Trans-Caspian Oil Transport System
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The Trans-Caspian Oil Pipeline is a proposed oil pipeline from the Kazakhstani port of Aktau to Baku in Azerbaijan. A 700-kilometre (430 mi) long pipeline linked with the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline in Baku will transport oil from the major Kazakhstani oilfield at Kashagan to world markets bypassing Russia. Construction across environmentally fragile and legally disputed segments of the Caspian Sea is predicated upon construction of the Trans-Caspian Gas Pipeline.
Work for the pipeline is still in the feasibility stage according to an official from the oil company Total. The pipeline would provide an important export route for oil from Western Kazakhstan. Work so far has run in parallel with ongoing negotiations between the Azerbaijani and Kazakh governments concerning supply agreements to the BTC pipeline. The Kazakh government has agreed to supply 15,000 barrels per day (2,400 m3/d) initially and optionally increase this to 40,000 barrels per day (6,400 m3/d).
A strong push for the project has been from the partners of the Kashagan oilfield project and in particular Total who has a share in both the field and the BTC pipeline. They have estimated that such a project would cost roughly US$4 billion. The project also faces opposition from Iran and Russia, both alternative avenues for Kazakhstan's oil and gas who would likely object to competing pipelines being built.
External links
- Trans-Caspian Oil Pipeline Planned in Kazakhstan, by Vladimir Socor, Eurasia Daily Monitor. 16 May 2005
- Kashagan Partners Eye US$4-bil. Trans-Caspian Oil Transport System to Connect to BTC Pipeline Global Insight
- The Globalization of Energy Resources: Tapping Caspian Oil and Gas. Lecture presented by Jonathan Elkind, Independent energy, environment and security consultant and former Director for Russian, Ukrainian, and Eurasian Affairs, National Security Council (1998-2001). October 19, 2006. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.