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Caspian Sea Region: Reserves and Pipelines Tables

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Table 1. Caspian Sea Region Oil and Natural Gas Reserves

Country

Proven* Oil Reserves

Possible** Oil Reserves

Total Oil Reserves

Proven* Natural Gas Reserves

Possible** Natural Gas Reserves

Total Natural Gas Reserves

Azerbaijan

1.2 BBL

32 BBL

33.2 BBL

4.4 Tcf 

35 Tcf

39.4  Tcf

Iran***

0.1 BBL

15 BBL

15.1 BBL

0 Tcf

11 Tcf

11 Tcf

Kazakhstan

5.4 BBL

92 BBL

97.4 BBL

65 Tcf

88 Tcf`

153 Tcf

Russia***

2.7 BBL

14 BBL

16.7 BBL

N/A

N/A

N/A

Turkmenistan

0.6 BBL

80 BBL

80.6 BBL

101 Tcf

159 Tcf

260 Tcf

Total

10 BBL

233 BBL

243 BBL

170.4 Tcf

293 Tcf

463.4 Tcf

Sources: Oil and Gas Journal, Energy Information Administration

* proven reserves are defined as oil and natural gas deposits that are considered 90% probable
**  possible reserves are defined as oil and natural gas deposits that are considered 50% probable
*** only the regions near the Caspian are included

BBL = billion barrels, Tcf = trillion cubic feet
   

Table 2. Caspian Sea Region Oil Production and Exports
(thousand barrels per day)

Country

Production (1990)

Est. Production (2001)

Possible Production (2010)

Net Exports (1990)

Est. Net Exports (2001)

Possible Net Exports (2010)

Azerbaijan

259

311.2

1,200

77

175.2

1,000

Kazakhstan

602

811

2,000

109

631

1,700

Iran*

0

0

0

0

0

0

Russia**

144

11

300

0

7

300

Turkmenistan

125

159

200

69

107

150

Total

1,130

1,292.2

3,700

255

920.2

3,150

Source: Energy Information Administration

* only the regions near the Caspian are included
** includes Astrakhan, Dagestan, and the North Caucasus region bordering the Caspian Sea
 
 

Table 3. Caspian Sea Region Natural Gas Production and Exports
(billion cubic feet per year)

Country

Production (1990)

Est. Production (2000)

Possible Production (2010)

Net Exports (1990)

Est. Net Exports (2000)

Possible Net Exports (2010)

Azerbaijan

350

200

1,100

-272

0

500

Kazakhstan

251

314.3

1,100

-257

-176.6

350

Iran*

0

0

0

0

0

0

Russia**

219

30

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Turkmenistan

3,100

1,642

3,900

2,539

1,381

3,300

Total

3,920

2,072

6,100

2,010

1,204.4

4,150

Source: Energy Information Administration

* only the regions near the Caspian are included
** includes Astrakhan, Dagestan, and the North Caucasus region bordering the Caspian Sea  
 

Table 4. Oil Export Routes and Options in the Caspian Sea Region

Name/Location

Route

Crude Capacity

Length

Estimated Cost/Investment

Status

Atyrau-Samara Pipeline

Atyrau (Kazakhstan) to Samara (Russia), linking to Russian pipeline system 

Recently increased to 310,000 bbl/d

432 miles

Increase in capacity cost approximately
$37.5 million

Existing pipeline recently upgraded by adding pumping and heating stations to increase capacity.

Baku-Ceyhan ("Main Export Pipeline")

Baku (Azerbaijan) via Tbilisi (Georgia) to Ceyhan (Turkey), terminating at the Ceyhan Mediterranean Sea port

Planned: 1 million bbl/d

Approximately 1,038 miles 

$2.9 billion 

One-year detailed engineering study completed in June 2002. Construction on Turkish section of pipeline began in June 2002. Completion of entire pipeline targeted for 2004, exports by Feb. 2005.

Baku-Supsa Pipeline (AIOC "Early Oil" Western Route)

Baku to Supsa (Georgia), terminating at Supsa Black Sea port

Recently upgraded from 115,000 to 145,000 bbl/d; proposed upgrades to between 300,000 bbl/d to 600,000 bbl/d

515 miles

$600 million

Exports began in April 1999; approximately 115,000 bbl/d exported via this route in 2001.

