
Azerbaijan urges EU to reassess finance restrictions on gas corridor expansion
He named the European Investment Bank's ban on new fossil fuel financing and a lack of long-term gas purchase contracts as barriers to expanding exports to the EU.
The Reuters Power Up newsletter provides everything you need to know about the global energy industry. Sign up here.
"The EU market is premium in terms of legislation, rules and pricing, but we should not look only to the west," Aliyev told a policy forum. "We can look to the east, to the south. This is important for the future of Azerbaijan's gas industry and Europe's energy security."
As it diversifed its energy imports from Russia following the start of the war in Ukraine, the EU has increased gas imports from the South Caucasus country to nearly 13 bcm in 2024 from 8 bcm in 2021.
In 2022 Brussels signed a deal with Baku to double gas imports to at least 16 bcm a year by 2027. Azerbaijan plans to increase gas exports to Europe to 14 bcm next year, the country's energy minister said this month.
But Aliyev's comments suggested those goals might be elusive, given challenges with securing infrastructure financing from Brussels.
"All our major energy projects - oil or gas - were funded on a 70% borrowed, 30% corporate financing model," Aliyev said. "Now European institutions must return to that approach."
Azerbaijan has said it wants to expand its main gas artery to Europe, the Southern Gas Corridor network, which runs across 3,500 km (2,175 miles) from Azerbaijan to Italy.
A total of 12 countries, including ten in Europe, receive Azerbaijani gas, Aliyev said, with gasification projects agreed in Albania and planned in Bulgaria.
The United States is also vying to sell liquefied natural gas to Europe in the context of possible trade negotiations.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Times
an hour ago
- Times
Asylum seekers denied housing may be able to sue
The Department of Justice is examining a ruling by the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) amid fears the state could face compensation claims from hundreds of asylum seekers left homeless after being denied accommodation. The judgment, delivered last Friday, stems from two test cases brought before the High Court by men seeking international protection who alleged the government had breached their rights under the EU Reception Conditions Directive and the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union. Both men applied for asylum in 2023 but the state denied them accommodation. Each was issued with a €25 voucher and deemed ineligible for the standard daily allowance, which led to them sleeping rough in Dublin. The government had argued the breaches were due to exceptional circumstances, namely an influx of asylum seekers, which amounted to force majeure. The CJEU rejected this argument, however. Jim O'Callaghan, the justice minister, is said to be deeply concerned about the judgment given its potential to expose the state to scores of compensation claims from asylum seekers who were denied accommodation. Immigration officials also fear the ruling could inspire fraudulent claims, with new applicants lodging cases when no accommodation is available in the hope of securing compensation. On Saturday the Department of Justice confirmed the judgment was being examined. A spokesman said there had been sustained pressure on the international protection system since 2022, when a significant increase in applications began. The department added that while demand was still high, the rate of new applications had slowed since last October and the number without housing fell from more than 3,500 in March to 942 in July.


