IMPLICATIONS: Deliberations over the mode of transportation to BTC are also likely to have serious political as well as cost implications. Despite the planned expansion of CPC’s annual capacity from 23 million tonnes to 60 million tonnes, capricious and unreliable Russian management of this transit route raises the spectre that some of the output from the more northerly Kazakh field at Tengiz, currently transiting through CPC, might eventually be switched to BTC. Moscow will be anxious to prevent this and may, as a result, raise a range of objections to the construction of a seabed route. In the unresolved dispute over the legal status of the Caspian Sea, the Russian government shifted to supporting a policy of de facto median line division in the late 1990s, manifested in the bilateral agreements on subsurface ownership made with Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan. While this gave Russian companies exploration and production opportunities in the Russian sector, it has also nullified any substantive legal objections that Moscow might have to the KCTS pipeline. Accordingly, the Russian government’s objections to a seabed pipeline have been framed in terms of its environmental risks, morally reinforced by President Vladimir Putin’s decision made in April 2006 to re-route the Transneft pipeline to the Pacific coast away from Lake Baikal. However, Moscow is also likely to seek a stronger formula that also incorporates a legal objection to the pipeline, perhaps on the basis of potential obstruction and damage to the surface caused by the construction and any potential fracture of the pipeline. This would bring Russia, by default, into concert with formal Iranian opposition to median line division, and also raises the spectre that Russia would carve out a role for itself as a self-appointed guardian of the sea’s ecological integrity backed, if necessary, by naval force. If the thought of Russia cleaving towards Iran or adopting a more forward posture in the Caspian region were an unwanted by-product of BTC expansion for US policy-makers, the prospect of Iranian oil being moved through an extended subsea line would cause even greater consternation. Mahmood Khaghani, a senior official in the Iranian oil ministry, raised this possibility on a visit to Baku in early June and, far from closing the door, Total’s Alain Przybysz, speaking in the same week, suggested that KCTS could be linked to Russian and Iranian offshore networks. Such an eventuality would negate over a decade of U.S. regional strategy. The likelihood of BP sanctioning the transit of Iranian oil through the BTC line proper is remote, but the European companies dominating the Agip KCO consortium (which do not include BP), might well decide to disperse Kashagan oil exports through a multiplicity of outlets, even those whose exclusion from the East-West transport corridor project is axiomatic to its existence.
CONCLUSIONS: Advocates of a pipeline extension of BTC across the Caspian Sea might therefore reflect carefully on both the technical, commercial and political consequences of such a project. Tanker traffic may be a more conservative transit mechanism but it is likely to be cheaper, more environmentally sensitive, involve greater local content and, crucially, engender a lower political risk to U.S. interests in the region. However, the calculation might be decisively weighted in favour of constructing a seabed pipeline by adding value to the project, most obviously in the form of a companion gas pipeline taking Kazakh and even Turkmen gas into the Shah Deniz complex and, ultimately, the South Caucasus (Baku-Tbilisi-Erzerum) pipeline due to become operational in 2007. While Russian opposition to the project would undoubtedly further intensify, the rewards for energy-deficient EU states in obtaining Caspian gas independently from the Russian transit system might make these risks worthwhile.
AUTHOR’S BIO: Michael Denison is a Lecturer at Leeds University and an Analyst for the Control Risks Group.