Caspian Sea PDF
Caspian Sea PDF
Caspian Sea PDF
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Background
With the dissolution of the Soviet Union, its successor states diverged in their approach to managing the oil and natural gas sectors of their countries, ranging between private ownership and full state control.
Historical records reveal primitive oil extraction on the Apsheron peninsula near Baku dating back hundreds of years. The Caspian became a significant source of oil production for the Russian Empire, and subsequently the Soviet Union. Its share of world supply fell in the second half of the 20th century because of stagnating growth and interest in new oil-rich areas such as West Siberia. The Caspian Sea and its surrounding area regained the world's attention after a consortium of international oil companies led by BP signed a deal with Azerbaijan to develop the country's offshore reserves and discovered the giant Azeri-Chirag-Guneshli (ACG) field. Since then, Caspian fields have seen an influx of investment into major projects such as Kazakhstan's Kashagan field.
Geology
The Caspian Sea is the world's largest inland water body.
The Caspian Sea is the world's largest endhoreic (inland) water body and contains more than 40 percent of the world's inland waters, according to the United Nations Global International Waters Assessment (GIWA). It has five littoral (coastal) countries Russia, Azerbaijan, Iran, Kazakhstan, and Turkmenistan. Rivers from the sea also discharge into Georgia, Armenia, and Turkey. Broadly speaking, four main geological basins make up the Caspian Sea area the northern, middle, and southern Caspian basins, and the North Ustyurt basin. The northern basin, which encompasses just over a quarter of the sea's surface area, is shallow in depth. This part of the Caspian is frozen nearly half of the year and fast-drifting ice in the shallow water makes exploration projects more difficult. Water depth is greater in the southern portion of the sea. The Mangyshlack Shelf separates the northern basin from the middle basin. This basin makes up about 38 percent of the surface area. The Apsheron Shelf, which is a continuation of the Caucasus mountains, separates the middle and southern basins. The southern basin has a maximum depth of 3,363 feet and contains almost two-thirds of the sea's total volume of water. Based on the geologic reach of the Caspian basins, this report considers the North Caucasus oblast (province) to be the only part of Russia in the Caspian region. Although Iran abuts the Caspian Sea and is one of the Caspian's coastal countries, this report will focus mainly on offshore Iranian assets, since geologically the Caspian ends at the northern tip of Iran. Iran's main centers of oil and natural gas production are far removed from both the Caspian basins and the regional energy infrastructure network.
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Historic treaties form the basis of the current legal status debates. The Soviet government annulled pre-existing treaties between the Russian and Persian Empires and established the 1921 Treaty of Friendship as the basis for bilateral relationship between the Soviet Union and Persia. This treaty focused heavily on navigation rights, and the only reference to natural resources came from fisheries agreements. A 1940 treaty states that the Caspian is "regarded by both contracting parties as a Soviet and Iranian Sea." After 1991, newly-independent Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, and Turkmenistan challenged the legal validity of the Caspian treaties under the 1978 Vienna Convention on Succession of States in Respect of Treaties. Because the countries could not agree unanimously on the Caspian's legal status, the coastal countries operate in a mix of unilateral and bilateral actions, based on differing economic and political interests. For example, Russia and Kazakhstan agreed to set maritime boundaries so that both sides could develop oil resources in their respective sectors. Under UNCLOS, if the Caspian is a legal 'sea', each littoral state receives a territorial sea up to twelve nautical miles, an exclusive economic zone (EEZ) up to nautical 200 miles, and a continental shelf. Since the Caspian at its widest is less than 200 miles, UNCLOS dictates the states apply a median line between claimants. Countries such as Turkmenistan and Azerbaijan would have exclusive access to offshore assets that Iran would not be able to access. If the Caspian is a legal 'lake', international agreements of border states regulate the use of border water. Iran's government has petitioned for equal division by giving each country 20 percent of the sea floor and surface of the Caspian.
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Sector organization
Generally, either state-owned oil companies or a consortium of foreign companies with state support develop Caspian energy resources.
