person:berat albayrak

  • Six journalistes jugés pour avoir divulgué des secrets du clan Erdogan
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/international/251017/six-journalistes-juges-pour-avoir-divulgue-des-secrets-du-clan-erdogan

    Une trentaine de personnes ont manifesté devant le palais de justice leur soutien à leurs confrères. Sur la banderole, on peut lire : « Informer n’est pas un crime. Liberté pour les journalistes ». © N. C. Le procès de six journalistes turcs, accusés de liens avec des organisations terroristes après avoir publié des informations sur les correspondances électroniques de Berat Albayrak, ministre de l’énergie et gendre du président Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a débuté mardi à Istanbul. Les courriels, piratés par des hackers, ont mis en évidence une possible implication du clan Erdogan dans un trafic de pétrole avec l’Irak.

    #International #Journalisme #turquie

  • Argent du pétrole, énergie et médias : le gendre d’Erdogan est une clé du régime
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/international/210517/argent-du-petrole-energie-et-medias-le-gendre-derdogan-est-une-cle-du-regi

    Tayyip Erdogan et #Berat_Albayrak, lors d’un meeting de la campagne pour le référendum, le 5 avril 2017 à Rize. © Reuters Parachuté ministre de l’énergie à 37 ans, Berat Albayrak, le gendre du président turc #Recep_Tayyip_Erdogan, a acquis au cours des derniers mois une étonnante visibilité médiatique. Il est en tout cas l’une des pièces maîtresses du « système Erdogan », un bras droit dont les secrets sont étroitement protégés par la justice turque, comme l’ont appris à leurs dépens plusieurs journalistes et le site WikiLeaks.

    #International

  • Energy dreams in the days of power cuts
    https://tr.boell.org/de/2017/01/11/energy-dreams-days-power-cuts

    The biggest city of Turkey, and its economic heartland, Istanbul has ended the year 2016 with power cuts over several days. Besides causing public outrage towards the provider companies, the power cuts also meant economic losses for private businesses. According to the Turkish Automotive Parts Industry Association (TAYSAD), car manufacturers lost almost 300 million Euros in these few days. Escalating winter conditions made power cuts hard to tolerate for consumers as well, as a good amount of houses are using electrical heaters. This situation is not without irony for a country that is hoping to become a global energy hub.

    A photo showing Energy Minister Berat Albayrak, President Erdoğan’s son-in-law, seemingly berating the head of TEİAŞ, the company responsible for the electricity transmission lines spoke volumes about how unpleasant the political outfall from the cuts might be for the government. While the minister and the pro-government media have pointed to the possibility of an international conspiracy against the national electricity network, it is clear that at a time, when the government is hoping to rally public support for a constitutional referendum, these cuts will not help their ratings.

    Even after the damage was repaired, the experts have continued warning that the problem is lying deeper and further cuts are to be expected mainly owing to the shortage in natural gas. Iran, the second biggest exporter to Turkey, has cut down the gas flow in December 2016 due to technical reasons, a development increasing the already existing deficit. BOTAŞ has repeated that it will cut supply to gas-fired power plants early in January. These cuts in urban centers have only been postponed as the weather conditions worsened last week.

    Another challenge for the energy security of the country is the falling currency exchange rate. Most energy imports are traded in Dollars and the electricity companies are among those holding high amounts of debts in foreign currencies

    #Turquie #Electricité #Coupure #Gaz naturel

  • Turkey blames sabotage, cyberattacks from US soil for power cuts — RT News
    https://www.rt.com/news/372957-turkey-power-grid-hacking

    Sabotage of underground powerlines and cyberattacks originating in the US were contributing factors in the power outages which Istanbul and other parts of Turkey have been experiencing since last week, the country’s energy minister said.

    “Yesterday, we faced an intense, US-originated cyber attack. These attacks have been carried out systematically on different parts of the Energy Ministry, but we have repelled them all,” Turkish Energy Minister Berat Albayrak said in an interview with A Haber TV.

