Turkey, Russia to inaugurate TurkStream gas pipeline in January

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The presidents of Turkey and Russia will inaugurate on Jan. 8 the TurkStream gas pipeline, an ambitious project stretching across the Black Sea from Russia to Turkey onto Europe, but now facing U.S. economic sanctions.
The Kremlin has announced that President Vladimir Putin will visit Turkey to attend the launching ceremony of the project, and is expected to have talks in Istanbul with his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
Diplomatic sources told Xinhua that Erdogan and Putin will discuss Turkish-Russian relations, including major projects, as well as the current situation in Syria, where the two countries are engaged in a difficult cooperation, and the delivery of Russian-made S-400 missile defense systems, a controversial purchase for which NATO member Turkey risks American sanctions.
“It will be the first face-to-face meeting of the two leaders of the new year to come, all matters of interest to the two nations will be on the agenda,” said the source.
“TurkStream confirms Turkey’s geostrategic position as an energy hub, coupling Ankara’s ambitions in this field with Russia’s drive to protect its share in the European Union natural gas market,” added the source, pointing to the Southern Gas Corridor (SGC), another gas pipeline recently inaugurated and pumping gas from Azerbaijan to Europe via Turkey.
The two projects will make Turkey a transitory crossroads of natural gas and a vital role in the increasing European energy needs and security, but this will also spark fresh concerns over Russian gas dependency.
Despite regional rivalries, Turkey and Russia have operated a remarkable rapprochement in the past few years, especially on energy issues, amid fears that Ankara is shifting away from the traditional Western alliance.
Turkey’s Energy Minister Fatih Donmez recently noted that Turkey wants to be an “energy center,” which would bolster the country’s international position by becoming a mega-transit state of natural gas to reach Europe while Turkey relies heavily on Russian gas imports.
Ankara and experts argue that the TurkStream pipeline is set to transform the buyer-seller nature of Turkish-Russian relations in a bid to make Turkey a joint provider of gas to European market.





