Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan Pipeline: Oil or Politics?

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

  • Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan Pipeline: Oil or Politics?

    RIA Novosti, Russia
    June 6 2005

    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan Pipeline: Oil or Politics?
    16:15


    MOSCOW (RIA Novosti economic commentator Vasily Zubkov) - The
    ceremony of commissioning the Azerbaijani section of the new
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline again drew the attention of
    analysts to the project.

    Moscow did not support the idea of the pipeline but did not interfere
    with it either, though it had said that it would not provide oil to
    it. Sergei Grigoryev, vice-president of Transneft, had said that each
    state had an inalienable right to build what it needs. I would add,
    even if the project were unprofitable. Baku cannot supply as much oil
    as the new, highly expensive pipe from the Caspian to the
    Mediterranean can pump. Nobody is talking any more about the
    allegedly giant underwater oilfields on Azerbaijan's shelf. The truth
    is that the bulk of oil is concentrated on the eastern, Kazakh, coast
    of the sea.

    The competition of oil companies for transportation routes, which is
    always tough, has never been so politically loaded as in the case of
    the BTC, described as the main geopolitical project of the U.S. in
    the former Soviet states. The late president of Azerbaijan Geidar
    Aliyev had said that the pipeline would pump oil in one direction and
    politics in the other. Oil has not started flowing west yet, but
    Georgia, a member of the project, has been shaken by a pro-American
    revolution.

    Americans spent through the nose to create the first stage of the
    Great Oil Road, laying pipes by a route bypassing Russia, which, as
    it grew stronger economically, is making public its view of
    developments in the former Soviet states, in particular on its
    southern borders, increasingly often. But will this pipe lower the
    transit potential of Russia?

    The new supermodern ports on the Baltic Sea, the upgrading of the
    Baltic Pipeline System to 60 million tons this year, and the nascent
    construction of pipelines in Russia's European north and the Far East
    will guarantee Russia a long geopolitical transit life in Eurasia.

    The rerouting of Azerbaijani oil from Novorossiisk to the new pipe
    was hardly noticed, because it accounted for a mere 1% of Russia's
    oil exports. Baku says openly that it would like Russian oil
    companies to become its clients; it needs them to ensure the BTC's
    estimated capacity of 50 million tons a year. Besides, the capacity
    of the Russian pipe monopolist, Transneft, has been larger than the
    oil output for a second year running, according to its president
    Semyon Vainshtok. The production of oil is lagging behind the
    construction and modernization of pipelines and ports, though this
    year Transneft plans to increase export deliveries by 16% to 255
    million tons.

    There will be a surplus of pipe capacities in the future, and so
    Russia does not plan to change export routes. A spokesman of LUKoil,
    which works energetically on the Caspian shelf, told RIA that the
    current rates and the absence of "lines" for Transneft's pipe suit
    his company. Rosneft and other oil majors do not plan to change
    export routes either.

    Russia plans to complete the construction of an alternative route to
    the BTC, from Burgas in Bulgaria to Alexandroupolis in Greece,
    bypassing the Turkish straits. It will be more profitable than the
    BTC: its length is slightly more than 300km (1,767km in the case of
    the BTC), its throughput capacity is 35-50 million tons (50 million)
    and it will cost about $700 million (some $4 billion). With the
    completion of this pipe, tankers with Russian oil will no longer have
    to spend weeks in the Turkish straits.

    Baku thinks that the Kazakh oil can "save" the BTC, to a degree.
    President of Kazakhstan Nursultan Nazarbayev was the highest foreign
    guest at the commissioning ceremony and expressed interest in the
    pipe, but his republic will not hurry to sign a contract. This
    proceeds from the recent statement by Lyazzat Kiinov, deputy minister
    of energy. He said that his country had an operating project
    Aktau-Baku and hence the new pipe would be filled exclusively by
    Azerbaijani oil. Kazakhstan will ponder participation in the BTC
    project only when the new pipeline to the Mediterranean is completed.


    What effect would it have on the Transcaucasus? Though there is not
    enough oil for the pipe so far, the aggregate capital of companies in
    the BTC consortium is $1 trillion, which makes the pipe an instrument
    of powerful political influence in the region. This is the opinion of
    Eduard Agadzhanov, of the Armat Center of Democratic Development and
    Civil Society (Armenia). In view of the unsettled Armenia-Azerbaijan
    conflict over Nagorny Karabakh, the powerful U.S. assistance to Baku
    is radically changing the geopolitical situation in the region.
Working...
X