Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06TUNIS2689
2006-11-01 16:29:00
CONFIDENTIAL//NOFORN
Embassy Tunis
Cable title:  

SCRAP THAT TENDER!! ENERCIEL VS STEG -- THE

Tags:  ECON ENRG KIDE EINV TS 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXYZ0001
PP RUEHWEB

DE RUEHTU #2689/01 3051629
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
P 011629Z NOV 06
FM AMEMBASSY TUNIS
TO RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 2145
C O N F I D E N T I A L TUNIS 002689 

SIPDIS

NOFORN
SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

NEA/MAG (MAYA HARRIS),EB/CBA (DWINSTEAD)
STATE PASS USTR
USDOC FOR ITA/MAC/ONE (ROTH AND MASON),ADVOCACY CTR (JAMES)

E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/27/2016
TAGS: ECON ENRG KIDE EINV TS
SUBJECT: SCRAP THAT TENDER!! ENERCIEL VS STEG -- THE
LATEST INSTALLMENT

REF: A. 05 TUNIS 1238

B. 05 TUNIS 1048

C. 05 TUNIS 867

D. 05 TUNIS 776

E. 03 TUNIS 2416

F. 03 TUNIS 426

G. 02 TUNIS 2505

Classified By: CDA David Ballard for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d)

C O N F I D E N T I A L TUNIS 002689

SIPDIS

NOFORN
SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

NEA/MAG (MAYA HARRIS),EB/CBA (DWINSTEAD)
STATE PASS USTR
USDOC FOR ITA/MAC/ONE (ROTH AND MASON),ADVOCACY CTR (JAMES)

E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/27/2016
TAGS: ECON ENRG KIDE EINV TS
SUBJECT: SCRAP THAT TENDER!! ENERCIEL VS STEG -- THE
LATEST INSTALLMENT

REF: A. 05 TUNIS 1238

B. 05 TUNIS 1048

C. 05 TUNIS 867

D. 05 TUNIS 776

E. 03 TUNIS 2416

F. 03 TUNIS 426

G. 02 TUNIS 2505

Classified By: CDA David Ballard for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d)


1. (C) Summary. In recent meetings with representatives of
the U.S. company UPC Wind Partners (UPC) and its subsidiary
Enerciel Tunisie, Emboffs were briefed on the current status
of UPC/Enerciel's wind energy investment (which already
approaches USD 3 million) and their ongoing problems with
GOT's electricity monopoly, Societe Tunisienne d'Electricite
et du Gaz (STEG). The most recent chapter of the
long-running dispute (reftels) surrounds STEG's public tender
for construction of a STEG-owned 120 megawatt (MW) wind
energy project. UPC/Enerciel believes that STEG is again
threatening their test sites and data with this tender and
requested USG support for annulling the tender. During a
follow-up meeting with Enerciel, its representatives related
circumstances of an alleged altercation between UPC/Enerciel
employees and STEG officials accompanied by several purported
thugs associated with STEG which left Enerciel's Tunisian
employees fearing for their safety and that of their
families. Specifically, UPC/Enerciel requested a letter from
the Secretary to Tunisian President Ben Ali (not withstanding
the GOT's non-response to two earlier letters from the
Secretary of Commerce). Absent further information, such as

SIPDIS
proof of a written agreement between the utility and
UPC/Enerciel, Post is not advocating such a move at this
time. Post will continue to raise this issue with
appropriate GOT interlocutors. End Summary.

2.(C) PolEconCouns, EconOff, and Commercial Specialist met
on October 11, 2006 with Peter Gish, UPC's General Counsel
and Managing Director, and Omar Ben Hassine Bey,

representative of its Tunisian subsidiary, Enerciel, at their
request. Gish and Bey reported that on September 23, STEG
issued public tender (No.2006 E 4025) for a 120MW wind energy
project to be built on three contested sites. The sites
involved - Medline, Kechabta, and Ben Aouf - are the same
sites that Enerciel has been using to collect wind data for
its own private wind energy project. UPC/Enerciel views this
tender as an attempt by STEG to use Enerciel's data and
proposed wind energy sites to build a STEG-owned facility.
Enerciel contends that STEG misrepresented to the Ministry of
Industry that STEG controlled subject land. Enerciel argues
that it owns approximately 80% of the land at the Kechabta
site and is working to acquire additional property as soon as
ownership can be ascertained. Gish and Ben Hassine Bey also
accuse STEG of intimidating local land owners to keep them
from selling their land to Enerciel, including by trying to
stir up anti-U.S. sentiment. (Note: Ben Hassine Bey is
actually buying the land and leasing it to Enerciel, as
Tunisian law forbids foreign ownership of agricultural land.
End Note.) Gish has sent a letter to Prime Minister
Ghannouchi protesting STEG's actions and requesting his
assistance in protecting UPC/Enerciel's investments in
Tunisia, but has yet to receive a response.