Since gaining independence, Soviet successor states adopted different trajectories in developing national energy resources, from maintaining state control to transferring energy companies to the private sector. Because of the Caspian's strategic location between both Asian and European markets, a wide variety of international firms have invested in the Caspian energy sector along with the national oil companies of the littoral countries. Larger international firms tend to operate through a consortium of several companies in order to jointly invest in major Caspian projects that require enormous upfront costs to develop. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Russia's oil sector adopted private domestic ownership structures. In 1993, Russia created three joint-stock companiesLUKOil, Surgutneftegaz, and Yukosto replace the Soviet oil monopoly. At the same time, the entity replacing the Ministry of GasGazpromretained monopoly ownership along with export monopoly and created 'private domestic ownership with state control'. There was little foreign involvement in Russia's oil and natural gas sector until the late 1990s, when BP bought a 50-percent stake in TNK to form TNK-BP. Azerbaijan involved foreigners in its petroleum industry after achieving independence. International oil companies (IOCs) had been involved in some of the earliest development of Azerbaijan's petroleum industry, including Royal Dutch Shell and the Nobel Brothers Petroleum Company. Azerbaijan has signed the largest number of production-sharing agreements (PSAs) in the former Soviet Union. SOCAR, the country's national oil company, serves as nominal partner in almost all of country's PSAs. It owns the majority of the country's oil and natural gas fields and is responsible for both PSA negotiations and implementation, making it a "one-stop shop" for financial investors. Several smaller publically-owned oil companies, such as UK's Arawak Energy Ltd., have significant investments in Azerbaijan fields, although SOCAR usually maintains around 20 percent interest in the field. A number of international energy firms, such as BP, Chevron, and ExxonMobil, have signed extraction contracts with Azerbaijan and operate through the Azerbaijan International Operating Company consortium (AIOC). AIOC has invested in construction of several pipelines, including the South Caucasus Pipeline and the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) Pipeline, and has also invested in extracting oil and natural gas from Azerbaijan's major offshore projects. Kazakhstan also involved private foreign ownership in the oil sector by selling off the majority of shares of Kazakhstan's state oil company. Initially, the government created a state holding companyKazMunaiGasto oversee oil enterprises inherited from Soviet production in the Caspian basins until foreign companies could take over. Where Azerbaijan's government strengthened SOCAR, the Kazakhstani government did not convert KazMunaiGas into a full-fledged NOC, but rather it sold off its assets to foreign companies. In October 2008, Kazakhstan's government reached an agreement with a number of foreign companies to form the new joint operating company North Caspian Operating Company (NCOC) B.V. This consortium includes equal shares to Royal Dutch Shell, Exxon Mobil, TOTAL, ENI, Kazakhstan's KazMunaiGas, with smaller shares going to other partners such as ConocoPhillips and INPEX. NCOC became the operator of assets formerly held by Agip Kazakhstan North Caspian Operating Company NV (Agip KCO), notably the giant Kashagan field. Smaller petroleum companies have stakes in a variety of Kazakhstan's energy assets. While the NOC KazMunaiGas holds minority positions in some of these assets, Kazakhstan has the most privately-owned assets in the Caspian region.
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Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan are unique among resource-rich Soviet successor states in that they retained the ownership structure inherited from the Soviet Unionmaintaining state ownership with control and discouraging foreign involvement. After declaring independence in 1992, the presidents of both countries asserted that the right to develop petroleum resources belongs to the state and formed fully state-owned oil and natural gas companies. In Turkmenistan, President Niyazov formed Turkmengaz and Turkmenneft for natural gas and oil, respectively, while President Karimov of Uzbekistan formed Uzbekneftegaz to manage both resources. Uzbekistan focused on meeting self-sufficiency in energy by producing from existing fields and increasing the use of hydropower. Total imports of petroleum products dropped from 50,000 bbl/d in 1992 to almost zero in 1996. Turkmenistan's government launched a ten-year development plan in 1993 to become a 'second Kuwait' but restricted the ability of foreign companies to invest in the sector, except for joint venture (JV) contracts with some companies. Heavy restrictions resulted in limited development of Turkmenistan's energy resources, particularly in offshore fields. Dragon Oil, an independent company headquartered in the United Arab Emirates, operates the Caspian offshore Cheleken contract area. Other NOCs such as the Chinese National Petroleum Company (CNPC) and Malaysia's Petronas have invested in Turkmenistan energy assets but do not have significant ownership shares. Iran is the only coastal Caspian country that was not a part of the Soviet Union. The country began to open up the oil and natural gas sector to foreign investment in the mid-1990s, although international sanctions have limited international involvement. The president of Iran chairs the Supreme Energy Council, which was established in July 2001 to oversee the energy sector. The stateowned National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC), under the supervision of the Ministry of Petroleum, is responsible for all upstream oil projects, encompassing both production and export infrastructure. Nominally, NIOC also controls the refining and domestic distribution networks, by way of its subsidiary, the National Iranian Oil Refining and Distribution Company (NIORDC), although functionally, there is a separation between the upstream and downstream sectors.
