New pipeline to pump Caspian oil to Europe
Six European countries, including Austria, Italy and Romania, approved a plan for a pipeline to ship oil from the
Caspian Sea region to western Europe, officials said. The pipeline would pump an average of 60 mm tpy of oil from
Romania's Black Sea port of Constanta into the Transalpine Pipeline, which supplies storage terminals and refineries
in Austria, Germany and the Czech Republic via Trieste, Italy, the officials said.
"The new pipe would cover for a future deficit of oil in Europe, especially as there won't be much oil left in the
North Sea by 2025," Romanian Deputy Economy Minister Andrei Grigorescu said. "This new pipeline could reach maximum
capacity in 2014 at the latest."
Grigorescu said the six countries, which also include Croatia, Serbia and Slovenia, have agreed to push for a larger
pipeline than one considered in 2001, which was originally planned at 15 mm tpy.
The actual construction of the pipeline should start at the end of next year, Grigorescu said at the end of a meeting
with government representatives from all six countries involved in the project.
The pipeline would provide an alternative to one now being built between Baku, in Azerbaijan, and Turkey's port of
Ceyhan, through the Georgian capital Tbilisi, he said.
"It's also meant to ease tanker traffic in Turkey's Bosporus Straits, as well as ease pumping of about 800 mm tons
via pipelines crossing the Mediterranean Sea each year," Grigorescu said. Grigorescu said the feasibility study on
the pipeline project would be financed by the European Union. Construction of the actual pipe has attracted interest
from "very many investors," he said.
ENI, Italy's largest oil company, called for construction of a similar pipeline in 1998. It said then building a
pipeline through Romania and Serbia would cost about $ 1.2 bn, using some existing pipes in both countries. That
pipeline would have carried no more than 35 mm tpy of oil.
"This pipeline would be the shortest way for Caspian oil to reach the European market," said Serbia's Slobodan
Sokolovic, the head of the committee made of representatives of the six countries considering the project. "It would
also help add stability in the region."
Refineries in all six countries are expected to benefit from processing crude pumped through the pipeline, Sokolovic
and Grigorescu said.
OMV, Austria's biggest oil company which processes oil from the Transalpine Pipeline in its refineries at home and in
neighbouring Germany, in July agreed to pay as much as EUR 1.52 bn to buy 51 % of SNP Petrom, Romania's biggest
refiner.
