Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Rena Effendi Captures The Forgotten Faces Of The Oil Boom

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Rena Effendi Captures The Forgotten Faces Of The Oil Boom

    RENA EFFENDI CAPTURES THE FORGOTTEN FACES OF THE OIL BOOM
    Tony Halpin

    The Times
    December 12, 2009
    UK

    A new book by the photographer charts the effect of a vital oil
    pipeline on the people who live above it, but do not profit as it
    feeds the appetite of the West

    hey are the forgotten faces of an oil boom that is literally passing
    them by, people connected by poverty along a billion-dollar pipeline
    that threads through the volatile Caucasus to pump energy to the West.

    Their lives are captured in a book of bleakly beautiful photographs by
    Rena Effendi, who travelled along the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline,
    through Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey, to document some of the
    effects of the new Great Game of power politics playing out in this
    exotic region. Oil bonanzas usually conjure up images of wealth and
    glamour but Effendi, an Azerbaijani, focused on those left high and
    dry despite the flood of petro-dollars.

    The pipeline, which is underground for its entire length of 1,768km, is
    an invisible intruder into her pictures and the lives of her subjects,
    who are mostly farmers, fishermen and the urban poor, struggling for
    survival in the shadow of a building boom in the Azeri capital, Baku.

    "I show the pipeline through the faces and homes of the people living
    above it. They can't see it and they have no control, they are up
    against something big," Effendi says. "It is a good project, good for
    the region. But it has a human cost and the book is about that cost."

    Its title, Pipe Dreams, betrays her ambivalence about a project that
    transformed her own prospects and those of her country, a former
    Soviet republic of eight million people that was in turmoil after
    a humiliating defeat by Armenia in a war over the breakaway enclave
    of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    The pipeline delivers one million barrels of crude oil a day from
    vast Caspian Sea deposits, the output of a deal dubbed the "contract
    of the century" when it was signed in 1994 between Azerbaijan and a
    consortium of Western oil companies led by BP. The investment sparked
    Baku's second energy boom, a century after tycoons such as the Nobel
    brothers, the Rothschilds and the Rockefellers had made the city the
    source of half the world's oil supplies.

    Ironically, Effendi's book examining the boom's underbelly was born
    of an assignment from BP to photograph a calendar highlighting the
    company's investment in schools and health facilities for people on
    the Azerbaijani section of the pipeline.

    "I was driven around from project to project and decided I needed
    to go back and make a journey on my own, not just in Azerbaijan, but
    also in Georgia and Turkey. The book is about the people who are not
    participating, but I didn't do it to paint a sad picture," she says.

    "My purpose was to tell a human story about families living on $50
    (£31) a month above a pipeline that is carrying almost $100 million
    a day. A lot of people who see all this energy going to the West have
    not had gas supplies in their own homes for decades."

    The book took six years to complete, but Effendi's life has been bound
    up with the pipeline for much longer. Her first job was with BP, as
    a translator, and she then worked with the US Embassy as an economic
    assistant, interpreting for high-level delegations that visited Baku
    to discuss the pipeline.

    "I built up my life on this oil boom so I can't judge it. We never
    had Irish bars in Baku but after the contract was signed in '94 we
    had our first Irish pub," she says. "This was in a country that had
    just had a military curfew and people were not being allowed on the
    streets after 11pm. That dramatic change was quite fascinating. I
    went to the bars myself and I liked them."

    Her images speak of disappointment in all three countries among people
    who believed that they were promised a better life with the arrival of
    the pipeline. Villagers live in decaying homes in Sangachal, only 500m
    from the modern oil terminal that marks the start of the pipeline. At
    the other end, Turkish fishermen are photographed through nets that
    no longer provide a living because fishing grounds have been damaged
    by oil tankers docking at Ceyhan.

    Oil money appears corrosively in Effendi's photographs of Baku. Luxury
    apartment blocks loom above residents of Mahalla, an historic
    neighbourhood that is gradually being erased by developers whose
    building permits were sold by corrupt officials. A man grips
    a prostitute's rear possessively in a disco, emblematic of a
    freewheeling nightlife fuelled by the influx of foreign oil workers
    and stiletto-heeled provincial women eager to stake their claim to
    some of the capital's new wealth.

    It presents a stark contrast to the decaying remains of the Soviet
    drilling industry, which has bequeathed poisonous oil lakes and waste
    dumps populated by scavengers. War too has left its scars on this
    ethnically diverse region. The pipeline weaves through five conflict
    zones, its route determined as much by politics as economics. The
    shortest route would have been through Armenia, something Azerbaijan
    refused to countenance because of the unresolved conflict over
    Nagorno-Karabakh. Instead, it arcs expensively around Armenia and
    through Georgia.

    The pipeline was targeted, unsuccessfully, by Russian bombs during
    the war with Georgia last year over another breakaway region, South
    Ossetia. Because oil is the lifeblood of modern economies, the contest
    over resources is the modern version of the 19th-century "great
    game" between Russia and Britain. Russia and the West are locked in
    a strategic struggle for control of the Caucasus as a gateway to the
    energy riches of Caspian and Central Asian states such as Kazakhstan
    and Turkmenistan.

    "It's dangerous ground. The pipeline goes through a minefield of
    conflict zones and different cultures and avoids other areas for
    political reasons, at great economic cost," Effendi says. "It
    [the pipeline] is good for all three countries, it increases
    our international profile. I am not against it. But these small
    individuals living along its path have no power to decide and they
    are being affected, they exist."

    Effendi is in London to launch her book and to see her work displayed
    at the HOST gallery as part of the first festival of Azerbaijani arts
    in Britain. Still only 32, her social documentary style has earned
    her recognition as a rising star and her pictures have been shown at
    biennales in Venice and Istanbul.

    Azerbaijan has been much less appreciative of her book. Customs
    officials impounded 50 copies sent to Effendi by her publisher three
    months ago after government ministers claimed that it damaged the
    country's image. "You can buy the book anywhere in Europe, but the 50
    copies I had to give out to friends have been arrested," Effendi says,
    laughing. "They are booing my book because it doesn't show the usual
    smiley face."

    Rena Effendi's exhibition at HOST gallery, London EC1, runs from
    December 17 to January 16 and is part of the Buta Festival of
    Azerbaijani Arts, which runs until March 7 across London (www.buta
    festival.com).

    Pipe Dreams is published by Schilt
Working...
X