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New Oil Pipeline 'Advances Cause of Freedom, Bush Says

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  • New Oil Pipeline 'Advances Cause of Freedom, Bush Says

    Town Hall, DC
    May 26 2005


    New Oil Pipeline 'Advances Cause of Freedom, Bush Says

    (CNSNews.com) - In a major achievement for the Caucasus and a
    strategic victory for the U.S., one of the world's longest oil
    pipelines has come on line, providing the region with its first
    outlet to world oil markets that bypasses Russia.


    The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline "can help generate balanced
    economic growth, and provide a foundation for a prosperous and just
    society that advances the cause of freedom," President Bush said in a
    message, read by Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman at the inauguration
    ceremony Wednesday.


    Just short of 1,100 miles long, the buried pipeline will by the
    year's end funnel one million barrels of oil a day, traveling at two
    meters per second, from Azerbaijan on the landlocked Caspian Sea, via
    Georgia, to the Turkish Mediterranean port of Ceyhan.


    The project is strongly supported by the U.S., while Russia has
    opposed it, favoring an existing route for Caspian Basin oil via the
    Russian Black Sea port of Novorosiisk -- a route that provides Russia
    with transit revenues and bypasses both Georgia and Turkey.


    Although the Bush administration has been cautious not to antagonize
    Moscow -- which has seen its influence sharply wane on its
    southwestern flank -- the State Department hailed the pipeline
    opening as "a major success for the U.S. goal of enhancing and
    diversifying global energy supplies."


    Not only will the BTC break Russia's virtual monopoly on regional
    energy export routes, it will also boost supplies from non-OPEC and
    non-Middle Eastern sources. Oil will come both from Azerbaijan's
    offshore fields and from Kazakhstan, the giant republic east of the
    Caspian Sea.


    The ceremony near Baku, the Azerbaijan capital, was attended by the
    presidents of Turkey, Georgia, Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan, and guests
    including the head of British energy giant BP, which holds the
    largest stake (30 percent) in a consortium running the pipeline.
    Other major shareholders include Azerbaijani state oil company SOCAR
    (25 percent and U.S. Unocal (almost nine percent).


    An expected Russian attendee, President Vladimir Putin's
    representative for international energy cooperation, failed to turn
    up. The Interfax news agency said the Kremlin cited illness.


    Listing the benefits Washington sees in the project, the State
    Department said it would reinforce the sovereignty and prosperity of
    Azerbaijan and Georgia and further integrate the two into the
    international free market economy.


    "The BTC pipeline will also enhance Turkey's emerging role as an
    energy transportation hub and help reduce oil tanker traffic
    congestion in the Bosphorus and Dardanelles straits," it added,
    referring to the narrow waterways tankers now have to navigate to
    exit the Black Sea en route to the Mediterranean and world markets.


    Bolstering the participating states' independence from Russia, the
    launch of the pipeline marks a further shift in geo-political
    alliances in a region that formed part of the Soviet empire before
    its disintegration in 1991.


    In 2003, Georgia's "Rose Revolution" replaced a pro-Moscow
    administration with a pro-Western one under President Mikhail
    Saakashvili.


    Bush's recent visit to Tbilisi cemented strong relations between
    Georgia and the U.S., which is also backing Saakashvili's call for
    Russia to remove two remaining Cold War-era military bases from the
    small country.


    Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan still are ruled by autocratic regimes
    relatively friendly to Moscow, under presidents Ilham Aliyev and
    Nursultan Nazarbayev, respectively. Nonetheless, Nazarbayev's
    last-minute announcement that the BTC will be used as one export
    outlet for oil-rich Kazakhstan is likely to upset Russia further.


    Construction on the $3.6 billion project began in 2003, almost a
    decade after the idea was broached.


    Among concerns raised over the years was the security issue --
    related to Chechen terrorists hiding out in Georgia and to the
    long-running Azerbaijan-Armenian dispute over an enclave called
    Nagorno-Karabakh -- and environmentalists' worries about the impact
    of a potential accidental or terror-related oil spillage.


    On Monday, Georgia's government said the three BTC countries were
    concluding a mutual-assistance agreement in case of security or other
    threat to the pipeline.


    According to BP's head office in the UK, just filling the length of
    the pipeline will require ten million barrels of crude oil, and it
    will take about six months for the flow to reach the Turkish end for
    the first tanker loading.


    A gas pipeline is also under construction, following the same route.
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