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  • Pipeline to end reliance on Middle East oil

    This is London, UK
    May 25 2005

    Pipeline to end reliance on Middle East oil

    By Lech Mintowt-czyz, Evening Standard


    An oil pipeline intended to sweep away decades of western reliance on
    the Middle East was opened today.

    The 1,094-mile line from the landlocked Caspian Sea to the
    Mediterranean is designed to free the region's huge potential
    reserves of oil - thought to be the third largest on the planet.

    Analysts hope the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan project will supply more than
    one per cent of the world's oil needs within months and help develop
    capacity to six million barrels a day, eight per cent of the total
    required, within five years.

    The pipeline, which is 30 per cent owned by BP, will eventually feed
    from an underground reserve capable of holding 220billion barrels of
    oil, enough to meet current needs for eight years.

    At an opening ceremony today at the Sangachal oil terminal, 25 miles
    south of the Azerbaijani capital Baku, the first drops of oil were
    pumped into the £2.2 billion pipeline, which will take five months to
    fill along its whole length.

    The first shipment of Caspian oil from the Turkish port of Ceyhan is
    expected before the end of the year.

    At the opening US energy secretary Samuel Bodman said: "This is a
    contribution towards an increased supply in oil in the world. It adds
    a new supplier of some consequence. We view this as a significant
    step forward in the energy security of that region." Azerbaijan
    president Ilham Aliyev added: "The whole region needs this pipeline."
    Described by BP as the "world's biggest energy scheme", the pipeline
    passes the Georgian capital of Tbilisi and eastern Turkey to the port
    of Ceyhan, on Turkey's Mediterranean coast.

    Azerbaijan will earn taxes and royalties on the oil, while Georgia
    and Turkey are to profit from transit fees.

    It is thought the wider Caspian region has oil reserves bigger than
    those in both American continents, with the potential to provide the
    west's oil needs for 50 years. There are also proven reserves of gas
    at least as large as those controlled by Saudi Arabia.

    The project, which took 10 years to design and build, runs through
    some of the most inhospitable terrain and politically volatile
    territory in the region.

    In Azerbaijan, it goes close to a ceasefire line with Armenia where
    there are still frequent clashes over a territorial dispute. Georgia
    is fighting separatist conflicts while in Turkey the pipeline skirts
    the Kurdish heartlands.

    In an attempt to prevent sabotage the line has been buried several
    metres underground for most of its length and will be guarded by
    local police forces.

    There have also been tensions with Russia, which feels it has been
    cut out of the deal.
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