Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06BELGRADE1813
2006-11-03 14:29:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Belgrade
Cable title:  

SERBIA'S ELECTRICITY OFFER TO KOSOVO

Tags:  PREL PGOV ENRG ECON SR YI UNMIK 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXYZ0001
RR RUEHWEB

DE RUEHBW #1813/01 3071429
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 031429Z NOV 06
FM AMEMBASSY BELGRADE
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 9693
INFO RUEHPS/USOFFICE PRISTINA 3567
UNCLAS BELGRADE 001813 

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PREL PGOV ENRG ECON SR YI UNMIK
SUBJECT: SERBIA'S ELECTRICITY OFFER TO KOSOVO


SUMMARY
-------
UNCLAS BELGRADE 001813

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PREL PGOV ENRG ECON SR YI UNMIK
SUBJECT: SERBIA'S ELECTRICITY OFFER TO KOSOVO


SUMMARY
--------------

1. (SBU) The Working Group on Energy Cooperation met in
Belgrade on October 26. As a result of the meeting, Serbia
sent a formal proposal of an electricity donation for Kosovo
on October 27 to Jolly Dixon, Chairman of the Working Group.
The offer, considered to be a donation to avert a potential
humanitarian crisis this winter, is the same as last year's:
50 million GWh of electricity per month benefiting those
Serbian enclaves experiencing the greatest electrical
outages. However, the offer appears to drop other conditions
which Serbia had tried to include last year, including
employment conditions and a request to establish its own
power distribution company. However, econoff was told
privately by UNMIK that an arrangement has already been
reached between state-owned Elektroprivrede Srbije (EPS) and
the Kosovo Energy Corporation (KEK) to supply free
electricity, but the arrangement lacks the political cover a
formal agreement would provide. END SUMMARY.

SERBIA'S OFFER OF ELECTRICITY WITH ONE CONDITION
-------------- ---

2. (SBU) The Working Group on Energy Cooperation met on
October 26 in Belgrade to discuss Serbia's offer of free
electricity to Kosovo among other things. The meeting
concluded with Serbia committing to send a detailed offer for
the electricity donation by Friday, October 27. The Pristina
delegation would not commit to a timeframe by which they
would respond. Jolly Dixon, UNMIK Chairman of the Working
Group, strongly urged Pristina to respond to Belgrade's offer
within five days.


3. (SBU) Econoff obtained a copy of the October 30 letter
signed by Nenad Popovic, Vice President of the Coordination
Center of Serbia for Kosovo and Metohija (CCKM) and team
leader of the Economic Team for Kosovo and Metohija and for
the South of Serbia, and Miroslav Kukobat, Serbia's point
person on Kosovo electricity issues, and dispatched to Jolly
Dixon (full text in para 12). The Serb's offer 50 million
GWh/month of electricity which, according to Kukobat, is
equivalent to 5 percent of the total capacity needed and can

supply electricity to some 30,000 people. The only condition
would be a guarantee from UNMIK that the Serbian enclaves
receive reliable electricity as a result of the donation to
the extent it is possible. As a donor for a humanitarian
crisis, Serbia believes it is justified in specifying how the
donation would be used.


4. (SBU) In a meeting with econoffs on October 23, Miroslav
Kukobat emphasized that it is not Serbia's intent to
discriminate on an ethnic basis. Rather, the donation will
go to assist the Kosovar Serbs who are the most vulnerable to
electricity disruption without freedom of movement,
employment and income to pay for electricity consumption. If
Albanians also benefit from electricity being sent to these
Serbian enclaves, Serbia has no problem with that. He was
dismayed at UNMK's outright rejection of Serbia's offer last
yer before it even looked at whether or not it wastechnically fesible. He believes that it would bereasonable
for UNMIK to accept an offer that willease the capacity
stress on the system and sbsequently benefit other areas as
well.


5. (SBU) Kukobat also said that Kosovar Serbs have no
confidence in public institutions in Kosovo, and this
adversely impacts the collection rate. Serbia is offering to
establish a mechanism to facilitate better collection rates
in Serbia areas, as much as an estimated 30 percent.
However, Kukobat stressed that this is not a condition to the
electricity offer. Rather, Serbia is offering this
separately to help the situation.

SECRET DEAL REACHED?

SIPDIS
--------------

6. (SBU) Econoff met with Paul Mecklenburg, Political Advisor
for the United Nations Office in Belgrade on October 25 to
discuss efforts by Nenad Popovic, Serbia's head of the
Economic Team for Kosovo and Metohija, to broker a deal
between the EPS and KEK that would allow the transmission of
free electricity to these Serbian enclaves while benefiting
others in those areas. Mecklenburg says that while formal
talks continue to founder over Serb conditions, in practice
it appears that EPS has begun to provide power through the
Serbian grid. While Popovic, IC personnel in Kosovo and
local Albanian officials in KEK have confirmed this initial
delivery, it appears to be quite limited in scope and no one
-- either in UNMIK or KEK -- appears to be willing or able to
confirm the details of this arrangement.