--------------
EconOff Goes Four-Wheeling to Kechabta
--------------


3. (C) Following the meeting, EconOff accompanied Gish and
Ben Hassine Bey on a visit to the Kechabta site.
UPC/Enerciel noted that STEG employees have been visiting
Enerciel sites since publishing the tender and reported STEG
employees' efforts to intimidate local landowners in an
attempt to get them to break their sales contracts with
Enerciel. STEG employees reportedly have been resorting to
anti-American sentiments, arguing "How can you be selling to
Americans after all they have been doing to our brothers in
Iraq, Lebanon, and Palestine?" Two of Enerciel's field
technicians and a local resident with whom Enerciel has been
consulting with to purchase land told EconOff that STEG
employees conducting such activities had departed just one
hour earlier. The resident consultant also said that STEG
was threatening not to provide local residents with a power
connection if they sold their property to the Americans.
(Comment: These residents are mostly subsistence farmers, who
currently have no connection to power. Thus the promise of
an electrical connection is a significant incentive for them.
Enerciel had told them that whenever the wind energy project
was completed, they would be connected into the local power
grid. End Comment.)


4. (C) One of Enerciel's field technicians had also just
returned from arguing against STEG trying to take Enerciel's
land in the Governorate of Bizerte's regional office.
(Comment: STEG had apparently started a 'process of inquiry'
relative to the land Enerciel had already legally purchased.
The field representative was giving witness to the fact that
the land had been signed over legally at the land registry
and the sales had been recorded at the Ministry of Finance.
End Comment.) The Enerciel field technicians also showed
EconOff a map of the land which Enerciel owned and land that
they were working on purchasing as soon as ownership could be
established. Gish pointed out that there were plenty of
other ridges in the general area, which STEG could have
chosen as sites for their public project. (Comment: EconOff
visually confirmed this assertion, lending credence to
UPC/Enerciel's claim that STEG plans to exploit the data that
UPC/Enerciel shared with it, including analytical reports and
layouts for optimal wind energy production on the assumption
that UPC/Enerciel would have the right to develop and produce
private wind energy there. End Comment.)

--------------
Follow-up Meeting - STEG's Thugs
--------------


5. (C) Econoff, RSO, and Commercial Specialist met again on
October 30, 2006, with Peter Gish and Omar Ben Hassine Bey at
their urgent request. Enerciel was extremely agitated over
an altercation that they said had occurred the previous day.
Enerciel was in the process of closing on the procurement of
an additional parcel of land located at the Kechabta site.
Its field representative and the resident consultant were at
the seller's office in Menzel Bourguiba and Ben Hassine Bey
was on his way with a notary public to sign the paperwork for
the sale. Two representatives from STEG reportedly showed up
at the seller's office and urged him not to sell his property
to Enerciel; STEG would up the offer. The seller was
instructed to wait one hour and a half while STEG got the
money to buy the property. Enerciel countered STEG's offer
with a higher price.


6. (C) Shortly thereafter, a White Renault drove up with
four "thugs" (suspected STEG affiliation but not provable)
who got out of the car and physically pulled Enerciel's field
representative away from the others. The seller allegedly
witnessed that one of them brandished a knife and another
carried a chain and metal bar, so he called the police. The
"thugs" also alleged threatened to burn the Enerciel car in
which the resident consultant was seated. Police arrived on
the scene and took the Enerciel field representative down to
the station. At the same time, police called for another
team to come to the scene and take statements from those
present. As the second police team arrived, the four "thugs"
in the white Renault reportedly drove off. The police began
taking statements from the witnesses, but then the Director
General of STEG's regional office in Bizerte appeared on the
scene and called the police aside. After speaking privately
with the Director General for several minutes, the police
went back to the witnesses and told them to go home,
indicating that no statements would be taken and no official
report of the incident would be filed. The Enerciel field
representative was released after Mr. Ben Hassine Bey arrived
at the police station where he was being held. Enerciel's
local employees are now sufficiently scared and worried about
their safety to keep them from performing their jobs,
according to Gish and Ben Hassine Bey.

