Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan Pipeline Company founded
On August 1, after eight years of bitter political intrigue, the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan Pipeline Company (BTC Co.) was
founded during a document signing ceremony in London. Witnessed by representatives of the pipeline’s host
countries Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey, the new corporation marks a major step in the opening of a new export route
for Caspian Basin oil resources to the United States, Israel and Western European markets.
The objectives of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, according to US officials, is to reduce dependence on OPEC oil
producers in the Middle East, create a secure supply of oil to Israel, and begin to end dependence on Russian and
Iranian oil transportation networks from the Caspian region. The preparation for the huge pipeline has already seen
an escalation of US military activity in the former Soviet Republics bordering Russia, integrating them further into
US military plans. The construction phase will see a dramatic further growth in US military operations.
At an initial cost of $ 2.5 bn, estimated to double before completion and funded from “free public money”
and private finance, BTC Co. will construct, operate and own the 1,750 km pipeline from Baku in Azerbaijan, through
the Georgian capital Tbilisi then onto the Turkish Mediterranean oil terminal at Ceyhan. The pipeline will be ready
to pump oil in 2005 from a phase one development of the Azeri-Chirag-Guneshli oil field. Its capacity will be 1 mm
bpd. A 900 km gas pipeline running between Baku-Tbilisi-Erzarum, terminating in Turkey’s Anatolia region, will
form the axis of the US sponsored Eurasian Energy Corridor.
Since the Eurasian Energy Corridor project was officially launched in 1994, the US and Turkish government’s
have sponsored various events announcing the “imminence” of a deal. As a result such declarations were
increasingly greeted with cynicism. This time, however, pipe-lay contracts have been awarded.
Consolidated Contractors International of Greece will construct Azerbaijan’s section. France’sSpie Capag
will lead a joint venture with US Petrofac to lay the Georgian sector. BOTAS, the Turkish State pipeline company,
will continue as the lump sum turnkey contractor for the Turkish sector of the pipeline. Bechtel (US) will be the
main contractor for engineering, procurement and construction.
The British Petroleum (BP) umbrella consortium, Azerbaijan International Oil Consortium (AIOC) first signed contracts
to explore Azerbaijan’s Caspian oil and gas fields eight years ago. The BTC Co. project has caused fracturing
within the Consortium. AIOC major shareholders, ExxonMobil and ChevronTexaco continue to object to the pipeline
project on commercial grounds, but the project is ready to move into construction phase.
BP is the leading shareholder in the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan Pipeline Company. September marks the tenth anniversary of
BP’s outline agreement with Azerbaijan for exploration of the Azeri-Chirag-Guneshli oil field. Since then
investment in BP projects in the country’s oil sector total $ 16bn and is said to be the most complex
infrastructure development in the world.
Since November 1999, BP has shifted from a public “position of scepticism” to leading the formation of
BTC Co. BP has not explained the abrupt change of policy, but oil industry analysts have accused BP of entering a
political alliance with the Bush and Blair governments. A BP spokesman replied that Azerbaijan at present has limited
oil reserves, but it is a “key component of its [BP’s] growth strategy” and that “the
pipeline was a strategic route out of the South Caspian and had to be built.” BP’s policy change was in
all likelihood prompted by a combination of the discovery in May 1999 of the Azeri Shah-Deniz oil field and the US
administration’s financial guarantees.
Negotiators for BTC Co. and US politicians were unable to convince executives of ExxonMobil and ChevronTexaco, major
shareholders in the AIOC, to become shareholders in the new corporation. At a conference on the BTC pipeline attended
by US government officials, Chevron vice Chairman Richard Matzke declared, “pipeline projects required an
incremental approach grounded in commercial realities, not perceived geopolitical imperatives.” He added,
“Oil cannot be pulled through a pipeline, but can only be pushed.”
ChevronTexaco and ExxonMobil are not objecting to political interference in commercial decisions. Through AIOC they
have completed a new Russian pipeline from the Tengiz oil field in northwest Kazakhstan to the Russian Black Sea port
of Novorossiisk. Differences between oil executives over oil pipeline routes from the Caspian fields are not only
commercial, but reflect differing political strategies within the Bush administration.
Oil executives’ objections do have substance: The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline passes through regions of
enormous political instability and social unrest. At one stage the Azeri section passes within 10 km of the
Azerbaijan and Armenia disputed border region, which caused terrible ethnic wars in the early 1990s. In Georgia the
pipeline will pass through the Pankisi Gorge, home to Chechen forces. The Turkish section passes through its
south-eastern region, where the Kurdish minority lives.
A spokesman for the London based Kurdish Human Rights group said, “This pipeline would militarise a corridor
running from the Caspian to the Mediterranean.... This could threaten the fragile ceasefire in the Kurdish region
through which the pipeline will pass”.
Pete Holibil of Prague based CEE Bank-Watch warned that the jobs promised by host country governments would not
materialise. BP has had to reign in estimates and insist that local economic impacts will be severely limited.
Holibil added, “Local people lack basic energy supplies, but the oil and gas from the Caspian will be piped
straight to Western markets. Local communities will be by-passed completely.”
