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  • Time: Oil's Vital New Power

    Time: Oil's Vital New Power

    19 January 2007 [17:48] - _Today.Az_
    (http://www.today.az/news/politics/3517 8.html)

    In the control room of Azerbaijan's sprawling oil terminal near the
    capital, Baku, Bala Mirza sits peering at a fuzzy map on a computer
    monitor. The outline of Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey looks like
    little more than a jumble of hills and farming towns. But for the
    engineer, 41, what lies underground has rocked his world: a new
    1,100-mile oil pipeline, which in recent months has tied this tiny
    country on the edge of the Caspian Sea to the huge Western
    market. "There is a lot of oil and a lot of money," says Mirza, who
    spent 14 years earning about $10 a month working on a creaking old
    Soviet oil rig. "And because there is a lot of money, our lives will
    surely improve."

    The stakes in Azerbaijan's new pipeline are far higher than the
    fortunes of just Mirza and his family. This Muslim republic, directly
    north of Iran and tucked into the southwest corner of the vast former
    Soviet empire, is suddenly a central player in one of the West's most
    distressing problems: how the U.S. and Europe will secure enough oil
    and gas to power cities, factories, airplanes and cars--in short, how
    to keep our entire modern lives afloat. Since last June, hundreds of
    thousands of barrels of oil a day have surged through a pipeline
    running from Baku through Georgia's capital, Tbilisi, to Turkey's
    Mediterranean port of Ceyhan. Named the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC), the
    $4 billion pipeline is one of the world's longest and is operated by
    the British-American oil company BP, with partners that include
    U.S. oil companies Chevron, ConocoPhillips and Hess. By spring, about
    1 million bbl. a day will move down the pipe, and BP could increase
    that soon after to about 1.5 million bbl. a day. A parallel BP
    pipeline opened last month to send hundreds of billionsof cubic feet
    of natural gas from the Caspian to Western Europe, in order to break
    the Continent's overwhelming reliance on Russia.

    As a piece of engineering, the BTC pipeline is a brilliant
    geopolitical bank shot. Built over three years, the pipeline had to
    skirt war zones in the Armenian-occupied Nagorno-Karabakh region in
    Azerbaijan, and in Georgia, which has been in a conflict with South
    Ossetian separatists. Then there were the engineering issues: the
    pipeline had to pass under about 1,500 rivers. At one point BP hired
    400 archaeologists to sift through the mountain of ancient artifacts
    unearthed along the way. Equally daunting was the political
    wrangling: two of the three countries changed Presidents during
    construction, requiring lengthy renegotiations over the deal.

    But to the countries and the global oil companies, the benefits are so
    compelling that they trump politics and old ethnic rivalries. The
    Caspian's oil and natural gas reserves, which some estimates have put
    as large as 200 billion bbl. (vs. 260 billion in Saudi Arabia), could
    deliver economic independence to the South Caucasus region and energy
    independence to the West. "This is about diversifying energy
    supplies," says Michael Townshend, a BP executive who ran the project
    in Baku until last year. "It is not from the Middle East and it is not
    from Russia."

    Fifteen years after the Soviet Union's collapse, it's tempting to
    think of the cold war as history--until you land in Baku. This is the
    front line ofa new East-West contest, one that is as consequential as
    the nuclear-weapons face-off of the past: the battle for energy
    supplies among countries heavily dependent on imported oil and gas,
    which include the U.S. and the E.U., plus the rocketing economies of
    China and India. That necessity is a powerful weapon in this new
    battle. Shortly before Christmas, Russian President Vladimir Putin
    forced Royal Dutch Shell to cede control of Sakhalin II, the world's
    biggest oil and gas project, to the state-owned giant Gazprom, opening
    theNorth Pacific island's vast resources to Asian markets. The $7.45
    billion price was small to Gazprom, whose value has soared from $9
    billion in 2000 to $270 billion today, after years of record energy
    prices.

    That's given Russia immense power to dictate terms for much of
    Europe. In one power play, the Russians briefly blocked gas last
    winter to Ukraine, leaving millions freezing. In December, Putin
    threatened to do the same toBelarus unless it began paying
    Western-level gas prices. Belarus agreed. Infuriated that Azerbaijan's
    new BP-operated pipeline to the West bypasses Russia, Putin has said
    he intends to double gas prices for Azerbaijan, which in turn
    threatened to stop exporting its oil through the Russian-controlled
    section of the Baku-Novorossiysk pipeline to the Black Sea. "We want
    to put an end to this!" says Khosbakht Yusifzadeh, slamming his fist
    on his desk. He is the aging first vice president of the State Oil
    Co. of Azerbaijan and spent decades as a Soviet official. The
    country's best shot at breaking Russia's grip is BP's parallel gas
    pipeline, which in December began transporting gas from Azerbaijan's
    massive Caspian Sea gas field named Shah Deniz. "I see it now," says
    Yusifzadeh, looking at a wall map of the Caspian Sea in his office. "A
    photo of Shah Deniz with the caption: THIS IS THE PLACE THAT MADE
    AZERBAIJAN INDEPENDENT OF RUSSIA."

    That could take a while. Azerbaijan--which BP says stands to earn
    about $230 billion from BP's pipeline during the next 20 years--has
    rarely been independent either of Russia's influence or foreign
    treasure hunters. Baku's élite included the Rothschilds during the
    1890s, when Azerbaijan produced half the world's oil supply. Oil
    production slid steadily as the Soviets let the infrastructure
    rot. Today hundreds of rusted oil derricks and pump jacks, many
    predating World War II, cram the seafront outside Baku like a
    scrap-metal forest, with old Soviet tractors turning several
    wells. The astonishing sight was memorialized in the 1999 James Bond
    movie The World Is Not Enough. Towering over the area now is a
    16,000-ton water-injection platform being built by BP, which will be
    towed to an oil field 75 miles offshore, where the company expects to
    pump about 320,000 bbl. a day beginning in April 2008. "This isa time
    of big change," says Mushvig Osmanov, 26, an Azeri engineer for BP,
    standing atop the half-built platform, gazing at the crumbling old oil
    wells. "Suddenly we have Western styles and tastes."

