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Frank Verrastro discusses the opening of the new trans-Caspian

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  • Frank Verrastro discusses the opening of the new trans-Caspian

    National Public Radio (NPR)
    SHOW: Talk of the Nation 3:00 AM EST NPR
    May 25, 2005 Wednesday

    Frank Verrastro discusses the opening of the new trans-Caspian
    pipeline

    ANCHORS: NEAL CONAN

    NEAL CONAN, host:

    This is TALK OF THE NATION. I'm Neal Conan in Washington.

    And here are the headlines from some of the stories we're following
    here today at NPR News. The Republican chairman of the House Armed
    Services Committee has given up on an effort to limit the role of
    women in combat. His proposal met with sharp resistance from the
    Pentagon and from many in Congress.

    And the defense has rested in the Michael Jackson case after
    presenting two celebrity witnesses who told of their past encounters
    with the accuser and his parents. The singer is accused of molesting
    a young boy. You can hear details on those stories and, of course,
    much more later today on "All Things Considered" from NPR News.

    Tomorrow on TALK OF THE NATION, Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas and
    Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon face deep challenges on the road
    to peace, both from each other and from their own peoples. With Abbas
    in Washington to ask President Bush for aid, we look at the US role
    in expanding this window of opportunity in the Middle East. That's
    tomorrow on TALK OF THE NATION.

    Right now if champagne is called for whenever you christen a ship,
    what do you break over a new oil pipeline? Whatever beverage one
    might pick, the opening of the new trans-Caspian pipeline today was
    certainly a cause for celebration in the countries along its route,
    and an interesting group of countries it is. Joining us now to talk
    about the political and economic issues surrounding this new pipeline
    is Frank Verrastro, the director of the Energy Program at The Center
    for Strategic and International Studies here in Washington, DC.

    Thanks very much for being with us.

    Mr. FRANK VERRASTRO (Energy Program Director, The Center for
    Strategic and International Studies): Sure. Thank you, Neal.

    CONAN: The route of this pipeline is part of what makes it so
    interesting. What can you tell us about it?

    Mr. VERRASTRO: Well, the route actually covers a thousand miles. It
    goes from Baku in Azerbaijan, across Georgia up to Tbilisi, and then
    down through Turkey and exits at the port of Ceyhan on the
    Mediterranean coast.

    CONAN: So tankers would pick up crude oil from the end of the
    pipeline in Turkey.

    Mr. VERRASTRO: Exactly.

    CONAN: Now prominently not on that list is Russia.

    Mr. VERRASTRO: And that's one of the, I think, big successes of the
    Baku-Ceyhan pipeline. It brings a relatively new and maybe
    substantial producing region and gives it access to Western markets,
    but the pipeline isn't through the Persian Gulf or through Russia.

    CONAN: Now at one point, many people believe that this Caspian region
    around Azerbaijan, Baku, was going to be a major source of new oil
    for the world. How is that panning out so far?

    Mr. VERRASTRO: It's--there's been about--oh, God--12 years of
    experience in drilling. Part of the problem was lack of
    infrastructure. But you're right. You know, in the early days, I
    think with the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the Western oil
    companies in particular flocked to the Caspian, and the estimates
    were up to 200 billion barrels of recoverable reserves. The
    experience has been somewhat less, but it's kind of a mixed bag. I
    would say there's been, you know, certainly some uncommercial finds,
    but there's been some successes, too. The ACG project, which is
    what--the oil that's coming going through the Baku-Ceyhan pipeline
    now is coming out of ACG, Kashagan and Kazakhstan, the Shakh-Deniz
    gas project. So there's been a couple of big successes, but it's been
    a mixed result.

    CONAN: And would those fields funnel their oil to Baku and then on
    the pipeline?

    Mr. VERRASTRO: Well, the ACG project clearly is going through
    Baku-Ceyhan. And I believe since the pipeline's undersubscribed,
    there's discussions with the Kazakhs to move some of the Kashagan oil
    through Baku-Ceyhan, as well.

