
it's also provided Central Asian nations a means of maneuvering
beyond Russia's reach. Turkmenistan seeking to free itself from the Kremlin
clutches and began supplying gas to China in 2009, sums up this new
reality perfectly. Turkmenistan was once nearly entirely dependent
on Russia for both exports and infrastructure, but now it has
swiftly become a regional heavyweight in gas exports. Continually
calling for a trans-Caspian line, potentially contributing to the
Trans-Anatolian Pipeline, and pushing for a transit route through
India, Turkmenistan has morphed from a Russian dependency to an
important regional actor. And with plans to triple its production
over the next two decades, Turkmenistan's weight stands only to grow.
Notes: weak damage control
Russia is
looking potential avenues to remedy its expected drop in supply
and imports. New entreaties to Azerbaijan to join
the Eurasian Economic Union could theoretically allow Russia greater
access to influencing Baku's energy output, though Baku likes to increase
transit cooperation with Turkmenistan. The Kremlin’s recent decision
to forgive North Korean debt paves a way to access
the South Korean market a long-term project. Central Asia will
likely play a notable role in US ally Seoul's energy needs, too.
Meanwhile,
the United States saw the most rapid energy production growth
of any nation and now stands as the world's largest producer
of natural gas. Likewise, the EU's gas storage units, following
a mild winter, are currently at record-high 65 percent capacity.
The Kremlin's
unabated aggression surrounding Ukraine is likely to intensify
the EU's search for alternatives to Russian energy, while
sanctions, both potential and realized, continue to bite.
Moscow's
motivations in cutting
off gas supplies to Ukraine last month seemed
far more political than economic, trying to make Ukraine a neutral nation in
Europe, if not a pro-Russian ally. .
It seems
the clout and constancy of Moscow diplomats in Brussels
and Washington would determine the future energy policy of Russia. .
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