    Those new energy-fueled tastes are turning Baku into a boomtown,
    despite widespread poverty in the rest of the country. Regular Azeris,
    who have an average cash income of $1,140 a year, are reeling from
    inflation (tomatoeshave recently doubled in price). But much of Baku
    is upbeat and partying. "There's a mood that Azerbaijan is now
    sustainable," says Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov. BP's operation
    has brought in thousands of oil workers and businesspeople, mostly
    British, who pack nightclubs with names like Le Chevalier and Le
    Mirage to dance with local women dressed in spiked boots and
    miniskirts.

    Baku's billboards announce this season's store openings, including
    Harry Winston, Cartier and Giorgio Armani. Others offer 18.7% interest
    at the Bank of Baku.

    One evening, I watched a fashion show to open the new store of Escada,
    the German luxury label. Baku's rich sipped California Merlot, while
    models flown in from Moscow walked the makeshift runway. There are 300
    apartment buildings currently under construction in Baku and 250
    others have recently opened, says Elnur Asadov, a real estate agent
    who guides me around a new three-story mansion with an indoor swimming
    pool and sauna. "People buy apartments when the ground is broken and
    sell when the building is up," he says. "That way they can double
    their money."

    The U.S. sees its alliance with a republic of just 8.4 million
    people--about the same population as New York City--as key to securing
    energy supplies at a time when China and the rest of Asia are
    competing for new sources. The Caspian, which is largely unexplored,
    probably accounts for 7% of the world's oil reserves, and the oil
    flowing through the new West-bound pipeline still represents a mere 1%
    of global supply. But ultimately some of the gas from Khazakstan and
    Turkmenistan's much larger natural-gas fields across the Caspian from
    Baku could flow through BP's pipelines, turning to the West rather
    than to Asia. "The pipeline is changing the strategic map in a very
    major way," says a senior State Department official.

    A glance at the map shows why: Azerbaijan is sandwiched between two
    energy giants--Iran to the south and Russia to the north--allies and
    old U.S. foes whose reserves will last decades. The U.S. has three
    interests in Azerbaijan: securing energy, spreading democracy and
    fighting terrorism. Vafa Guluzadeh, a former adviser to President
    Heydar Aliyev, whose decade-long rule over Azerbaijan ended in 2003
    when he maneuvered his son Ilham's succession, remembers translating a
    phone call from President Bill Clinton to his boss in 1994.

    "Clinton said, 'Mr President, we need to diversify the oil
    pipelines. We need a new route.' It was all a very strategic plan,"
    says Guluzadeh, sipping coffee in Baku's Park Hyatt, where Western and
    Asian businesspeople fill the $250-a-night rooms.

    Thirteen years later, Azerbaijan is one of the few Muslim countries to
    fight in Iraq alongside American soldiers. The U.S. has financed two
    radar stations in Azerbaijan, one a few miles from the Iranian
    border. U.S. NavySEALs have trained teams to guard the Caspian's
    underwater pipelines, and U.S. Customs agents have overseen border and
    airport security systems. With Baku just a couple of hours' drive from
    Iran, "Azerbaijan could be the world's only secular country with a
    Shi'ite majority," says the State Department official.

    Azerbaijan might be secular, but it is hardly democratic. Local
    elections in 2005 and the presidential vote that brought Ilham Aliyev
    to power in 2003 were both flawed, according to U.N. and American
    election observers. A free press? Hardly. One afternoon in December,
    TIME's team was taken to a police station near Baku and questioned for
    three hours about our activities. In Baku, the late former President's
    face peers down from billboards, and a huge statue of him stands in
    one of the many Heydar Aliyev parks. On the third anniversary of
    Aliyev's death, in December, government television channelsaired
    round-the-clock programming about his life. The footage aired also on
    large screens on street corners.

    But can Azerbaijan grow richer without growing freer? Some Azeris
    believe Western governments prefer energy security to political
    freedom, as was sought in the 2004 revolution in Ukraine--a major
    transhipper of natural gas to Western Europe. "The U.S. will never
    support democrats in Azerbaijan because of their oil interests," says
    Guluzadeh. But Azeris might start to demand more democracy if oil
    revenues do not trickle down. The country is listed as one of the
    world's most corrupt by the Berlin-based Transparency
    International. "The average citizen is very suspicious of the
    government," says a Western official in Baku, who did not want to be
    named. "But if the oil wealth is not distributed, you will see people
    wanting a change."

    Back in the oil terminal outside Baku, Bala Mirza, the engineer at the
    computer monitor, says he has already reaped benefits from the new oil
    boom. His life is barely recognizable from those days when he earned
    $10 a month on that offshore Soviet rig. Since joining the pipeline
    project in 2003, he has bought a car for himself and for his father,
    who worked in Soviet oil production for 30 years. But the real test of
    how Azerbaijan has changed will be the future of Mirza's daughter, who
    is now 10. "When all our oil is finished, say, in 50 years from now,
    there should be no problems for her." So until then, party on, Baku.

    By Vivienne Walt
    TIME magazine

    URL: _http://www.today.az/news/politics/35178.html_
    (ht tp://www.today.az/news/politics/35178.html)
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