China, Russia and the Eastern Shift of Energy
Now, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin is on his way to Beijing, and a host of fresh energy deals are in the works. Chief among them is continued work on an important natural gas alliance between the countries that -- if completed -- would end up shipping a large portion of Russia's gas to China. It would come from the Kovykta gas field. The two countries have been working on the pact for three years but have yet to reach pricing agreement. But when they do, pressure will increase on Europe to figure out how it will satisfy its growing appetite natural gas. (Will the gas go off in Europe in the beginning of January in the annual flareup of tensions between Ukraine and Russia? The short answer is yes)
Listen this morning as my friend Jim Falk, president of the World Affairs Council in Dallas, interviews James Miles, the Economist's Beijing correspondent, who provides among the best coverage of the country out there. Sign up for it here, then listen in on this link to the live audio feed starting at 11 a.m. EST.
Labels: china, kovytka, Russia, Turkmenistan


4 Comments:
Have you read Bobo Lo's book on Russia-China relations?
http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/65230/stephen-kotkin/the-unbalanced-triangle
It looks interesting. What's your take on the book?
Steve, sorry to be a pain but it's Kovykta, not Kovytka...
Sergey
Sergey, many thanks for that good catch. It is corrected. Best Steve
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