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  • The politics of pipelines

    Frontline Magazine
    Volume 22 - Issue 13, Jun 04 - 17, 2005
    India's National Magazine

    WORLD AFFAIRS

    The politics of pipelines

    JOHN CHERIAN

    The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline is part of a grand U.S. strategy to
    isolate Russia and secure guaranteed supplies of oil and gas from the
    Caspian region.

    ANADOLU AJANSI/RIZA OZEL/AFP

    An August 11, 2003 picture showing workers laying a section of the
    BTC pipeline near the Sangachal terminal.

    THE ceremony in Azerbaijan on May 25 to inaugurate the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) oil pipeline formally was attended by the
    Presidents of Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Georgia and Turkey. The
    ceremony took place at the Sangachal oil terminal on the Caspian Sea,
    near the Azerbaijani capital of Baku.

    The first phase of the 1,760-km-long United States-backed pipeline
    has now been completed. Once fully operational, it will take Caspian
    Sea oil directly from Baku to the Turkish port of Ceyhan on the
    Mediterranean coast. The pipeline will run through the Georgian
    capital, Tbilisi, bypassing the traditional Russian route.

    Russia was initially very critical of the BTC pipeline project,
    calling it a blatant attempt to undercut its influence in the states
    that were part of the Soviet Union. Moscow's criticism in recent
    years has been muted but Russian officials have pointed out that the
    pumping of Caspian oil and gas through existing Russian pipelines
    would have been much cheaper for Western consumers, at least in the
    foreseeable future. Pumping Caspian oil through Iran would also have
    been a more logical and less expensive option.

    However, from the time of the Bill Clinton presidency, American
    officials have made it clear that they view the BTC pipeline as part
    of a grand strategy to isolate Russia further in the region and, in
    the process, secure guaranteed supplies of oil and gas from the
    Caspian region. The argument being put forward in the West is that
    Caspian oil will diminish forever the influence of the Organisation
    of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). However, according to many
    oil experts, it was realpolitik and not market economics that created
    the BTC pipeline.

    The objections of environmental groups were overruled despite
    evidence of widespread corrosion and cracking of pipelines. British
    Petroleum (BP), which leads the consortium that is constructing the
    BTC pipeline, had admitted in November 2003 that 23 per cent of the
    joints of the pipeline in the Georgian sector were faulty.
    Environmental groups have said that the pipeline poses a danger as
    large sections of it pass under water. The pipeline goes through the
    politically volatile Kurdish areas of eastern Turkey. The people
    there have not been consulted about the project. State authorities in
    Turkey and Azerbaijan have dealt with protesters harshly. The Azeri
    authorities in fact refused permission to protesters to gather when
    the opening ceremony of the pipeline was taking place. In Georgia,
    there were protests by minority Armenians as the pipeline traversed
    territory on which they formed the majority.

    The project is governed by an Inter-Governmental Agreement (IGA)
    between Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey and by the individual Host
    Government Agreement (HGA) between each of the three governments and
    the BP-led consortium.

    These agreements have largely exempted BP from the laws of the three
    countries. The agreements allow BP to claim compensation from the
    governments concerned, should any law, whether it be related to human
    rights or the environment, make the pipeline less profitable. Many
    groups operating in the region have described the agreements as
    "neo-colonialist" in nature. The sovereignty of the strip of land
    through which the pipeline runs in the three countries has been
    virtually abrogated by BP. Landowners are still fighting for adequate
    compensation in many areas that the pipeline snakes through.

    The $3.2 billion project has the capacity to transport one million
    barrels of oil a day and is the first direct oil link between the
    landlocked Caspian region and the Mediterranean. The Caspian is said
    to have the third largest oil and gas reserves in the world. A gas
    pipeline, running parallel to the oil pipeline, will also be
    completed. It is claimed that once the two projects are completed,
    the three countries will generate revenues exceeding $150 billion
    from oil transportation alone. Most of the funds for laying the
    Baku-Ceyhan pipeline came from bank loans guaranteed by governments.

    U.S. Vice-President Dick Cheney, said in 1998, when he was running
    the oil company Halliburton, that he could not "think of a time when
    we have had a region emerge suddenly to become as strategically
    significant as the Caspian".