Not only is the pipeline created on entirely fresh ground with no previous infrastructure development, it also runs
over three regions that suffer regular earthquakes. According to an environmental impact report, BP has brushed aside
such dangers. Under different circumstances such obstacles would cause oil executives to terminate a planned
commercial operation at the feasibility stage, but in this case the political necessity of US domination of the
Caspian is driving commercial decisions.
Pipeline volume does not correspond to the relatively small-scale volume of oil currently extracted from Azerbaijan.
At present Azeri oil transported through the smaller AIOC pipeline from Baku to the Georgian Black Sea port of Supsa
is 200,000 bpd. The port can only handle 80,000-ton tankers, whereas at Ceyhan a massive terminal will be built to
handle 300,000-ton tankers.
The US-BP project is expected to enter intense competition for the significant new oil fields discovered in
Kazakhstan. One report said the “Bush administration insists that Kazakhstan [largest oil discoveries so far]
join the planned Baku-Ceyhan project by building an underwater pipeline that would link its Caspian sea port of Akatu
to the Azerbaijan capital (Baku).
In Washington’s view, such a development would not only make the projected conduit more profitable, it would
also tie Kazakhstan to its own Central Asian regional security build-up.” BTC Co. faces fierce competition from
Iran and Russia. On March 26, 2001, Kazakhstan began pumping oil from its huge Tengiz oil field through a Russian
pipeline to the major Black Sea oil terminal at Novorossiisk.
They are also considering a deal with Iran to transport its oil from the huge new Kashagan oil fields to the Persian
Gulf. On May 13, 2002, Russia and Kazakhstan struck an agreement over the demarcation of the northern Caspian seabed
and both hope that it clears the way for further joint ventures.
The protection of the pipeline has become a pretext for broader US military operations in the region. Controlling
pipeline routes from the Caspian Sea has been identified by strategists as a key post Cold War objective. On April
29, the presidents of the three host countries met in the Turkish Black Sea port of Trabzon to discuss security issue
surrounding the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline.
Georgia’s Eduard Shevardnadze, Azerbaijan’s Heidar Aliev and Turkey’s Ahmet Necdet Sezer signed a
security pact creating the foundations for reorienting its military structures to protect the pipeline and the
Eurasian Energy Corridor. On February 21, two US Air force planes brought 40 US special advisors to Tbilisi, the
Georgian capital -- the first time US combat troops have been deployed in the Caucasus.
They will prepare the groundwork for the later deployment of 200 Special Operations troops as part of the US’s
“Georgia Train & Equip” programme. They will concentrate their activities in the Pankisi Gorge
against Chechen and Islamic militants.
Both the US and Russia have declared the gorge to be a hideout for fleeing Taliban and Al Qaeda terrorists. Although
there is agreement on this question, the Russian government has reacted angrily to the latest incursion by US combat
forces into what it regards as its own sphere of influence. Georgia has rejected Russian demands that its forces be
allowed in to secure the Pankisi Gorge.
Leading strategists in the US see the snubbing of Russian offers and the arrival of US troops as a strategic victory.
The head of the state-run Georgian International Oil Corporation, Giorgi Chanturia, which is directly involved in
negotiations at Trabzon, said, “All three states have said, through their presidents, that they will sign an
agreement on the creation of co-ordination [structures] to ensure the safety of the two pipelines but also of the
main communication arteries, the electricity transportation network, the fibre optic cables, etc.”
Chanturia explained the significance of the arrival of US military personnel: “... the training programme will
partly aim at helping Georgia ensure the safety of oil pipelines. As I said, [Georgia, Azerbaijan, and Turkey] have
agreed to guarantee the safety of the pipelines on their respective territories. From the very beginning, we have
said that issues related to the safety of the pipelines will be part of the [US] training programme.”
Chanturia added, “What has been set up [in Trabzon] is a basis that will help bring regional co-operation with
regard to the safety of the whole energy corridor to a new level in order to protect the interests of the producing
countries, transit countries and consuming countries. What is at stake is not only the security of the pipelines, we
are talking here about the entire energy corridor.”
The next summit in Tbilisi is expected to attract growing interest in the former Soviet republics. Russian oil giant
LUKoil, also a leading shareholder in AIOC, approached the Russian government on investment in BTC Co. but was
instructed to reject all offers. The Russian government has for the last eight years supported an alternative Russian
route to the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan Pipeline. It has also sought agreement to form what the Russian press calls a
“Central Asian OPEC.” In May 2001 the Eurasian Economic Commonwealth (EEC) was formed, creating a free
trade zone between Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan.
Internal trade has increased by only 1 % on the previous year. Russia is using the EEC to pursue common border
defence agreements. According to a report on July 30, “Russian President Vladimir Putin diplomatically summed
up the decision the other EEC member states would soon face: ‘Russia has to determine whether it needs to
fortify its border with Kazakhstan, or guard [the Kazakh border further south]’”.
