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  • US Leans on Caspian Pipeline Partners

    US Leans on Caspian Pipeline Partners
    March 07 - 2008

    (http://www.iwpr.net/?apc_state=3Dpenfrca343 216&l=3Dru&s=3Df&o=3D343216)

    Washingt on is working to end disputes between Turkmenistan and
    Azerbaijan in the hopeof getting a major new pipeline project moving.
    United States diplomat Steven Mann flew into Turkmenistan for the
    second time this year on February 28, on a mission to get the Central
    State firmly behind the planned Trans-Caspian Gas Pipeline, TCGP.

    When the Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State met President
    Gurbanguly Berdymuhammedov in Ashgabat, energy issues were at the top
    of the agenda.

    Washington wants to see Ashgabat actively committed to building a
    pipeline that would for the first time bring Central Asian gas to the
    West without going through Russia.

    Mann has been alternating visits to Turkmenistan and Azerbaijan, which
    lies on the other side of the Caspian Sea and would be another key
    project participant. Three days before flying to Ashgabat, the
    diplomat was in the Azerbaijani capital Baku, where a tender for a
    feasibility study for TCGP has already taken place.

    The proposed pipeline would stretch almost 2,000 kilometres from
    Turkmenistan under the Caspian Sea floor to Turkey.

    There it would connect up to the planned Nabucco pipeline, which is
    intended to run from Turkey to Austria via Bulgaria, Romania and
    Hungary.

    TCGP would be capable of carrying 30-32 billion cubic metres of
    natural gas a year, most of it from Turkmen and Azerbaijani deposits.

    The idea for a gas pipeline circumventing Russia was first floated in
    1998, but has not been implemented so far.

    There are several reasons for this, one of which is that the Kremlin,
    the main buyer of Turkmen hydrocarbons and owner of the only major gas
    pipeline out of Central Asia, has actively opposed the project.

    Iran, too, is against a western pipeline being laid close to its
    territory, especially as the Caspian's waters have yet to be finally
    demarcated among littoral states.

    Finally, there is the unresolved dispute between Turkmenistan and
    Azerbaijan over who owns a large offshore field which the Azerbaijanis
    call Kapaz and the Turkmen call Serdar.

    This ownership dispute will only be finally resolved when the status
    of the sea itself has been determined. All five littoral states -
    Iran, Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan, Kazakstan and Russia - have different
    visions ofhow this should be done.

    Ashgabat and Baku have been particularly at loggerheads. Azerbaijan
    favours a plan where a median line would be drawn down the centre of
    the sea and individual national sectors then sliced up on either side
    of it. That would give it an advantage in claiming oil deposits.

    Turkmenistan, however, wants the sea to be divided in such a way as to
    divide oil wells according to how close they are to national borders.

    With concerted US diplomacy, observers believe the pipeline may
    finally be about to get off the ground.

    They say the time for a deal has never been more favourable, as Russia
    is currently absorbed in domestic affairs, having just elected a new
    president.

    Mars Sariev, an NBCentral Asia political expert, said the US diplomat
    had timed his latest visits to the region to coincide with a `power
    paralysis' in the Kremlin.

    `Mann is taking advantage of the moment to exert pressure on Ashgabat
    to resolve its disputes with Azerbaijan,' he explained.

    `Berdymuhammedov and [Azerbaijani president Ilham] Aliyev may be able
    to reach a consensus under the aegis of the Americans and with [the
    promise of] massive western investment.'

    Sariev's argument would appear to be backed up by the
    inter-governmental talks between Turkmenistan and Azerbaijan which
    began in Baku on March 5.

    Equally significantly, the foreign ministries of the two countries
    have also started consulting on an official visit which the Turkmen
    leader will pay to Azerbaijan in the first half of this year.

    `By the time Berdymuhammedov visits Baku, the issue of the disputed
    areas will have been solved in essence,' predicted Sariev.

    Rovshan Ibrahimov, an expert with the Turkey-based International
    Strategic Research Organisation, also expects US diplomatic efforts to
    play a role in bringing Baku and Ashgabat together.

    `If these assumptions prove correct, the last obstacle will have been
    cleared away for talks on the demarcation and status of the Caspian,
    whichare essential to making TCGP a reality,' he said.

    Analysts predict US diplomacy could prompt a firmer Turkmen commitment
    to the pipeline project.

    Filling the future pipeline to capacity would require more natural gas
    than is currently available, and Turkmenistan will need foreign
    investment if it is to increase its extraction levels.

    `The US could be a potential investor here,' noted Ibrahimov.

    (NBCentralAsia is an IWPR-funded project to create a multilingual news
    analysis and comment service for Central Asia, drawing on the
    expertise ofa broad range of political observers across the
    region. The project ran from August 2006 to September 2007, covering
    all five regional states. With new funding, the service is resuming,
    covering only Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan for the moment.)


    © Institute for War & Peace Reporting
    48 Gray's Inn Road, London WC1X 8LT, UK
    Tel: +44 (0)20 7831 1030 Fax: +44 (0)20 7831 1050
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