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Notes: (s) = Value is too small for the number of decimal places shown. "Offshore Caspian" refers to fields in the Caspian Sea. "Onshore Caspian" refers to fields in Caspian basins that are not offshore. Proved + Probable reserves exceed the value of 'proved reserves' in EIA's International Energy Statistics. Sources: U.S. Energy Information Administration, IHS EDIN, Eastern Bloc Research Energy Databook 2012
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The Caspian Sea may contain additional hydrocarbons in unexplored or underdeveloped areas. The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) assessed the Caspian basins region using published geologic information on commercial oil and natural gas field data to estimate undiscovered resources for priority basins around the world. These additional resources are not considered commercial reserves at this time because it is unclear how economically feasible it would be to extract them. The USGS estimates a mean of about 20 billion barrels of crude oil and 243 trillion cubic feet of natural gas in technically recoverable, conventional undiscovered resources. USGS estimates around 65 percent of the undiscovered oil and 81 percent of the natural gas to be in the South Caspian Basin, reflecting the more limited exploration and geologic assessment of the southeastern part of the Caspian Sea near Iran and Turkmenistan because of territorial disputes. The arctic-like north of the Caspian Sea is also relatively unexplored, and USGS estimates significant amounts of undiscovered resources there as well.
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Oil production
The Caspian basins area produced an average of 2.6 million barrels per day of crude oil in 2012, around 3.4 percent of world supply, with just over a third of that coming from offshore fields.
EIA estimates that the Caspian basin produced an average of 2.6 million bbl/d of crude oil and lease condensate in 2012, around 3.4 percent of world crude oil supply. Around 35 percent of that came from offshore fields in the Caspian Sea, with the rest produced in onshore fields in the Caspian basins. Over half of all Caspian basin oil production comes from onshore fields located less than 100 miles from the Caspian Sea coast. Over the past decade, Kazakhstan's onshore oil fields, particularly the Tengiz field, were the biggest contributor the region's production. As Azerbaijan developed the Azeri-Chirag-Guneshli (ACG) field group between 2006 and 2008, the country's offshore production began accounting for an increasing part of total Caspian production. Other significant sources of Caspian oil include onshore fields in Turkmenistan near the coast and production from Russia's North Caucasus region. While most current Caspian oil comes from onshore fields, the biggest prospects for future growth in Caspian oil production will be from offshore fields, which are still relatively undeveloped. Caspian production accounts for virtually all oil production in some of the region's countries, including Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan, yet only a very small portion for the region's two largest producers, Russia and Iran. In total, production that can reasonably be classified as "Caspian oil" accounts for roughly 17 percent of the total production of the region's countries. The table below compares Caspian production to total production for the six countries covered by this report. Crude oil production in Caspian region, 2012
Country Azerbaijan
onshore basin 32
0 3 6 46 0 945
Sources: U.S. Energy Information Administration, IHS EDIN, Eastern Bloc Energy, Rigzone, Rystad Energy
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Azerbaijan
Most of Azerbaijan's oil production comes from the large offshore field complex called ACG after its three principal fields: Gunashli Deep (discovered in 1977), Chirag (1985), and Azeri (1986). A BP-led consortium, the Azerbaijan International Operating Company (AIOC), operates the field group and estimates 5 billion barrels of technically recoverable oil. AIOC includes both Azerbaijan's state oil company SOCAR, as well as foreign companies such as INPEX and Chevron. Oil from ACG transfers to the onshore Sangachal terminal south of Baku via two separate pipelines, and to the onshore Kyanizadag terminal east of Baku. ACG produces mostly Azeri Light, a medium-light and sweet crude that is valued for its high middle-distillate yield. In 2012, Azerbaijan's oil production struggled to meet production targets because of poor performance from AGC. BP and SOCAR agreed to an output stabilization program for 2013 to prevent future declines from the field.
Iran
Currently, there is no significant Iranian production in the Caspian. Iran claims 100 million bbl of oil reserves from a field discovered in 2011 named Sardar Jangal. The Iranian Oil Ministry plans to establish a refinery on the Caspian coast and supply it with crude oil derived from the Sardar Jangal oilfield, although any development in this area is likely years away.