--------------
Enerciel Seals the Land Deal
--------------


7. (C) In the aftermath of the above incident the seller of
the land allegedly indicated in front of STEG representatives
that he was so disgusted by their behavior that he would sell
his property to "the Americans or even the Israelis before
selling it to STEG!" He then went ahead with the originally
planned sale of his land to Enerciel. On October 31, this
seller was summoned to the La Marsa delegate to the
Governor's office and told that Bizerte's delegate to the
Governor's office had called him and told him about the
seller publicly declaring in front of others that he would
sell land to the Americans or even the Israelis before

selling to STEG. The La Marsa delegate then proceeded to ask
him why he had said this and why he sold his land to the
Americans.


8. (C) Enerciel indicated that it intends to lodge a
complaint in Carthage and with Madame Alifa Farouk - the
Mediateur Administratif (Office under the Presidency that
deals with the behavior of public officials) over this latest
incident. Enerciel has also promised to provide EconOff and
RSO with a report detailing the incident, including names of
parties involved and statements from the witnesses. If the
Enerciel field representative and the seller consent to be
interviewed, EconOff and RSO will go the Enerciel's offices
in Carthage to conduct the interview. (Note. Enerciel
indicated that they would not want to come to the Embassy for
the interview, fearing that they would be followed and
something bad would happen to them, if they were seen going
into the American Embassy. End Note.)

--------------
Background
--------------


9. (C) Reftels provide background on Enerciel's dealings and
problems encountered during the eight years that it has been
trying to get its private wind energy development project up
and running. Key milestones are summarized as follows:

-- In late 1998, Enerciel approached the GOT with a proposal
to study wind energy.

-- The GOT gave Enerciel permission to set up some test sites
and gather wind data which it was agreed would be shared with
STEG.

-- According to UPC/Enerciel, the data obtained was to be
owned by both STEG and UPC/Enerciel for a period of five
years and could not be used by a third party without the
agreement of both STEG and Enerciel. (Comment: Post has not
seen documentation substantiating this claim. End Comment.)

-- Since then, Enerciel has submitted numerous proposals to
GOT to develop private wind energy on the test sites which
demonstrated the best potential.

-- Enerciel has met with various GOT ministers and officials
to pitch these proposals and contends that it has repeatedly
been given verbal or at least implied assurance that it would
be allowed to proceed with a private wind energy project.


10. (C) In spite of these reported assurances, Ben Arfa,
Director General of STEG, has succeeded in blocking private
sector wind energy development. STEG is staunchly against
private (particularly if it is American) electricity
development -- the root of UPC/Enerciel's problems. Even
though the GOT has publicly indicated that it intends to
support the independent production of 100 megawatts of wind
energy as part of Tunisia's greater development plans, the
STEG DG seems to have a stranglehold over private wind energy
development. Post has been unable to confirm exactly where
Ben Arfa's power comes from; indications would seem to point
to connections to the presidential palace. Ben Arfa has just
been given another extension (his fifth),which allows him to
work past the Tunisian mandatory retirement age, and it
appears unlikely that private wind energy development will be
authorized as long as he controls STEG.


11. (C) POST RECOMMENDATION: Emboffs meet regularly with
Enerciel and Post has intervened with the GOT each time
Enerciel has encountered problems. The Secretary of Commerce
twice wrote to President Ben Ali (in April 2005 and April
2006) about this case. Two previous Ambassadors and EconOffs
have raised the issue with their interlocutors each time the
issue has come to a head. Other than verbal indications that
the GOT would be supporting private wind energy development
in the future, none of these interventions has received a
written response. While Enerciel has made a substantial
investment in wind energy development in Tunisia, Post is not
convinced that Enerciel has proven a strong enough legal
basis to merit a letter from the Secretary. (Comment:
Without corroborating documents Enerciel has not yet provided
Post, it is difficult to prove that fundamental assertions
made by Enerciel are true. Moreover, Post has long advocated
that Enerciel seek competent legal representation in Tunisia.
It may be that their failure to do so reflects a reluctance
to have their case decided on the basis of
contractual/regulatory law. End Comment.) Post will
continue to bring the issue to the attention of relevant GOT
officials and suggests that the Department double-track these
representations with the Tunisian Ambassador in Washington.
BALLARD