
Russian President Vladimir Putin (L) and President of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan during a meeting in Baku, Azerbaijan June 13, 2015.
Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Turkish opposite number, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, met face to face on neutral territory on the Caspian Sea to reportedly discuss bilateral relations and energy and hydrocarbon supply.
During a photo session that preceded the talks, the presidents didn't talk much and only exchanged opinions about the previous day's opening ceremony. The presidents agreed the ceremony was superb and wished success to the host team of Azerbaijan.
When President Erdogan remarked that none of the EU leaders had attended the event, President Putin replied: "As EU accession candidate, Turkey represented the whole of the European Union."
The Russian delegation included Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, Energy Minister Aleksandr Novak, head of Gazprom Aleksey Miller, head of Rosatom nuclear monopoly Sergey Kirienko and the Russian president's senior foreign policy adviser, Yury Ushakov.
On the second day of his visit to Azerbaijan, President Erdogan met with his Russian counterpart Putin. pic.twitter.com/n73Uu9XJI9— Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu (@MevlutCavusoglu) June 13, 2015In December 2014, after opposition from the EU, Russia announced the scrapping of the South Stream gas pipeline project that would have bypassed the current routes via Ukraine. Moscow presented a new project, the Turkish Stream - a gas pipeline that will pass through Turkey.
This new 1,100-kilometer transportation route will be laid out under the Black Sea from Russia to Turkey. It will deliver Russian gas to Turkey and the EU border. Europe will have to arrange a means of accessing the gas by itself.
The Turkish Stream will consist of four lines with a capacity of up to 63 billion cubic meters of gas per year. Some 16 billion will be reserved for Turkey; the rest will go to Europe when the necessary infrastructure is in place.
In 2014, Russia supplied 27.4 billion cubic meters of gas to Turkey, primarily through the Blue Stream pipeline that also passes across the Black Sea. Russia and Turkey agreed earlier to increase Blue Stream capacity from 16 to 19 billion cubic meters per year.
The agenda of the presidents' meeting in Baku remains unknown, although ahead of the talks the Russian president's press secretary, Dmitry Peskov, revealed they intended to discuss bilateral energy relations and the situation in Syria, adding the meeting of the two presidents is going to be "important."
"First of all they (Putin and Erdogan) have not met for quite some time," Peskov noted.
Tension between Moscow and Ankara had arisen after Putin attended the commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the genocide of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire (Turkey), which took place in Yerevan, the capital of Armenia.
President Erdogan had threatened to withdraw the Turkish ambassador from Russia, but the meeting in Baku apparently diffused things. President Putin congratulated Erdogan on his party's win in Turkey's parliamentary elections on June 7.





Comment: Putin smoothing relations with Turkey. Their conversation about Syria would be interesting to hear.