Kazakhstan
The largest source of oil production in Kazakhstan is the giant Tengiz oil field, discovered in 1979 off the northeastern shore of the Caspian Sea. A consortium known as TengizChevroil (TCO) operates the field, which produced roughly 500,000 bbl/d in 2011. In 2012, however, LUKOil announced that Tengiz production fell short of this production because of adverse weather, and mechanical and transportation problems. The greatest potential for oil production growth in Kazakhstan comes from the giant Kashagan field, the biggest oil discovery in the last 35 years. A consortium known as the Agip Kazakhstan North Caspian Operating Company (Agip KCO), led by ENI, operates the field. Discovered in 2000, it is the largest oil field outside the Middle East, with reserves estimates in excess of 13 billion barrels of oil along with significant natural gas deposits. Development of the Kashagan has experienced significant delays and cost overruns. In 2007, the consortium delayed the estimated time for first oil production to 2010, five years later than original schedule. The consortium estimated that about $30 billion has been spent on the first phase of the field's development. Challenges to production include the field's great depth (15,000 feet below sea bed), high sulfur (H2S), high pressure, and cold temperatures that make it unsuitable for typical fixed or floating platform designs. Kashagan requires offshore facilities installed on artificial islands to protect against pack ice movements. The start of commercial production currently is estimated to be in the third quarter of 2013. ENI forecasts Kashagan's output to reach 200,000 bbl/d by the end of 2013 and then rise to the full phase-one target of 370,000 bbl/d in 2014.
Russia
Russian production in the Caspian basin traditionally came from onshore fields in the North Caucasus region, particularly from Krasnodar, Stavropol, and Chechnya. According to Eastern Bloc Energy, the North Caucasus supplies Russia with approximately 65,000 bbl/d. In 2010, Russia's LUKOil launched production of the Yuri Korchagin field, the country's first offshore field in the Caspian Sea. Korchagin has become one of the most profitable upstream projects in the Caspian after Russia reduced export duties on its
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output. Crude output goes to the Makhachkala port in Dagestan to be shipped to the Black Sea port of Novorossiysk via pipeline. Transneft announced plans to expand the Baku-Tikhoretsk pipeline to accommodate increased Russian output from the Caspian to Novorossiysk. LUKOil announced its next plan to increase investment into the Filanovsky field, where it expects to be able to produce 120,000 bbl/d. Aside from oil revenues, development of the northern Caspian gives the Russian enterprises the opportunity to develop new technologies that could eventually be employed in the Arctic. The Korchagin field was the first field in the world to use an iceclass floating storage offloading vessel to protect against the harsh conditions of the northern Caspian Sea. The oil passes through 36 miles of underwater pipelines to floating oil tanks.
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Country Azerbaijan
0 (s) 17 1 0 580
Sources: U.S. Energy Information Administration, IHS EDIN, Eastern Bloc Energy, Rigzone, Rystad Energy
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Azerbaijan
Historically an oil producer, Azerbaijan is emerging as an important regional natural gas producer. Natural gas production comes mostly from the Shah Deniz field, discovered in 1999. Some natural gas production is associated gas from the ACG field group. In total, about 75 percent of natural production comes from offshore fields. Shah Deniz is the largest gas field in the Caspian Sea, located about 40 miles southeast of the ACG complex, in water depths between 262 and 2,000 feet. According to BP (the project's technical operator), Shah Deniz contains potential estimated reserves of roughly 30 Tcf of natural gas. Phase 1 of the development came onstream in late 2006 and began supplying natural gas to Georgia and Turkey a year later through the South Caucasus Gas Pipeline (SCP). Azerbaijan's gas export capacity is tempered somewhat by rising domestic gas consumption, particularly in the power sector where Azerbaijan is replacing Soviet-era equipment with new combined-cycle gas turbines (CCGTs).
Turkmenistan
Because it is landlocked, Turkmenistan generally focuses on exporting natural gas through pipelines rather than as liquefied natural gas (LNG). The country received significant investment for gas field exploration in the 1980s, making it the Soviet Union's then second-largest supplier of gas. Turkmengaz operates the country's two largest fields, Dauletabad and Malai, which are oriented towards exports and account for the majority of the country's production. The British company Gaffney, Cline, and Associates carried out the first independent audit of Turkmenistan's gas reserves in 2008 and 2009. Their report suggested that the country contains the world's fourth largest natural gas field, the South YolotanOsman, which was renamed Galkynysh in 2011. Turkmenistan's national gas company Turkmengaz controls onshore gas production and has limited access to international companies. In 2007, CNPC signed a production-sharing agreement with Turkmen authorities to develop natural gas fields in eastern Turkmenistan, as well as potentially exploring the Galkynysh field.
