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Economist: The dangers of the safe route; Caucasian pipelines

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  • Economist: The dangers of the safe route; Caucasian pipelines

    The Economist
    August 16, 2008
    U.S. Edition



    The dangers of the safe route; Caucasian pipelines

    How conflicts in the Caucasus affect Western oil




    Georgia?s pipelines to the West weren?t bombed but they remain
    vulnerable

    IT?S not just the Russian-Georgian conflict that has made August such
    a rotten month for the West?s favourite oil pipeline. On August 5th a
    pumping station on the 1,100-mile (1,760km) Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC)
    pipeline in eastern Turkey was set ablaze. The PKK Kurdish separatists
    claimed responsibility. The entire route, which had been carrying
    850,000 barrels of Caspian crude oil a day to Western markets, shut
    down and world oil prices, which had been falling, nudged up
    again. BP, which spent $4 billion on BTC and still manages it, put a
    brave face on things, saying that the disruption would be
    temporary. But the station was still burning when Georgia and Russia
    went to war two days later.

    The company?s other oil pipeline, Baku-Supsa, carrying crude to
    Georgia?s Black Sea coast (now blockaded by Russian warships), had
    only recently re-opened but was also forced to shut down. On August
    12th, even as the conflict was fading, BP stopped putting gas into the
    Baku-Erzurum gas pipeline. The only pipeline from Azerbaijan that was
    fully operational this week is the one running through Russian soil to
    the port of Novorossiisk.

    For the past decade Georgia has been championed as a reliable country
    through which new pipelines, safely controlled by Western companies,
    could bypass both Russia and Iran. On the face of it, the past week
    has made a mockery of that claim. But not completely. Georgia will
    point out that its energy infrastructure survived the war unscathed:
    no pipeline was bombed. Russia, mindful of the need for good relations
    with Azerbaijan and Turkey, has been careful to point out that this
    was not an oil war.

    Yet the crisis'including the dangerously unresolved dispute between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan over Karabakh'raises wider issues. South
    Caucasus is supposed to be the location for the next generation of
    so-called "fourth corridor" projects, by means of which Western
    strategists dream of ending Europe?s dependence on Russian gas and
    getting Caspian gas to European markets.

    The jewel in this scheme, the Nabucco pipeline'designed to ship
    Caspian gas to Europe in 2013'is already in trouble for lack of
    unequivocal European support, a rival Russian scheme called South
    Stream and the fact that there is no major Western energy company
    based upstream in Turkmenistan to lobby for the deal. One of the first
    foreign-policy initiatives by Russia?s president, Dmitry Medvedev, was
    to court Azerbaijani and Turkmen leaders in order to persuade them to
    sell their gas to his country. With an eye on events in Georgia, they
    must now decide how to respond to his friendly advice.
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