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Kazakhstan eyes share of Georgian gas pipelines

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  • Kazakhstan eyes share of Georgian gas pipelines

    Kazakhstan eyes share of Georgian gas pipelines


    ASTANA, March 31 (Reuters) - Kazakh firms should get part ownership of
    Georgia's gas pipelines in return for supplying gas, President
    Nursultan Nazarbayev said on Thursday, one day after Kazakhstan
    muscled in on a huge international oil project.

    Nazarbayev was hosting Georgia's President Mikhail Saakashvili on his
    first visit to the energy-rich Central Asian state, which lies across
    the Caspian Sea from Georgia.

    Saakashvili told a joint news conference that Georgia's energy needs
    would double when new power stations, now under construction, came on
    stream. "Kazakh gas could come to Georgia," Nazarbayev said. "Kazakh
    gas suppliers would need to get a large share of control over the
    pipeline system in Georgia."

    Saakashvili did not comment on the suggestion and neither president
    explained how Kazakh gas would get to Georgia, which relies on
    supplies from giant neighbour Russia, where pipelines are controlled
    by gas monopoly Gazprom.

    Gazprom also wants to own the pipelines, which it uses to supply gas
    to Georgia and Armenia.

    But the United States, where Saakashvili has close ties, is against a
    Gazprom buyout, fearing the monopoly power of the world's biggest gas
    firm in the tiny Georgian market.

    Georgia is also the route for the Baku-Ceyhan pipeline, along which a
    BP-led consortium is due to start pumping oil later this year,
    including crude produced in the Caspian.

    BP and Norway's Statoil also plan to build a gas pipeline from
    Azerbaijan to central Turkey via Georgia later this decade, which will
    run parallel to Baku-Ceyhan.

    Despite its fabulous energy wealth, Kazakhstan faces the problem of
    getting its oil and gas to distant markets.

    An ENI-led international consortium has a 40-year production sharing
    agreement to develop Kazakhstan's offshore Kashagan oilfield, which is
    due to start pumping oil in 2008.

    After trying for months to get into the project, Kazakhstan agreed the
    purchase of half of BG's $1.8 billion, 16.67 percent stake in the
    giant field.

    Kazakhstan has also proposed selling gas to China, and is studying the
    possibility of building a pipeline eastwards.



    03/31/05 09:03 ET

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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