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Major project
Location
Production, 2012
Shah Deniz
Caspian Offshore
2006
Araz-Alov-Sharg
Caspian Offshore
developing
Tengiz
Caspian Onshore
1991
Karachaganak
Caspian Onshore
Kurmangazy Turkmenistan SouthYolotan (Galkynysh) Dauletabad Cheleken Russia NorthCaspian block (Yury Korchagin) Iran
Caspian Offshore
developing
Rosneft, KazMunaiGaz
Turkmengaz/CNPC
Caspian Offshore
2010
LUKOil
* Although not geologically part of the Caspian basin, these projects are included because they link up to Caspian region infrastructure. NOTE: No projects detailed for Uzbekistan and Iran. Sources: U.S. Energy Information Administration, BP, ENI, Chevron, IHS Edin, Platts, Dragon Oil.
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government has considered building additional refineries in the area to service Kashagan. Turkmenistan's two refineries on the Caspian coast together process most of the country's annual crude output. Finally, while Iran does not produce oil from the Caspian region, NIOC's refinery in Tehran takes in some crude oil from the Caspian Sea under oil swap agreements (see section below). Although the Iranian government has considered constructing a refinery in the port city of Neka, construction has been delayed.
Total 40 9 2 3 2 3 59
Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Oil and Gas Journal Worldwide Refineries January 2013, IHS EDIN.
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* Gas processing plant to service Kashagan field is under construction. Sources: U.S. Energy Information Administration, IHS Edin, IHS Global Insight.
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Major Caspian oil and natural gas export routes Transit route (origin-destination) Major source fields
Destination
Pipeline
Status
Content
Estimated capacity
Owner
To European markets Baku-TbilisiCeyhan(BTC) Operating Crude oil 1,000,000 bbl/d KazakhstanAzerbaijan-GeorgiaTurkey Caspian Pipeline Consortium (CPC) Operating Crude oil 684,000 bbl/d Kazakhstan-Russia Tengiz Transneft, Chevron Caspian Pipeline Consortium, LukArco, ExxonMobil, Rosneft/Shell, Agip, Oryx, BG, KazMunaiGas, BP Uzen-Atyrau-Samara Operating Baku-Novorossiysk (Northern Route Export Pipeline) Central Asia Center gas pipeline system (CAC) Operating Natural Gas eastern branch: 2,200 TurkmenistanBcf western branch: 120 Bcf Baku-TbilisiErzurum(BTE, South Caucasus Pipeline) KazakhstanCaspian Transportation System (KCTS) Proposed Crude oil init. 300,000 bbl/d expand to 800,000 bbl/d KazakhstanAzerbaijan Tengiz Operating Natural Gas 280 Bcf Azerbaijan-Georgia- Shah Deniz Turkey BP, Statoil, SOCAR, LUKOil,Total, Naftiran Intertrade, TPAO Gazprom, Turkmengaz,Uzbektransgaz UzbekistanKazakhstan-Russia Dauletabad Gazprom, Turkmengaz, Uzbekneftegas, KazMunaiGas Operating Crude oil Crude oil 600,000 bbl/d 100,000 bbl/d Kazakhstan-Russia Azerbaijan-Russia Tengiz Sangachal Transneft Transneft ACG, Shah Deniz, Tengiz BTC Pipeline Co.