One of Putin’s first acts after coming to power was to refocus Russian policy toward the Caspian Sea. A report
in Caspian Sea Oil Studies explained, “Russia’s new leader, Vladimir Putin, was pushing ahead with an
aggressive policy designed to recover Moscow’s regional hegemony. Soon after Putin’s March 26 election,
Russia’s National Security Council declared the Caspian region to be one of Russia’s key foreign policy
interests.”
The report continues that the former energy minister Victor Kalyuzhny took up a newly created post on May 31, 2002 as
a special co-ordinator on Caspian policy: “The creation of the post underlined a significant shift from
Moscow’s ad hoc and disorganised approach seen during the Yeltsin era.... The ominous implications of
Russia’s new policy were underlined by Andrei Urnov, Russia’s ambassador at large and chief of the
Foreign Ministry’s Working Group on the Caspian Sea, in a May 2000 appearance on Capitol Hill....,” Urnov
told the Washington audience, “it hasn’t been left unnoticed in Russia that certain outside forces are
trying to weaken our positions in the Caspian Basin, to drive a wedge between us and other Caspian states”.
Russia’s Naval Caspian Sea Flotilla is one of the few areas of military spending that has expanded. Over the
last few years it has doubled in size. When the Soviet Caspian Navy was disbanded after the dissolution of the Soviet
Union, Russia had to withdraw from its main naval base in the Azerbaijan capital Baku and create a new one at
Astrakhan. This reorientation of Russian naval power was displayed last during the largest Caspian Sea naval
operations since 1991.
Between August 1-15 this year, 60 ships, 30 aircraft and 10,000 military personnel took part in operations aimed at
defending oilrigs, terminals and seaports. US conflicts with Iran None the new states in the Caspian have any real
military or naval capacity to match Russia’s. Iran, in an agreement signed in 1924 with the former Soviet
Union, was not allowed naval bases along its Caspian coastline. Due to the expansion of Russian naval presence and
conflicts with Azerbaijan, the Iranian State is now considering the transformation of existing ports into naval
bases.
Turkmenistan recently signed a contract with the Russian government to exchange gas rights for gunboats. According to
a report, “In March 2002 Washington announced it would soon provide military aid to build its [Azerbaijan navy]
-- to protect its claims to a section of the Caspian Sea also claimed by Iran.”
Iran has consistently opposed the BTC pipeline project and Azerbaijan’s regional ambitions to become a
strategic energy transportation hub. Iran possesses the most efficient pipelines into the Persian Gulf and thus onto
Asian markets. In the face of fierce US opposition, France’s Total, operating in Iran and the Caspian, is
planning a feasibility study to transport oil from Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan via Iran into the Persian Gulf.
AIOC firms have lobbied the US administration to allow it to pump 800,000 bpd through Iran’s National State Oil
Company. It was ruled out after Iran was named as the main sponsor of terrorism in Bush’s “axis of
evil” speech. The US government has used a combination of political and financial muscle to turn oil
corporations away from using Russian and Iranian pipeline routes and to construct an alternative network.
Iran and Azerbaijan clash regularly over border disputes. The most serious was anincident last July, when two Iranian
air force jets threatened to sink two Azeri ships hired by BP to explore the Araz-Aloo-Sharg oil field. The Iranian
military accused the ships of entering Iranian waters. US officials told Iran it would not tolerate threats against
Azerbaijan. Turkey’s General Staff Chief Kivrikogla went to Baku, followed by ten fighter jets. One report
declared the deployment a “warning to Azeri enemies” and another one declared that Turkey and Azerbaijan
may be two countries, “but we are one nation”.
Iran’s main political weapon is to disrupt any agreement on the division of the Caspian Sea Basin. The Iranian
government is demanding that Caspian Sea wealth be equally distributed between all countries with a Caspian
coastline.
Disagreements between Russia and Iran and Azerbaijan are frustrating the development of Caspian energy resources.
Brenda Schaffer of the Caspian Studies Program at Harvard University explained, “The main problem with Iran is
that, for them, the Caspian isn’t about two more percentage [points] this way or two more percentage [points]
that way. It’s basically about obstructing the flow of Caspian oil in order to keep Azerbaijan in a weak
position.”
The Iranian bourgeoisie fear the possible outcome on Iran’s internal political situation if Azerbaijan becomes
one of the major regional hubs for oil and gas production and transportation. Approximately 10 mm Azeris live in Iran
-- more than in Azerbaijan. The Iranian regime believes that separatist forces in the Azeri community may demand
areas of Iran where they predominate break off and develop relations with Azerbaijan.
Recent US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) reports on internal Iranian politics indicate that the Bush
administration is not only considering a direct military assault on Iran, but also using Azeri political forces to
destabilise, weaken and break-up the Iranian State. Schaffer also adds a crucial point: “As an OPEC producer,
they are very concerned with the development of non-OPEC oil sources, which ruin the OPEC monopoly and thus its
ability to manipulate prices and use oil in a political way.”
The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan Pipeline Company will have a significant impact upon military, economic and diplomatic relations in the Caspian Region. All five nations surrounding the Caspian Sea will dramatically increase naval capacity, financed by the major powers. The Eurasian Energy Corridor opens up a new high-tech artery of the global economy, but under imperialist control it marks a major step towards military conflict in Central Asia.