Baku-Novorossiisk Pipeline (Northern Route)

Baku via Chechnya (Russia) to Novorossiisk (Russia), terminating at Novorossiisk Black Sea oil terminal

100,000 bbl/d capacity; possible upgrade to 300,000 bbl/d

868 miles; 90 miles are in Chechnya 

$600 million to upgrade to 300,000 bbl/d

Exports began late 1997; exports in 2001 averaged 50,000 bbl/d.

Baku-Novorossiisk Pipeline (Chechnya bypass, with link to Makhachkala)

Baku via Dagestan to Tikhoretsk (Russia) and terminating Novorossiisk Black Sea oil terminal

Currently: 120,000 bbl/d (rail and pipeline: 160,000 bbl/d); Planned: 360,000 bbl/d (by 2005)

204 miles

$140 million

Completed April 2000. Eleven-mile spur connects bypass with Russia's Caspian Sea port of Makhachkala.

Caspian Pipeline Consortium (CPC) Pipeline

Tengiz oil field (Kazakhstan) to Novorossiisk Black Sea oil terminal

Currently: 565,000-bbl/d; Planned: 1.34-million bbl/d (by 2015)

990 miles

$2.5 billion for Phase 1 capacity; $4.2 billion total when completed

First tanker loaded in Novorossiisk (10/01); exports rising to 400,000 bbl/d by end-2002

Central Asia Oil Pipeline

Kazakhstan via Turkmenistan and Afghanistan to Gwadar (Pakistan)

Proposed 1 million bbl/d

1,040 miles 

$2.5 billion

Memorandum of Understanding signed by the countries; project stalled by regional instability and lack of financing.

Iran-Azerbaijan Pipeline

Baku to Tabriz (Iran)

                                               Proposed 200,000 bbl/d to 400,000 bbl/d

N/A

$500 million

Proposed by TotalFinaElf.

Iran Oil Swap Pipeline

Neka (Iran) to Tehran (Iran)

175,000 bbl/d, rising to 370,000 bbl/d

208 miles

$400 million to $500 million

Under construction; oil will be delivered to Neka and swapped for an equivalent amount at the Iranian Persian Gulf coast.

Kazakhstan-China Pipeline

Aktyubinsk (Kazakhstan) to Xinjiang (China

Proposed 400,000 bbl/d to 800,000 bbl/d

1,800 miles

$3 billion to $3.5 billion

Agreement 1997; feasibility study halted in September 1999 because Kazakhstan could not commit sufficient oil flows for the next 10 years.

Kazakhstan- Turkmenistan-Iran Pipeline

Kazakhstan via Turkmenistan to Kharg Island (Iran) on Persian Gulf 

Proposed 1million bbl/d

930 miles

$1.2 billion

Feasibility study by TotalFinaElf; proposed completion date by 2005.

Khashuri-Batumi Pipeline

Dubendi (Azerbaijan) via Khashuri (Georgia) to Batumi

Initial 70,000 bbl/d, rising to 140,000 bbl/d-160,000 bbl/d

Rail system from Dubendi to Khashuri, then 105-mile pipeline from Khashuri to Batumi

$70 million for pipeline renovation

ChevronTexaco has canceled plans to rebuild and expand the existing pipeline.

Trans-Caspian (Kazakhstan Twin Pipelines)

Aqtau (western Kazakhstan, on Caspian coast) to Baku; could extend to Ceyhan

N/A

370 miles to Baku

$2 billion to $4 billion (if to Ceyhan)

Feasibility study agreement signed in December 1998 by Royal/Dutch Shell, ChevronTexaco, ExxonMobil, and Kazakhstan; project stalled by lack of Caspian Sea legal agreement.


 

Table 5. Natural Gas Export Routes and Options in the Caspian Sea Region

Name/Location

Route

Capacity

Length

Estimated Cost/Investment

Status

Baku-Erzurum

Baku (Azerbaijan) via Tbilisi (Georgia) to Erzurum (Turkey), linking with Turkish natural gas pipeline system

Planned 254 Bcf capacity

540 miles

$1 billion (includes up to $500 million to construct new Azeri section)

Financing being arranged, construction originally scheduled to start in summer 2002.