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
HAMISH MCRAE: New Trump tariffs spoil the party
Donald Trump has proved a bit of a party pooper. There we were last week, celebrating strong results from Microsoft and other members of the 'magnificent seven' clan, plus some decent figures here from several of our biggest enterprises, and pretty spectacular ones from Rolls-Royce. The S&P 500 and FTSE 100 indexes of leading shares touched all-time highs. Trade negotiations seemed to be plodding along, with a decent deal between the US and the EU, even if businesses on the Continent were upset that it wasn't as good as the agreement that we in the UK got. Then, bang, the full list of tariffs was announced, coming into effect on Thursday for any country that had not closed a trade deal with the US. It includes some beefy figures. Switzerland was stunned to discover that it would be hit by a 39 per cent levy. You may not feel sorry for what is one of the richest countries in the world but it's rough on others. For example, South Africa gets 30 per cent and India 25 per cent. These figures will almost certainly be negotiated down and there are all sorts of exceptions. But meanwhile there is huge disruption. Until the end of last week the view of the markets was that global business was nimble enough to cope. Now they are not so confident. And it isn't only the Swiss enterprises that are being hit; it is also American ones. You see that best in the impact on Amazon. It produced some stunning results on Thursday and the shares were trading around their all-time high, valuing the company at well over $2.5 trillion (£1.9 trillion). Then came the details of the tariffs. Its share price fell by more than 7 per cent. It's silly to read too much into one day's market movement, but it's a useful reminder that Americans are being hit by Trump's trade policy, not just foreigners. We don't know how the cost of the tariffs will be carried. Some may be absorbed by exporters. But they can only do that for a while as we have seen when there are sharp currency movements. If the dollar suddenly weakens and they therefore receive less money in their own currency, exporters to the US eventually will have to increase their prices. What we do have is a feel for the extra revenue the US expects to receive. Scott Bessent, the Treasury secretary, estimates it will be an extra $300 billion a year. That's equivalent to about 1 per cent of national output. If a third of that ends up being paid by importers squeezing their margins and two-thirds by consumers in higher prices, that's a noticeable dent on living standards. Some items will go up by a big amount, and while many won't, the headlines will shock. The tax revenue will be useful, of course, but as the US federal budget deficit is running at 6 per cent of national output, it doesn't go far towards closing the gap. What happens next? Disruption is never good and even if, as seems realistic, world trade does settle down, there will be lasting costs from the tariff war. What will matter even more is whether, irrespective of all this, the US economy continues to grow at a decent clip. It managed to do so in the second quarter, at an annual rate of 3 per cent. But there are worries. Every time there's a weak number, as there was on Friday with jobs growth, the markets wobble. The housing market has gone soft in many areas. Consumer sentiment is fragile, though up a little in recent months thanks to booming share prices. So markets need to stay strong to maintain consumer confidence – and vice versa. It's a virtuous circle, but as we all know, that could flip. You can see why Trump is so hostile to the Federal Reserve chairman, Jerome Powell. The one thing that might ensure the boom continues a while longer would be a cut in interest rates. The Fed didn't move last week, while here the Bank of England is widely expected to reduce rates on Thursday. It was a stunning July for British investors and shares here remain solid value compared with US markets. The UK will probably gain from US tariffs, given the favourable deal we negotiated. But August will, I am afraid, be a less comfortable month.


Reuters
3 hours ago
- Reuters
Pope Leo tells hundreds of thousands of young Catholics to build a better world
ROME, Aug 2 (Reuters) - Hundreds of thousands of young people filled a vast field on the outskirts of Rome on Saturday to see Pope Leo, in the largest event yet of the new Catholic pontiff's tenure, as part of a special weekend aimed at energizing Catholic youth. Young people from more than 146 countries, some wearing colourful bandanas to ward off the hot summer sun, were pressed against fences in the Tor Vergata field as Leo toured the crowd in his white popemobile in late afternoon. The pope, smiling broadly, waved, offered blessings and occasionally caught small stuffed animals and national flags thrown by the youth as he passed by. "Dear young people ... my prayer for you is that you may persevere in faith, with joy and courage," Leo said in remarks later to the crowd. "Seek justice in order to build a more humane world," he said. "Serve the poor, and so bear witness to the good that we would always like to receive from our neighbours." Many of the youth attending the event with Leo spent all day waiting in the field in heat approaching 30 degrees Celsius (86°F) to see the pope. Organizers were using water cannons to help cool down people in the crowd. "For me, it is an incredible emotion because I had never been to an event like this before," said Maya Remorini, from Italy's Tuscany region. She said her group had arrived around 5 a.m. that morning. Many of the youth are expected to sleep in the field overnight, waiting for a second chance to see Leo on Sunday morning, when the pope is due to celebrate a Catholic mass. The weekend events are tied to the ongoing Catholic Holy Year, which the Vatican says has attracted some 17 million pilgrims to Rome since it started at the end of 2024. Leo, the first U.S.-born pope, was elected on May 8 by the world's cardinals to replace the late Pope Francis.