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  • A new Silk Road, or just a pipe dream?

    Ottawa Citizen, Canada
    July 15, 2006 Saturday
    Final Edition

    A new Silk Road, or just a pipe dream?

    Many believe the $4-billion BTC oil pipeline, meandering from
    Azerbaijan to Turkey, may be the area's salvation. Others, though,
    suggest it is just another door leading to violence.

    by Charles Enman, The Ottawa Citizen

    It seemed like such a madcap scheme, the fodder for foolish spy movies
    -- building a 1,770-kilometre oil pipeline through land threatened
    by earthquakes, political instability, geopolitical rivalries, and
    even war. So, of the BTC pipeline that runs from Azerbaijan on the
    Caspian Sea all the way to a Mediterranean seaport in Turkey, we may
    say two things.

    First, it did become fodder for a spy flick, the 1999 James Bond film,
    The World Is Not Enough.

    And second, it stepped magisterially from celluloid fantasy into
    reality. After a three-year, $4-billion construction effort, the BTC
    pipeline was opened officially only last Thursday.

    Only the Druzhba pipeline from Russia to Europe is longer.

    The pipeline takes its name from its route, beginning near Baku, the
    capital of Azerbaijan, and running east and a bit north to Tbilisi,
    the capital of Georgia, and finally meandering down to Ceyhan, on
    Turkey's Mediterranean coast.

    It is an understatement to call this route something less than direct.

    The shortest route to a seaport would be through Iran, but that
    country, considered unreliable in many Western forums, was never
    seriously considered.

    To go directly west would take the pipeline through Armenia, which is
    still technically at war with Azerbaijan on account of its occupation,
    since the early 1990s, of Nagorno-Karabakh and several adjoining
    regions of Azerbaijan. No go, in other words.

    One could have chosen a northern route up to the Druzhba pipeline,
    but that would leave transport of Caspian oil to Europe partly up to
    the whims of Moscow, a possibility craved by none of the project's
    partners.

    One of the driving forces behind the pipeline's construction was the
    late Haydar Aliyev, who led Azerbaijan from 1993 to 2003. He came into
    office when Azerbaijan was still suffering the political and economic
    tumult that followed the collapse of the Soviet Union late in 1991.

    Azerbaijan has huge offshore oil reserves in the Caspian Sea, and Mr.

    Aliyev was canny at luring international oil companies in to exploit
    them.

    In the BTC project, British Petroleum became the lead partner, with
    30.1 per cent of the shares, followed by Azerbaijan's oil group Socar,
    which holds 25 per cent. Other partners include American company
    Unocal (8.9 per cent), Norway's Statoil (8.71 per cent), Turkey's TPAO
    (6.53 per cent), and other companies from Italy, France and Japan.

    There were many hesitations before proceeding. Four billion dollars
    is no small sum, after all. For years, many referred to the project as
    "the pipeline to nowhere."

    But oil prices in the neighbourhood of $70 per barrel have wonderful
    levitating effects on the spirit, and one can be sure there were
    smiles all around as Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, Georgian
    President Mikhail Saakashvili, Turkish President Ahmet Necdet Sezer and
    Prime Minister Recep Erdogan, and officials from 30 other countries,
    inaugurated the pipeline in Ceyhan on Thursday.

    Mr. Erdogan pronounced the pipeline "the Silk Road of the 21st
    century."

    The pipeline has the capacity to deliver 50-million tonnes of crude oil
    annually. That figure won't be reached initially, but with Kazhakstan,
    just east across the Caspian Sea from Azerbaijan, having recently
    agreed to use the pipeline for some of its own exports, early fears
    that the pipeline would be underused are losing traction.

    A Wall Street Journal article by Thomas Goltz on Thursday even
    mentioned rumours that both Russia and Iran are considering the
    possibility of transporting some of their oil on the new pipeline.

    For the world oil market, 50-million tonnes of oil represents only
    one per cent of global consumption. Still, in the Caucasus, that
    figure represents big apples.

    Over the next two decades, Azerbaijan alone expects to realize
    $150 billion of revenue from its oil shipments. For a country of
    eight-million people with per-capita GDP of $4,800 U.S., that is
    a huge inflow. The government is setting up an oil fund, much like
    Alberta's Heritage Fund, to ensure that much of the revenue is saved
    for future use.

    Azerbaijan may have a more immediate use for the money. It remains
    officially at war with Armenia over the latter country's 13-year
    occupation of 15 per cent of Azerbaijan's land. Some 800,000 refugees
    still live in mostly wretched circumstances.

    In a recent interview, Maj.-Gen Ramiz Najafov spoke of the ongoing
    buildup of the Azerbaijani armed forces. Next year, he said, the
    country's military budget alone will be larger than the total budget
    of the Armenian government, which controls a population less than 40
    per cent as large as Azerbaijan's.

    "We have shown patience in our resolve for a resolution, but our
    patience is not endless," Maj.-Gen. Najafov said.

    The Azerbaijanis are encouraged in their resolve by the fact
    that not one country has recognized a sovereign government in
    Nagorno-Karabakh. But the world's supportive platitudes do nothing
    to change the facts on the ground.

    In war, the advantage goes to the defender, and Armenia has had
    13 years to entrench itself, allegedly with Russian military help,
    on the land it conquered 13 years ago.

    Azerbaijani oil revenues, in other words, may buy a fight, but not
    a cakewalk.

    Some have worried that the pipeline is vulnerable to sabotage. It runs
    close to areas of secession in Russia and Turkey, and passes through
    southern Georgia, which has many ethnic-Armenian residents, some of
    whom fought for the independence of Nagorno-Karkabakh 13 years ago.

    Against this dire possibility is the fact that the pipeline has been
    buried along virtually all of its route, making things difficult
    for saboteurs.

    So, is the pipeline a "new Silk Road," or a doorway to new violence?

    That, like so much else, depends on human choice.

    What we know today is that Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey, with a
    great deal of western corporate help, and money from the World Bank
    and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, have pulled
    off one of the great construction projects since the beginning of
    this millennium.
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