"Centgas" (Central Asia Gas)

Daulatabad (Turkmenistan) via Herat (Afghanistan) to Multan (Pakistan). Could extend to India.

700 Bcf/year

870 miles to Multan (additional 400 miles to India)

$2 billion to Pakistan (additional $500 million to India)

Memorandum of Understanding signed by  Turkmenistan, Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Uzbekistan. Presidents of Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Turkmenistan met in May 2002 to discuss reviving this pipeline idea.

Central Asia-Center Pipeline

Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan via Kazakhstan to Saratov (Russia), linking to Russian natural gas pipeline system

3.5 Tcf/year

Existing route

N/A

Operational. Turkmenistan is using this pipeline to export a total of 8.83 Tcf to Ukraine (via Russia) from 2002 to 2006, as well as smaller amounts to Russia.

China Gas Pipeline

Turkmenistan to Xinjiang (China). Could extend to Japan.

1 Tcf/year

4,1,61 miles; more if to Japan

$10 billion to China; more if to Japan

Preliminary feasibility study done by ExxonMobil, Mitsubishi, and CNPC

Trans-Caspian Gas Pipeline (TCGP)

Turkmenbashy (Turkmenistan) via Baku and Tbilisi to Erzurum, linking with Turkish natural gas pipeline system

565 Bcf in first stage, eventually rising to 1.1 Tcf/year

1,020 miles 

$2 billion to $3 billion

Project stalled; negotiations between Turkmenistan and Azerbaijan over pipeline volumes restarted in October 2001.

Korpezhe-Kurt-Kui

Korpezhe (Turkmenistan) to Kurt-Kui (Iran)

283-350 Bcf/year; expansion proposed to 459 Bcf/year by 2005

124 miles

$190 million; 2005 expansion: $300 million to $400 million

Operational since December 1997.


 

Table 6. Bosporus Bypass Oil Export Routes
(for Oil Transiting the Black Sea)

Name/Location

Route

Crude Capacity

Length

Estimated Cost/Investment

Status

Adria-Druzhba Integration

Russian Druzhba export pipeline connected to Adria pipeline (flows reversed) to terminus at Omisalj (Croatia)

100,000 bbl/d in first full year of operation; increasing to 300,000 bbl/d

1,987 miles in total

$20 million to modernize Adria, integrate the pipelines, and reverse existing flows

Yukos expects exports from Omisalj via the integrated pipeline system to start by end-2002.

Albanian Macedonian Bulgarian Oil (AMBO) Pipeline

Burgas (Bulgaria) via Macedonia to Vlore (Albania) on Adriatic coast

750,000 bbl/d (could be expanded to 1-million bbl/d)

560 miles

$850 million to $1.1 billion

Construction delayed, (proposed 2001-2002) as financing is arranged. Completion originally targeted for 2004-2005. 

Burgas Alexandropoulis (Trans-Balkan Oil Pipeline)

Burgas to Alexandropoulis (Greece) on the Aegean Sea coast

Proposed 600,000 bbl/d to 800,000 bbl/d

178 miles

$600 million

Initial agreement signed in 1997 between Bulgaria, Greece, and Russia. Project delayed.

Constanta-Trieste Pipeline

Constanta (Romania) via Hungary, Slovenia, and/or Croatia to Trieste (Italy) on the Adriatic Sea coast.  Omisalj (Croatia) has also been proposed as a terminus.

660,000 bbl/d

855 miles

$900 million

Feasibility studies completed; financing still to be arranged.

South-East European Line (SEEL)

Constanta via Pancevo (Yugoslavia) and Omisalj to Trieste. Omisalj has also been proposed as a terminus.

660,000 bbl/d

750 miles

$800 million

Feasibility studies completed; financing still to be arranged.

Odesa-Brody Pipeline

Odesa (Ukraine) to Brody (Ukraine), linking to the southern Druzhba pipeline; optional
 spurs to the northern
   Druzhba line at Plotsk (Poland) and/or to Gdansk on the Baltic Sea coast.

500,000 bbl/d

400 miles from Odesa to Brody

$750 million for pipeline and Pivdenny terminal

Construction on pipeline completed in August 2001; Pivdenny terminal became operational in December 2001. Ukraine is seeking to sign contracts with Caspian oil exporters to fill the line.

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