    A letter from U.S. President George W. Bush was read out at the
    inaugural ceremony, by U.S. Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman. In his
    message, Bush said his government had "consistently supported" the
    pipeline project. Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev said in his
    speech that the pipeline would help solve the economic and social
    problems of the region besides playing a role in "strengthening peace
    and security in the region". He evidently hopes that the huge
    American political and strategic stake in the pipeline will help his
    country reclaim the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, which is
    currently under the control of Armenia.

    Azerbaijan's authoritarian government brooks no internal dissent. It
    had conducted recently what many international organisations and
    observers described as a deeply flawed election. The present
    President succeeded his father, Haidar Aliyev. Not surprisingly, the
    Bush administration is not keen on seeing democratic reforms in
    Azerbaijan or, for that matter, in neighbouring Kazakhstan, where
    American companies have big stakes in the hydrocarbon sector. The
    Bush administration's goal is to eliminate Russia from its
    traditional zone of influence and keep control of the oil and gas in
    the region. Another important aim is to prevent China from getting
    more access to Caspian oil.

    Under a separate agreement, Kazakhstan will also be connected to the
    new pipeline, allowing the country to pump oil directly to Western
    markets for the first time. There are also plans to connect the
    oilfields in Turkmenistan to the pipeline.

    Another big gainer from the pipeline will be Turkey, which has a 6.5
    per cent share in the pipeline project. Oil and gas from Iran and
    Iraq are already flowing through Turkey to markets in the West. The
    traffic of oil tankers through the Bosporus Strait will be
    considerably reduced. Turkey hopes to emerge once again as a serious
    player in Central Asia and the Caucasus. Many countries in the region
    have a pan-Turkic identity.

    Petroleum Minister Mani Shankar Aiyar said in the first week of June
    that India was considering a proposal from Israel for the supply of
    oil from the BTC pipeline. Israel has told the Indian government that
    a pipeline between Turkey and Israel will deliver oil to the Israeli
    port of Eilat, from where it could be shipped to India. All the
    proWestern states in the region seem keen to cash in on the black
    gold that promises to start flowing soon from Baku.

    However, there are many people who are sceptical about the long-term
    prospects of the BTC pipeline. There are reports that the amount of
    oil and gas deposits in the Caspian region, especially in the area
    under Azerbaijan's sovereignty, is highly exaggerated. Some experts
    feel that they will run out in less than 20 years. Newly discovered
    offshore oil and gas fields in Azerbaijan have not been all that
    bountiful. According to Russian experts, if the pipeline is to be
    commercially viable, it will need huge supplies of Kazakh and Russian
    oil from the Caspian Sea.

    RUSSIA had already geared up for the challenge from the Baku-Ceyhan
    pipeline by building the Caspian Consortium Pipeline, which was
    inaugurated in 2001; it connects the Kazakh oilfield of Tengiz to the
    Black Sea port of Novorossiysk. A recently constructed gas pipeline,
    called the Blue Stream pipeline, has brought energy across the Black
    Sea from Russia to Turkey.

    For the BTC project to remain economically viable, oil prices will
    have to remain high. The new pipeline is also part of American
    attempts to bypass Iran in "the new great game". Despite the Bush
    administration's efforts, many Western oil companies, taking
    advantage of the absence of American oil companies, are investing in
    Iran's oil industry. Oil companies operating in the East Caspian
    believe that a transport route through Iran will be highly
    competitive, representing the lowest capital costs.

    "The world runs on oil and gas and those who control it will wield
    commercial and geopolitical power. The United States simply cannot
    afford to allow Russia and Iran to dominate the energy resources of
    the Caspian," wrote Sheila N. Heslin, who was a senior member of
    President Bill Clinton's National Security Council in charge of
    Russian, Eurasian and Ukrainian affairs, in an article published in
    1997. As the U.S. unfolds its blueprint for the region, other major
    countries will also be charting out their strategies for the new
    "great game" in Central Asia and the Caucasus.

    for maps: http://flonnet.com/fl2213/stories/20050701000805900.htm
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