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ANKARA: Baku-Ceyhan Breaking Point

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  • ANKARA: Baku-Ceyhan Breaking Point

    Zaman, Turkey
    May 28 2005

    Baku-Ceyhan Breaking Point

    ERHAN BASYURT
    05.28.2005 Saturday - ISTANBUL 19:30


    The first crude oil has been pumped through the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
    pipeline that will carry Caspian oil to the world. This giant project
    is not only important for Azerbaijani-Turkish relations, but it is
    also a turning point for the region's future. This is the first time
    a former Soviet republic, independently, has been able to complete an
    energy pipeline that Russia abandoned without maintenance, and then
    pump its oil to the world. The new pipeline will bring about gradual
    but sustainable development to the Azerbaijani economy. Azerbaijan
    expects a 20 percent growth rate every year, in the next few years.
    This is a great success for Azerbaijan which gained its independence
    in the wake of the destruction and ruins of the [Nagorno]-Karabakh
    conflict.

    The 1,744-km Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, which is accepted as the
    one of the longest in the world, will bring peace and cooperation to
    the three countries it passes through. This partnership will even
    become stronger when the gas pipeline, that is being constructed
    parallel to the oil pipeline, is completed. The project's biggest
    partner, British Petroleum (BP), claims the revenue the three
    countries will generate from oil transportation alone will be $150
    billion.

    The presidents of the three countries came together at the pipeline's
    oil-pumping ceremony and also signed a protocol to construct the
    "Kars-Tbilisi-Akhalkalaki-Baku" railway. This project also shows that
    there is a stability pact in the Caucasus. The project that will
    connect Turkey with Eurasia, was delayed for years due to the threat
    from the Armenian minority in Georgia's Akhalkalaki region. Russia
    evacuating its military bases in Batumi and Akhalkalaki, under the
    framework of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
    Europe's (OSCE's) disarmament initiative, paved the way for this
    railway project.

    Kazakhstan will be connected to this pipeline via Aktau. Thanks to
    this project this country will also have an alternative pipeline to
    that of Russia. Also, the oil tanker traffic, and the threats posed
    by tankers to the enviroment and human life in the Bosphorous and
    Dardanelles will be reduced. In addition, another Turkic republic,
    Turkmenistan, will be also be connected to this gas pipeline project.
    If this happens, it would mean that the Trans-Caspian Project
    indirectly has materialized. The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline has
    great strategic importance for Turkey. Ceyhan, along with the Kerkuk
    pipeline, have increased Turkey's importance as an energy delivery
    point outside the Gulf. The geostrategic importance of Incirlik for
    the US and Cyprus for Turkey has increased. Turkey, which became an
    energy route with Iranian and Azeri gas, and also Iraqi and Caspian
    oil, now has more strategic value for the European Union (EU). The
    project to carry natural gas to Europe via Greece, in particular, has
    now become a possibility rather than a dream.

    Besides Azerbaijan's natural gas and oil reaching Turkey, the 6.5
    percent share of the Turkish Petroleum Corporation (TPAO) in this
    project is of great importance. For the first time, Turkey will be
    participating in an international partnership with big oil companies
    in such a large area of oil and natural gas. These experiences
    undoubtedly will contribute greatly and give the needed financial
    backing to the roles TPAO will play in the future.

    Consequently, the oil from the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline comes
    from the Caspian region, which has 8 percent of the proven oil
    reserves in the world and the oil flowing from this pipeline will
    exceed 1 percent of the world's total supply. This means that the
    world energy market will not change its route as a result of these
    projects, but these amounts are enough to remake the countries in the
    region, consolidate their independence and allow them establish
    stable relations.

    Pumping oil through the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline is a breaking
    point from many perspectives and strengthens the search for
    multidimensional cooperation.
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