7. (SBU) There was no mention of a deal at the meeting of the
Working Group on Energy Cooperation in Belgrade on October

26. Econoff privately asked UNMIK and GOS participants
separately if a deal had been reached, and all said that they
knew nothing about such a deal.


8. (SBU) The Working Group concluded with Serbia committing
to send a formal offer for the electricity donation by
Friday, October 27. The Pristina delegation would not commit
to a timeframe by which they would respond. Jolly Dixon,
UNMIK Chairman of the Working Group, strongly urged Pristina
to respond to Belgrade's offer within five days.

EMS NOT SHOWING FAVORITISM
--------------

9. (SBU) UNMIK has accused Serbia's transmission system and
market operator, EMS, of not providing transit of electricity
from neighboring countries to Kosovo in a fair and
transparent manner. On October 23, Fayez Risheg, UNMIK Head
of Office in Belgrade, told econoff that as an example, EMS
refused to transmit electricity already purchased from
Bulgaria because it was not given proper notification.
However, at another time when electricity was purchased from
a Serbian supplier at twice the price and with the same
notification time, EMS allegedly transmitted the electricity
without any problems.


10. (SBU) Kukobat refuted these accusations, stating that
documentation had been provided to the European Commission
providing proof that EMS's transmission of electricity is
done fairly and transparently. He cited a recent letter that
Minister of Energy Radomir Naumov sent to the Andris
Piebalgs, European Commissioner for Energy, in which Naumov
also refuted these accusations by referring to the
significant documentation submitted to EU representatives.
The letter also appealed to the EU for their help in
mediating the offer to export electricity to Kosovo. Kukobat
believes that only the U.S. or the EU can help break the
current stalemate that exists in the discussions.


11. (SBU) When Econoffs asked about the September 1 letter
from Prime Minister Kostunica to EU Commission Solana
offering power for Kosovo on an unconditional basis, Kukovat
threw his hands in the air (figuratively) and said that the
Ministry of Energy had not been consulted on that letter.
However, the new offer is an effort to be as responsive as
possible to humanitarian needs, he said.


12. (SBU) The following is the text of the October 30 letter
from Nenad Popovic to Jolly Dixon regarding the Serbian offer
of electricity:

Dear Mr. Dixon,

As you are well aware, from 1999, Kosovo and Metohija has
been ruled by UNMIK in accordance with the UN Security
Council Resolution 1244. Ever since, the electricity supply
in Kosovo and Metohija (K-M) is very ineffective, reaching
now very critical point. Our electricity companies, EPS and
EMS, have not been allowed to operate on the territory of
province. Serbia has no authority at all on the territory of
the Province. In this respect, there is no responsibility of
Serbian Government concerning the extremely bad energy
situation in the Province.

Due to very bad condition of power facilities in the
Province, all the population living in it has serious
problems concerning the quality and regularity of electricity
supply. Areas of the province mainly inhabited with the
Serbian population are in the worst position. Almost every
day, the Serbian population in K-M has no electricity for up
to 20 hours per day, which is completely unacceptable in
Europe, at the beginning of the 21st century. These
electricity shortages during the most critical winter days
instigated the real humanitarian disasters during the last
two years. We would like to prevent these humanitarian
disasters to repeat for the third year in a row, in view of
which, we would like to once again offer a donation in
electricity for the areas K-M predominantly inhabited by the
Serbian population.

The Government of the Republic of Serbia is ready to provide
humanitarian assistance in electricity for K-M (50 GWh/month)
for the winter season 2006/2007, for the areas predominantly
inhabited by the Serb population (and also including the
minority Albanian population in the areas),because these
areas are considered as the most vulnerable and socially
jeopardized. The guarantees of UNMIK that these areas will
be provided with the electricity based on the delivered
humanitarian electricity i.e. that these areas will temporary
(sic) fall under the consumer category A, for the winter
period 2006/2007, fully justify the basic fact that the
donation should be targeted to the most vulnerable areas.

The most important is that UNMIK fully cooperates with us, in
order to make our proposal technically feasible. This
cooperation implies a readiness for the prompt start of
talks, and for reaching a common understanding on highly
technical, expert level, primarily concerning the power
network exploitation, removal of the bottlenecks, and
monitoring of the donation implementation. Only such
approach could make our proposal really and timely
implemented.

END TEXT.

COMMENT
--------------

13. (SBU) Serbia followed through with its commitment to
offer the donation without all of the strings attached to
last year's proposal. UNMIK had told us that they were
initially amenable to the offer last year until the other
conditions were placed upon it. This current offer provides
two immediate benefits - Kosovar Serbs receive needed
electricity while easing the stress on the grid and improving
system integrity. It also would provide a tangible signal
that increasing cooperation could co-exist with Kosovo final
status; we believe that UNMIK should grab this offer and work
to establish other areas of concrete cooperation.

POLT