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Global Market Brief: The Geopolitics Of Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan

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  • Global Market Brief: The Geopolitics Of Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan

    GLOBAL MARKET BRIEF: THE GEOPOLITICS OF BAKU-TBILISI-CEYHAN

    Stratfor
    June 1 2006

    The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline, a year behind schedule and
    some 30 percent over budget, is now a reality. Though the project
    will not be officially inaugurated until July 13, the approximately
    1,118 mile, $4 billion line has already begun operations, with crude
    already pouring into storage tanks overlooking the Mediterranean Sea.

    By the end of 2006, the BTC project will be pumping 300,000 barrels
    per day (bpd) of Caspian crude to the Turkish port of Ceyhan on the
    Mediterranean Sea. By 2008, the BTC will meet its full throughput
    capacity of 1 million bpd. On average, half of that crude will come
    from Azerbaijan and the other half will come from Kazakhstan.

    That was not the original plan.

    Initially, the bulk of the BTC crude was expected to come from
    Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan's reserves, however, did not live up to the
    hype, requiring an expectations adjustment. Regardless, the BTC project
    went ahead as planned -- and it was damn lucky Kazakhstan was brought
    on board. Kazakh crude will cross the Caspian Sea in small oil tankers
    for loading into the BTC at Baku, Azerbaijan. Kazakh and Azerbaijani
    authorities expect to finalize all the agreements needed to make this
    arrangement possible before the end of June.

    Such a business plan makes one wonder about the economic underpinnings
    of the BTC -- and well it should. Of the various means of shipping
    crude out of the Caspian region, the BTC is the least economically
    viable. Not only does the BTC negotiate three states, it also traverses
    long stretches of mountainous territory. Unlike natural gas, moving
    liquid oil -- every seven barrels of which weighs about a ton -- up and
    down mountains is hardly child's play from an engineering standpoint.

    It would have been far easier, cheaper and faster to simply link the
    Azerbaijani oil fields north into the Russian pipeline network or
    south into the Iranian network. Throwing in Kazakhstan, which is on
    the wrong side of the Caspian Sea, left economists doubly perplexed.

    Moreover, the line ends on the Mediterranean, a body of water whose
    littoral states already have enough oil. Caspian crude is needed in
    Asia, not Europe.

    And that's not all. In addition to being technically challenging,
    expensive and geographically questionable, the line also threads its
    way through some extremely dangerous regions. Before the pipeline even
    gets out of Azerbaijan, it must skirt around the secessionist region
    of Nagorno-Karabakh, which broke from Baku during the transition from
    Soviet rule.

    In Georgia, things are far worse. There, the BTC was routed to avoid
    not one, but three restive regions. The first two -- South Ossetia and
    Abkhazia -- broke away from Tbilisi in 1993. Even after 13 years of
    on-again, off-again ethnic cleansing, more ethnic Georgians live in
    these regions than Ossetians or Abkhazians, respectively. The other
    region -- Samtskhe-Javakheti -- is an ethnic Armenian enclave that,
    while still part of Georgia, hosts a Russian military base that poses
    a challenge to Georgian sovereignty over the region. And while Georgia
    and neighboring Chechnya consider themselves on the same side in the
    sense that they both oppose Russian activity in the region, Chechen
    fighters played a decisive role in fighting against the Georgians
    in the Abkhaz and South Ossetian secessionist wars. The winds change
    quickly in the Caucasus, and when they change, they change completely.

    Even in Turkey -- a far more cohesive state than either Azerbaijan or
    Georgia -- the line follows an expensive and winding route to avoid
    the country's increasingly restive Kurdish regions.

    In all cases, the BTC project's operation will flood cash into the
    coffers of the states involved. Turkey expects to make $300 million
    annually from transit fees alone, while Azerbaijan's gross domestic
    product will likely double within five years as a result of the
    project. A fair portion of such money will undoubtedly be used
    to assert the power of Ankara, Tbilisi and Baku over Diyarbakir,
    Sukhumi, Tskhinvali, Akhalkalaki and Stepanakert -- giving all of
    those secessionist regions reason to want the BTC offline. If the
    Iraq experience has taught the oil industry anything, it is that
    oil pipelines are notoriously easy to disrupt, and the BTC is more
    than five times the length of Iraq's northern export system, which
    insurgents have essentially shut down since 2003.

    So why build an economically questionable and militarily insecure
    project?

    The answer is geopolitics. The Soviet Union's dissolution left
    Azerbaijan and Georgia shattered and impoverished. They were also left
    sandwiched between Russia, their former colonial master, and Iran,
    which had a vested interest in ensuring that its own 17-million-strong
    Azerbaijani population did not take any cues from the now-independent
    8-million-strong Azerbaijan to their north. The American-European
    solution was to link the two states in an east-west corridor to
    themselves and Turkey, rather than simply allow them to languish in
    Russia's shadow or fall into the orbit of a resurgent Iran -- and they
    directed their respective government-linked financial institutions
    to help finance the project.

    The greatest threat to the BTC project comes from Russia. Moscow
    serves as the ultimate (if informal) security guarantor of Abkhazia,
    South Ossetia, Samtskhe-Javakheti and Nagorno-Karabakh -- regions
    Russia has backed in order to keep pro-Western Azerbaijan and Georgia
    off-balance. As the project was specifically designed to cut Russia
    out of the loop, one can easily imagine what the Russians would
    like to see done to the pipeline. And considering Moscow's cordial
    relations with these secessionist (or quasi-secessionist, in the case
    of Samtskhe-Javakheti) regions, one can equally easily imagine what
    tools could be brought to bear against the pipeline.

    Yet, irony of ironies, the greatest hope for the BTC also comes
    from Russia, which is, if anything, actually working to restrain
    secessionist groups in the region from acting against the project.

    The single largest investor in the BTC, as well as the oil fields in
    Azerbaijan that will help fill it, is supermajor BP Amoco. BP also
    happens to be the single largest foreign investor in Russia proper,
    and its merger with local oil firm TNK was personally arranged and
    blessed by none other than Russian President Vladimir Putin himself.

    While relations between Russia and the West are certainly cooling,
    they have not yet reached the point where Russia is willing to take
    serious economic hits to protect its geographic space.

    But in the aftermath of Ukraine's Orange Revolution, the Russians
    have been reformatting their foreign and security policies into more
    confrontational forms, and have not shied away from using energy
    policy as a tool to further national goals. Whether Russia will
    attempt to take the BTC offline is not a question of if, but of when,
    and the only restriction on Russian action is a pending decision at
    the highest level of government on whether to advance Russian policies
    to a new stage.

    Project participants in the BTC include BP (30.1 percent), the State
    Oil Company of the Azerbaijani Republic (25 percent), Unocal Corp.

    (8.9 percent), Norway's Statoil (8.71 percent), the Turkish Petroleum
    Corp. (6.53 percent), Italy's ENI (5 percent), France's Total (5
    percent), Japan's Itochu Corp. (3.4 percent), ConocoPhillips (2.5
    percent), Japan's Inpex Corp. (2.5 percent) and Amerada Hess Corp.
    (2.36 percent).

    http://www.stratfor.com/products/premiu m/read_article.php?id=267009
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