    CONAN: But instead of something that might rival OPEC, you're looking
    at something that might rival, oh, a major member of OPEC, Iran, say.

    Mr. VERRASTRO: Yeah, exactly. In terms of total production by 2012 or
    2015, it'll be about four million barrels a day. So it's not
    insignificant, exactly.

    CONAN: And this is not OPEC oil.

    Mr. VERRASTRO: No. No. Although I guess it always leaves the option
    open for producer countries to join OPEC down the road.

    CONAN: You mentioned how long these projects have been in
    development--I guess basically since the fall of the Soviet Union.
    And I guess in the interest of full disclosure, we should say that
    you worked with Pennzoil very early in the development of this
    pipeline. One of the major concerns, though, has to be stability,
    both geologic stability and political stability.

    Mr. VERRASTRO: No, that's absolutely true. I mean, if you look at the
    Caspian today, I would argue that it's probably a more sensitive time
    than it was even when we went in in the early 1990s. You've got a new
    transition of leadership, you've got a number of different political
    conflicts going on in the region, in Georgia and Chechnya, in Armenia
    on the border of Azerbaijan. Then you've got the situation with Iraq
    just to the south. So, yeah, it's a tough neighborhood, to be sure.

    CONAN: The countries involved all would collect transit fees for the
    oil. I guess this would be very good news for Azerbaijan and Georgia
    in particular.

    Mr. VERRASTRO: Yes. Well, Georgia would prosper both as a transit
    country and probably gain some energy supply as a result. Turkey's in
    the same boat. Azerbaijan has a dual role. They're also a participant
    in the project as well as a shipper. So...

    CONAN: Mm-hmm. Now the United States has been heavily involved in the
    development of this project, no?

    Mr. VERRASTRO: Absolutely.

    CONAN: And for the particular reason that this was--well, I guess, a
    way to get out of that Russian nexus.

    Mr. VERRASTRO: Yeah. If you look at the Caspian, it's landlocked. So
    when the oil and gas were discovered in the Caspian, the real issue
    was: How do you get it to hard-currency markets? And of the
    choices--if you went north, you were going through Russia; the China
    market wasn't developed yet if you could go back, you know, 10 or 15
    years; couldn't go south because of Iran's sanctions or southeast
    because of turmoil in Afghanistan and Pakistan. So really, you are
    kind of left with either going through Russia on a changed route or
    looking west to go through Georgia and Turkey.

    CONAN: Hmm. Now Russia has not necessarily been very happy with US
    involvement in certain situations in Ukraine and various other former
    Soviet republics. How is Russia responding to this more economic
    threat?

    Mr. VERRASTRO: I think they are concerned about the US presence in
    the region. I mean, I don't think there's any question about that.
    And the same for Iran. You know, the Iranians--the Azeris, when this
    project first got off the ground, wanted to introduce an Iranian
    company into the consortium, and the US government objected to that,
    said that no US companies could participate if Iran was a member. So
    the Iranians were left out of ACG, and they got a piece of the next
    project, the Shakh-Deniz project.

    CONAN: So when it comes down to it, what do you think this project is
    going to amount to?

    Mr. VERRASTRO: In terms of global supply, I mean, it's clear that it
    would be helping on the margin. I mean, four million barrels a day of
    new production from a non-Middle East source has to be good news for
    global markets. But you're right. I mean, it's not another Saudi
    Arabia, it's not another Middle East. What we've learned about the
    Caspian is that it's hydrocarbon-rich, but there's large gas-prone
    areas. And that, at the end of the day, may be a bigger contributor
    than the oil. Infrastructure is still a limiting factor, but the big
    issue is managing the geopolitics.

    CONAN: Frank Verrastro, thanks very much for being with us today.

    Mr. VERRASTRO: Absolutely. Thank you, Neal.

    CONAN: Frank Verrastro is director of the Energy Program at The
    Center for Strategic and International Studies, and joined us from
    his offices in Washington, DC.
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