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  • The critical BTC pipeline

    The critical BTC pipeline
    TODAY'S COLUMNIST
    By S. Rob Sobhani
    July 14, 2006

    Washington Times, DC
    July 14 2006

    Yesterday, at the southern Turkish Port of Ceyhan on the Mediterranean
    Sea, the 1,087-mile Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) crude-oil pipeline will
    be inaugurated at an official ceremony with the presidents of Turkey,
    Georgia and Azerbaijan in attendance. This historic event marks
    the culmination of a major U.S. foreign policy effort to connect
    the Mediterranean with the heretofore landlocked but energy-rich
    Caspian Sea.

    Since the discovery of sizable hydrocarbon reserves in the Caspian
    Sea, a fundamental premise of U.S. energy policy has been the
    uninterrupted transportation of the Caspian's 80 billion barrels
    of oil to international markets, thereby diversifying world energy
    supplies and easing Western reliance on Middle East crude supplies.

    The new pipeline is the linchpin of this policy because it carries
    crude oil directly from the offshore oil fields of Azerbaijan to the
    Mediterranean via Tbilisi, the capital of Georgia.

    This world-class marvel of the 21st century runs entirely underground
    in order to preserve the environment. Operated by BP, it has the
    capacity to deliver more than 1 million barrels per day of crude oil
    to the port of Ceyhan, where the oil can be offloaded to tankers with
    destinations worldwide.

    Support from both the private (BP) and public (World Bank) sectors
    for the BTC pipeline has helped bring prosperity to the region. More
    than 500 villages along the pipeline route have received improvements
    in their medical, water and educational facilities.

    Interestingly, of the 15,739 micro-loans issued by the World Bank
    in Azerbaijan, 49 percent were to women. The gross domestic product
    of Azerbaijan alone is expected to grow by 20 percent per annum,
    transforming this nation into the Kuwait of the Caspian Sea.

    Sadly, the man most responsible for making the BTC pipeline a reality
    died before it was completed. Former Azerbaijan President Heydar Aliyev
    used his formidable leadership capability, determination and courage
    to bring the pipeline into existence. The obstacles Mr. Aliyev faced
    were tremendous. When the U.S. government determined that it did not
    want a pipeline from the Caspian Sea to run through the territory
    of Iran, then-President Aliyev showed enormous courage and stood up
    to the clerical regime in Tehran, despite the latter's vociferous
    objections. Azerbaijan's neighbor to the north also objected to the
    U.S. policy of multiple pipelines, but Mr. Aliyev did not buckle
    under Moscow's pressure. He forged ahead because he realized that
    U.S.-Azerbaijan interests were mutually reinforcing, and nowhere did
    they overlap more than in the uninterrupted exploration, development
    and transportation of Caspian Sea oil and natural gas to international
    markets.

    Upon Mr. Aliyev's death in December 2003, the responsibility for
    ensuring the completion of BTC was inherited by his son, Ilham
    Aliyev, who was elected president after his father's death. The young
    president, who recently visited President Bush at the White House to
    discuss global energy security, has continued his father's legacy
    and can be credited for turning this South Carolina-sized country
    of 8 million into the transport hub of the Caspian Sea region,
    thus elevating Azerbaijan's strategic importance to the West. Just
    last month, oil-rich Kazakhstan signed a long-term agreement to
    transport 140 million barrels per annum through the BTC pipeline,
    thereby enabling it to deliver crude oil to Western markets without
    Russian involvement.

    Credit for today's historic event must also be given to those many
    individuals within the U.S. government who fought day and night
    for years to see this pipeline become a reality. Furthermore, the
    personal commitment to the pipeline by Sir John Browne, chairman of
    BP, was also instrumental in giving confidence to the international
    financial community to finance the $3.4 billion project.

    BTC must be seen as a project of geo-strategic significance: linking
    three allies of the United States along an East-West energy corridor,
    loosening Russia's long-standing grip over oil exports from the
    Caspian and denying the Islamic regime of Iran transit revenues.

    In order to ensure the viability of this strategic asset, which is
    of enormous importance to Western energy security, Washington might
    consider the following initiative: First, the resolution of the
    Azerbaijan-Armenia conflict over the territory of Nagorno-Karabagh
    should be a priority of American diplomacy because resumption of
    this conflict could negatively affect the flow of oil to the United
    States. And second, Congress must immediately allocate funding to
    bolster U.S.-Azerbaijan military ties.

    Over the last decade, the strategic partnership between the United
    States and Azerbaijan has helped both countries significantly.

    Today, with the flow of oil through the BTC pipeline, this important
    relationship has also enhanced global energy security.

    S. Rob Sobhani, Ph.D., is president of Caspian Energy Security.
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