Balkan Vital Graphics
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BALKAN VITAL GRAPHICS
BACKGROUND
MINING
WATER
NATURE
19
conflicts. The Danube was closed to navi- gation for a few years, due to NATO bomb- ing in 1999 which destroyed several bridges preventing river traffic. Today, all the bridges have been rebuilt and navigation has been reopened in the area.
FINLAND
Political and economic alliances Member and observer countries
SWEDEN
BALTICSEA
DENMARK
Vyborg
Helsinki
NORTH SEA
BALTICAND POLANDBYPASS: NORTHERNEUROPEAN GASPIPELINE ANDBALTICOILPIPELINE (BPS)-
of the GUAM: Georgia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Moldavia (a pro-western organisation) of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) of the European Union
Primorsk
Tallinn
ESTONIA
Tomsk
LANDS NETHER-
Saint Petersburg
Rostock
Novossibirsk
Riga
RUSSIA
Greifswald
LATVIA
of the Union of Russia and Belarus
Perm
Jaroslavl
Tyumen
GERMANY
Gdansk
of both the SCO and the Union of Russia and Belarus
RUSSIA
LITHUANIA
Berlin
Omsk
Major oil and gas pipeline projects The oil and gas pipeline ‘war’ Major oil and gas fields
Vilnius
GASPIPELINE YAMALEUROPE
Moscow
Kazan
Minsk
Niznij- Novgorod
Warsaw
Prague
Ufa
Existing or under construction and/or renovation
POLAND
BELARUS
Envisaged
Supported by
CZECH REP. .
DRUJBA EXPANSION
Astana
SWITZ.
Samara
China Russia the United States the European Union Iran
Vienna Bratislava
AUSTRIA
Karaganda
Brody
Orenburg
SLOVAKIA
Kiev
Saratov
Budapest
Atassu
Druzh ba
Trieste
Ex-USSR pipeline network Other very important pipelines
SLOVENIA
Alexandrov Gaj
OILPIPELINE ADRIA REVERSAL
HUNGARY
Omisalj
UKRAINE
LAKE BALKHA SH
KAZAKHSTAN
Alashanku
Chisinau MOLDOVA
KAZAKHSTAN-CHINA OILPIPELINE
Chossing a route: geostrategic ‘bypass’ policies
Kuvandyk
CROATIA
GASPIPELINE NABUCCO
RUSSIA
Volgograd
Territory which is largely not under state control and where the security of oil and gas pipelines cannot be guaranteed Territory that players in the Great Game say should be avoided when planning the transport of oil and gas from the point of extraction to the main markets (US, Europe, China and Japan) • The US and European Union are seeking at all costs to establish supply lines across the southern Caucasus, the Black Sea, and Turkey, thus avoiding Russian and Iranian territory (although the Europeans are consider- ing a gas pipeline across the north of Iran). • Russia is trying to control the oil and gas routes across transit countries (Georgia, Ukraine, Belarus, Hungary and Poland). On 12 May 2007 it signed an agreement with Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan to renovate the CAC-4 gas pipeline, thus spoiling competing western plans. It has also just commissioned a gas pipeline allowing it to bypass Chechnya. Finally, Russia could neutralise the Ukraine, Poland and the Baltic states as transit countries by joining in the construction of gas and oil pipelines across the Baltic sea (with direct access to the German market) and from Burgas to Alexandroupoli (avoiding, for historical and ecological reasons, the Bosporus). • Azerbaijan insists on bypassing its neighbour Armenia, with which it is still in conflict.
