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Azerbaijan and Its Gas Consortium Partners Sign Agreements With Turkey
On October 25 in Izmir, Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev and Turkish Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, witnessed the signing of agreements on the delivery and transit of Azerbaijani gas to Turkey and onward to European Union territory (Trend, Anatolia news agency, Platts Commodity News, October 26-28).
Kazakhstan Interested in Nuclear Fuel Exports to Vietnam
Kazakhstan is interested in long-term supplies of nuclear fuel to Vietnam and in participation in constructing nuclear power plants in this country, the press service of Kazakh president said on Monday.
Japan and India to promote talks on nuclear pact despite disaster
okyo - Japan and India agreed Saturday to advance talks on a civilian nuclear cooperation pact, despite the devastating nuclear incident in Japan earlier this year.
Kazakhstan can join top five world oil exporters
"Kazakhstan is a significant player at the world energy market. Your country may join the world's largest oil exporters," Noé van Hulst, Secretary General of the International Energy Forum said in an exclusive interview to PM.kz site.
CIS Countries Discuss Cooperation in Peaceful Use of Nuclear Energy
Armenian capital city Yerevan hosted today the 12-th meeting of the CIS Commission for Use of Nuclear Energy for Peaceful Purposes and also a meeting of international working groups.
Russia 'Still Committed' To Armenian Nuclear Project
Russia has reaffirmed its stated commitment to help Armenia build a new nuclear plant, while cautioning that the ambitious and expensive project will not be easy to implement.
Serbia and Italy Sign Energy Deal
Italy and Serbia signed a strategic partnership on renewable energy in Rome on Tuesday. The goal is for Italian companies to produce hydroelectric power in Serbia and export it to Italy via Montenegro.
Energy cooperation between EU and South-Eastern European countries
The Energy Community Treaty was signed between the European Union and nine countries (so-called contracting parties) from the Balkans (seven states), Moldova, and Ukraine with Armenia, Georgia, Norway and Turkey as observers. The Treaty entered into force in 2006 and has had five years of success: it established an increasing socio-economic stability and security of supply.
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