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Momentous Implications Of Azerbaijan-Georgia-Turkey Railroad (Part O

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  • Momentous Implications Of Azerbaijan-Georgia-Turkey Railroad (Part O

    MOMENTOUS IMPLICATIONS OF AZERBAIJAN-GEORGIA-TURKEY RAILROAD (PART ONE)
    By Vladimir Socor

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    Nov 27 2007

    Ignoring the anti-constitutional opposition's calls for immediate
    regime change, Georgia began construction work on its section of the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Kars (Turkey) railroad on November 21. The railroad will
    connect Asia and Europe via the South Caucasus. The Georgian section
    is the linchpin to the entire project.

    Presidents Ilham Aliyev, Mikheil Saakashvili, and Abdullah Gul
    attended the groundbreaking ceremony at the Marabda railroad station
    in southeastern Georgia and an inaugural event in Tbilisi. The three
    countries are carrying out this intercontinental project without any
    involvement by other parties or international organizations. With
    the European Union defaulting on its earlier-declared transit policy,
    and the United States neutralized on this issue by anti-Turkish and
    anti-Azeri lobbying in Congress, it is Azerbaijan that has taken the
    lead in this project, serving both regional and Western interests.

    The project will link the railroads of Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Turkey
    by constructing missing links and upgrading old, worn-out sections in
    Georgia and Turkey. When complete, the railroad will link up eastward
    from Baku with Kazakhstan by trans-Caspian shipping lines and westward,
    from the undersea railroad tunnel near Istanbul to wider Europe. The
    project is dubbed an "Iron Silk Road."

    Mainly at Azerbaijan's initiative, in February 2007 the three
    countries signed an intergovernmental agreement to carry out this
    project. It involves building 105 kilometers of track from scratch,
    including 76 kilometers in Turkey and 29 kilometers in Georgia; and
    totally upgrading some 190 kilometers of old dilapidated tracks in
    Georgia. The target date for completion is 2010.

    Project costs are preliminarily estimated at $600 million, including
    $420 million for construction and reconstruction of those railroad
    sections, with the remainder to be spent on related infrastructure.

    The International Bank of Azerbaijan is financing most of the
    construction and reconstruction on Georgian territory. It has agreed to
    give Georgia a $200 million loan on the softest of terms: repayment
    in 25 years at 1% interest. Georgia will repay the loan from the
    revenue generated by the railroad on its territory.

    Turkey is financing and building the railroad section on its
    territory. The Azerbaijani company Azerinshat Service will construct
    the Georgian section.

    Cargo volume on the railroad is anticipated at 5 million tons annually
    in the initial stage after 2010, some 15 million tons by mid-decade,
    and some 30 million tons annually from 2020 onward.

    Passenger service is also envisaged.

    This railroad will reconnect Georgia with the outside world after
    the Russian destruction or blockade of Georgia's railroad outlets to
    Russia. The Georgian railroad's Abkhaz section has been inoperable
    since the 1992-93 Russian military intervention; and other overland
    routes are closed since 2006 as part of Russia's overall transport
    blockade.

    Moreover, the new outlet to Turkey and Europe reorients Georgia's main
    transport axis from the Russian to the Western direction. It "opens
    a window to Europe for Georgia and its citizens," Saakashvili said at
    the groundbreaking event. It can also create tens of thousands of new
    jobs in Georgia and help revitalize the deeply impoverished, mostly
    Armenian-populated Javakheti area, overcoming its economic isolation.

    Azerbaijan had experienced (together with Georgia) the temporary
    blockade of its own railroad and other transport outlets by Russia
    during the two Chechen wars. The railway via Georgia to Turkey and
    Europe will now be safe from that type of Russian action. "This
    railroad will make Azerbaijan and Georgia stronger and more
    independent," Aliyev stated at the groundbreaking event.

    For his part, Gul described this railroad as a "history-changing
    project," one that ultimately links "China to London" on the shortest
    overland route through the South Caucasus and Turkey. Some observers
    anticipate that China will prefer this railroad over Russia's
    Trans-Siberian for Chinese exports to this region and also to certain
    European destinations.

    Kazakhstan is expected to use this railroad for at least 10
    million tons of cargo annually for its booming exports, including
    oil and grain. With grain exports projected at up to 5 million tons
    annually, Kazakhstan is now completing construction of an 800,000-ton
    grain-handling terminal near Baku for storage and transfer from ships
    to railroad.

    Through this railroad, Kazakhstan gains unprecedented, direct access
    to Europe on the shortest overland route. Kazakhstan will be able
    to shift some of its westbound cargoes into this route, away from
    Russian railroads. These charge extortionate rates -- a long-standing
    grievance of Kazakhstan -- in the absence of competition. The
    Azerbaijan-Georgia-Turkey railroad will break Russia's monopoly on
    railroad transport from Kazakhstan and other Central Asian countries,
    just as pipelines through the South Caucasus can break the Russian
    monopoly on oil and gas transit from Central Asia.

    (Trend, Azertaj, Civil Georgia, Messenger, Anatolia, Zaman, November
    21-24; Journal of Turkish Weekly, November 23)

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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