BOSNIA and HERZEGOVINA
Karakoya Kol
Rostov
Odessa
Aterau
ITALY
Alma-Ata
SERBIA Belgrade
Kherson
Iujny
ROMANIA
TENGIZ
CHINA
CASPIANPIPELINE CONSORTIUM-CPC
KASHA
GAN
TURKMENISTAN-CHINA GASPIPELINE
SEAOF AZOV
Bucharest
KCTS (OILPIPELINETO KURYKTHEN TANKERS)
MONTENEGRO Kosovo
Constanta
Crimea
Bishkek
Krasnodar
OIL
ARAL SEA
Sofia
KYRGYZSTAN
PIPELINE AMBO
BULGARIA
Novorossijsk
CHECHNYABYPASS
Tirana
Burgas
MACEDONIA
Bejneu
TANKERS
Tuapse
Vlorë
Aktau
BAP
Tashkent
ALBANIA
CENTRALASIA– CENTREGAS PIPELINE (CAC-4) WESTERNLEG EASTERNLEG
CASPIAN SEA
Bosphorus
Abkhazia
UZBEKISTAN
Kuryk
BLACKSEA
Chechnya
Alexandroupolis
GEORGIA
A number of oil pipelines are currently under study or construction in the Balkans: the US registered Albanian-Macedonian-Bulgarian Oil Corporation (AMBO) project will carry oil from the Caspian to the Mediterranean, via Bulgaria, Macedonia and Albania; the Adria Group project will channel Russian oil to the Omisalj terminal on the Croatian coast. The presence of President Putin, of Russia, at Southeast Europe’s first energy summit in Zagreb in June 2007, emphasised the re- gion’s strategic importance to his country. It should be borne in mind that many Balkan countries suffer a serious energy deficit, fur- ther aggravated by the closure of four out of six units of the nuclear power plant at Ko- zloduy, Bulgaria, by 2006.
Istanbul
GASPIPELINE BLUESTREAM
GREECE
Tbilisi
Supsa
KCTS
TANKERS
TCGP
TAJIKISTAN
Ankara
AEGEAN
OILPIPELINEBTC
Dushanbe
Erevan ARMENIA
Turkmenbashi
AZERBAIJAN
Athens
Bakou
Baku
TURKMENISTAN
Erzurum
GASPIPELINE BTE
TURKEY
Nakhitchevan (Azer.)
MEDITERRANEAN
Ashkhabad
GUNESHLI CHIRAG AZERI
TRANSCASPIAN CORRIDOR
Tabriz
Ceyhan
Kabul
Islamabad
Neka
Meshed
AFGHANISTAN
Herat
CYPRUS
Tehran
Sources:Kazinform;WorldPressReview;Pravda;RiaNovosti;Agence France-Presse (AFP);UnitedStatesDepartmentofEnergy (USDOE),Energy InformationAdministration (EIA);RadioFreeEurope -RadioLiberty (RFE-RL); AsianDevelopmentBank;Eurasianet; InterstateOilandGasTransport to Europe (Inogate);TransportCorridorEurope-Caucasus (Traceca),European Union,Tacisprogramme,2005;EnergyMapof theMiddleEastandCaspianSea Areas,PetroleumEconomist,London,2006; InternationalEnergyAgency (IEA); JeanRadvanyiandNicolasBeroushashvili, ‘Atlas’, Institutnationaldes langues etcivilisationsduCaucasusorientales (Inalco), tobepublishedat theendof 2007;SaltanatBerdikeevaandErinMark, ‘Russianenergypolitics’,Eurasia21, 2006;Nabucco,Energyministersconference ‘Securityofgas supplies inEurope’, Vienna, June2006
SYRIA
GASPIPELINETAPI
LEBANON
Baghdad
IRAN
New Delhi
PAKISTAN
ISRAEL
Isfahan
IRAQ
PALESTINE
INDIA
Kerman
JORDAN
SAUDI ARABIA
ÉGYPTE
LIBYE
Abadan
Shiraz
GASPIPELINE IPI
KUWAIT
NB:TheCaspianPipelineConsortium (CPC) is supportedbyRussiabuthasa numberofUS,OmaniandKazakh shareholders
MAP BY PHILIPPE REKACEWICZ, 2007
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