    He added that ministry staff responding to power cuts discovered sabotage of underground lines in three districts of Istanbul.

    #Turquie #Electricité #Complot

    • Et pour quelques éléments d’explications moins complotistes : privatisation, météo, géopolitique, incompétence de l’État...

      Turkey’s energy watchdog EPDK imposes two-month cap on power prices
      http://energy.economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/power/turkeys-energy-watchdog-epdk-imposes-two-month-cap-on-power-prices/56386439

      ANKARA: Turkey’s energy watchdog EPDK imposed a two-month cap of 500 liras per megawatt hour on electricity prices on Friday after prices rose to their highest level in years.

      Turkey’s daily natural gas consumption has risen to record highs since December, largely due to colder-than-usual weather triggering higher power consumption.

      The day-ahead electricity price at Turkey’s energy exchange (EPIAS) rose to 586 lira ($162) per megawatt hour last month with hourly prices as high as 1,900 lira, data from the exchange showed. Such levels were the highest in years, traders said.

      In a decision announced in the Official Gazette on Friday, Turkey’s EPDK said a 500 liras ($138.06) per megawatt hour cap would be imposed on electricity prices from January 6 to March 1, 2017.

      “With this decision, the EPDK is attempting to protect the consumer, supplier and producer from prices rising and falling unpredictably, and reduce the effects of seasonal weather conditions on energy prices,” the EPDK said in a statement.

      Day-ahead power price in EPIAS on Friday stood at 176.03 lira per MWh, data on its website showed.

      Traders have criticised poor supply planning and lack of coordination by the state energy authorities.

      State pipeline operator Botas has cut 75 percent of supplies to gas-fired power plants and advised industrial firms to cut non-critical output.

      In addition to mounting demand triggered by persistent cold weather, Turkey decided not to set its clocks back as usual this winter which led to a rise in electricity consumption rather than the planned energy savings.

  • Les Redhack détiennent les mails du Ministre de l’Energie-Kedistan
    http://www.kedistan.net/2016/09/24/redhack-detient-mails-ministre

    @Ad Nauseam - Les RedHack annoncent avoir piraté les comptes e-mail personnels Gmail, Yahoo et iCloud de Berat Albayrak, le Ministre de l’Energie. Ils revendiquent la libération de tout-es les opposant-es de gauche, commençant par Alp Altınörs et Aslı Erdoğan et déclarent que dans le cas contraire, le dossier de (...)

    #Kedistan / #Mediarezo

  • Turkish delegation in Gaza to discuss electricity crisis http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/turkish-delegation-in-gaza-to-discuss-electricity-crisis.aspx?pag

    delegation from Turkey’s Energy and Natural Resources Ministry is currently visiting the Gaza Strip to discuss means of meeting the coastal enclave’s demand for electricity.

    The visit came two weeks after Ankara and Tel Aviv agreed to normalize relations following a six-year hiatus.
    According to ministry sources, members of the delegation, which arrived in the strip late on July 10, will meet both Israeli officials and representatives of Gaza’s Hamas-run government to discuss means of resolving the problems facing the territory’s energy sector.

    Following its visit to Gaza, the Turkish delegation is expected to provide a report on its findings to Energy and Natural Resources Minister Berat Albayrak.

    The report will include an assessment of the strip’s energy needs, facts about local production, transmission and distribution of energy and recommendations for tackling the chronic problems plaguing Gaza’s electricity infrastructure.

    The report will also be submitted to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and the Turkish cabinet, after which a roadmap will be prepared on the means of implementing the report’s recommendations.

    A number of private Turkish companies have reportedly expressed interest in helping meet Gaza’s energy needs in terms of the production, transmission and distribution of energy.