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To East Asia markets Kazakhstan-China Pipeline Phase 1 operating Phase 2 planned Crude oil currently: 240,000 bbl/d expand: 400,00 bbl/d Kazakhstan-China Tengiz, Zhanazhol Kazakh-Chinese Pipeline Co (KCPC)
Operating
Natural Gas
1,400 Bcf
TurkmenistanUzbekistanKazakhstan-China
To South Asia markets Iran Oil Swap Operating Crude oil 200,000 bbl/d KazakhstanTurkmenistanAzerbaijan-Iran TurkmenistanAfghanistanPakistan-India Pipeline (TAPI) NOTE: No projects detailed for Uzbekistan and Iran. Sources: U.S. Energy Information Administration, BP, ENI, Chevron, IHS Edin, Platts, Dragon Oil. Proposed Natural Gas 1,000 Bcf TurkmenistanAfghanistanPakistan-India South Yolotan (Galkynysh), Dauletabad n/a n/a n/a
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Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, European countries have begun investing in alternative export routes. The Baku-TbilisiCeyhan (BTC) pipeline is a 1-million bbl/d line in Azerbaijan, which came online in 2006. Kazakhstan has a contract with Azerbaijan and the BTC Pipeline Company to ship up to 500,000 bbl/d of oil via the BTC pipeline. Kazakh oil supplies were loaded into the BTC for re-export for the first time in October 2008. Oil supplies are delivered by tanker across the Caspian to Baku. The BTC pipeline system runs 1,110 miles from the ACG field in the Caspian Sea, via Georgia, to the Mediterranean port of Ceyhan, Turkey. From there the oil is shipped by tanker mainly to European markets. Kazakhstan's other major oil export pipeline, Uzen-Atyrau-Samara, is a northbound link to Russia's Transneft distribution system, which provides Kazakhstan with a connection to world markets via the Black Sea. The line was upgraded in 2009 by the addition of pumping and heating stations and currently has a capacity of approximately 600,000 bbl/d. Before the completion of the CPC pipeline, Kazakhstan exported almost all of its oil through this system. Kazakhstan is plan on constructing the Kazakhstan-Caspian Transportation System(KCTS). The plan is to export oil produced primarily at Kashagan and Tengiz to international markets via the East-West energy corridor along the route EskeneKuryk-BTC. The oil would be transported through the future Eskene-Kuryk pipeline on the Kazakh Caspian coast to an oil terminal where it would sail to Azerbaijan, and from there on through the BTC pipeline. KTCS expected to supply 300,000 bbl/d through BTC to global markets, gradually increasing to 800,000 bbl/d. Foreign investment will fund part of the project, estimated by KazMunaiGas to cost $4 billion. Caspian natural gas moves to Western Europe through a combination of Soviet-era and newly constructed pipelines. The Central Asia-Center gas pipeline system (CAC), built between 1960 and 1988, carries Caspian Sea natural gas north to Russia where it links up with the wider Soviet gas pipeline network. The two branches of CAC, controlled by Gazprom, meet in the southwestern Kazakh city of Beyneu before crossing into Russia at Alexandrov Gay and feeding into the Russian pipeline system. The eastern branch of the pipeline, which has a throughput capacity of 2.2 Tcf, originates in the southeastern gas fields of Turkmenistan. The western branch (120 Bcf) originates on the Caspian seacoast of Turkmenistan. Almost all Turkmen and Uzbek gas is delivered via the eastern branch. The western branch is more than 35 years old, and sections of it are in disrepair, causing periodic operational problems. The South Caucasus Pipeline (SCP) runs parallel to BTC and supplies natural gas to Georgia and Turkey from Caspian fields. The pipeline began operating in 2007 and has the capacity to transport about 280 Bcf of natural gas, according to IHS Global Insight. In 2010, SCP daily throughput averaged 180 Bcf of natural gas, according to BP.
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The Turkmenistan-China gas pipeline transports most of the Caspian region's natural gas exports to East Asia. Turkmenistan's eastern natural gas fields, including Galkynysh and the Bagtyyarlyk field group, feed the pipeline, which then enters Uzbekistan and runs to southern Kazakhstan. The pipeline crosses the Kazakhstan-China border at Khorgos and connects to the West-East Gas Pipeline. The pipeline's partners are expanding the pipeline to receive natural gas from Kazakhstan's western fields, such as Tengiz and Kashagan.
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Notes
Data presented in the text are the most recent available as of August 26, 2013. Data are EIA estimates unless otherwise noted.
Sources
BBC Monitoring BP Asia News Monitor Bernstein Research Cedigaz CPC Eastern Bloc Energy European Bank for Reconstruction and Development Eurasianet FACTS Global Energy International Energy Agency IHS Global Insight IHS CERA IHS Edin IHS PFC Interfax Janusz et al (2005). "The Caspian Sea: Legal Status and Regime Problems." Chatham House, REP BP 05/02 Kazakhstan Oil & Gas KazMunaiGas LUKOil Luong and Weinthal (2010). Oil Is Not a Curse: Ownership Structure and Institutions in Soviet Successor States. Cambridge University Press Middle East Economic Survey (MEES) Natural Earth GIS dataset Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Black Sea and Caspian Sea Environmental Information Center Offshore Technology Oil and Gas Journal Reuters RFE/RL Rigzone Rystad Energy Transneft U.S. Department of State U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) UN Global International Waters Assessment Energy Charter Secretariat (2008). "Oil flows and export capacity in the Caspian and Black Sea regions."
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