    @rumor #Turquie #Gaza #Electricité

  • Istanbul could face electricity cuts if big investments not made
    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/istanbul-could-face-electricity-cuts-if-big-investments-not-made-

    Istanbul could face a serious electricity shortage over the next couple of years unless necessary investments are made, Energy Minister Berat Albayrak told journalists flying with him from Beijing to Ankara after a meeting of G-20 energy ministers.

    “If required investments to renew the outmoded infrastructure are not made immediately, Istanbul will face serious power cuts in the next three to five years. We have been carrying large amounts of electricity from Anatolia and the Black Sea region to Istanbul, which poses a big risk,” Albayrak said, daily Milliyet reported on July 4.

    He added that the Marmara region, where Istanbul is located, consumes a third of Turkey’s total electricity use.
    The government will open new tenders in the upcoming period to gradually increase the use of local coal reserves in Turkey’s electricity production, Albayrak said.

    “Some claim that Turkey is turning to coal reserves at a time when the world is turning to renewables. But it should be remembered that the share of the use of coal reserves in Turkey is just 13 percent, which is much lower than the world average of 35-40 percent,” he added.

    The energy minister said the aim was to make new coal-fired power plants reach capacities of more than 4,000 megawatts (MW).

    The government had recently stated that 85 percent of Turkey’s electricity infrastructure will be modernized over the next five years, with an investment of around 18 billion Turkish Liras.

    #Electricité #Turquie #Charbon

  • #Turquie : vers une rupture Erdogan-Davutoglu
    http://www.lemonde.fr/europe/article/2016/05/05/turquie-le-parti-au-pouvoir-organise-un-congres-exceptionnel-l-avenir-du-pre

    M. Erdogan, qui ambitionne d’un pouvoir présidentiel fort, a déjà rogné les pouvoirs et le contrôle de M. Davutoglu sur l’#AKP. Le 29 avril, le comité exécutif du parti, composé aux trois quarts de fidèles du président Erdogan, lui a retiré le pouvoir de nommer les dirigeants du parti dans les régions.

    Si M. Davutoglu dirige officiellement l’AKP, M. Erdogan, censé être au-dessus de tout parti en tant que chef de l’Etat, dispose de nombreux fidèles au sein de la formation politique qu’il a fondée en 2001.

    Les successeurs potentiels de M. Davutoglu sont nombreux et deux noms sont régulièrement cités par la presse : Binali Yildirim, ministre des transports et vieux compagnon de route du président, et Berat Albayrak, ministre de l’énergie et gendre du chef de l’Etat.

  • Who’s Buying ISIS’ Oil? | Alternet
    By Vijay Prashad / CounterPunch
    December 10, 2015
    http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/whos-buying-isis-oil

    On December 2, Russia’s Deputy Minister of Defense Anatoly Antonov made a strong statement about Turkish complicity with ISIS. The charge sheet is long and detailed. It mentions many aspects, but the most incendiary is the accusation about “ISIS oil.”

    ISIS controls Iraqi oil fields near Mosul. They have been making millions of dollars each day by selling oil from these fields. How does ISIS get the oil from the fields in Mosul to the market?

    What ISIS has done is to use the old networks that have smuggled oil from the Kurdish Regional Government without any consideration given to Baghdad’s sovereignty over that oil. This had been a point of contention for decades, since the Kurdish region began to exercise autonomous control of the north. Kurdish oil was sold to smugglers who would cart them in tankers across the border into Turkey. In Turkey the trucks would run the length of the country to the Mediterranean port of Ceyhan. From Ceyhan, which is a port run by the Turkish government, the oil is purchased by transporters whose ships go to Malta, where the oil is transshipped to destinations such as Ashdod (Israel). This has long been a bone of contention between the Iraqi government, the Kurdish Regional Government and the Turkish government. It was documented by Tolga Tanış in his book Potus ve Beyefendi (2015). Tanis accuses Berat Albayrak, son-in-law of Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, of involvement in this illegal scheme. ISIS has merely replaced the Kurdish Regional Government in the new arrangement.

    #Pétrole #EI #ISIS