1. Oil Pipelines in the Silk Road Region Coordination and Collaboration Amidst Competition and Confrontation
- Author:
- Rodrigo Labardini
- Publication Date:
- 04-2021
- Content Type:
- Journal Article
- Journal:
- Baku Dialogues
- Institution:
- ADA University
- Abstract:
- For centuries, numerous projects have wanted to connect the Caspian Sea to its main markets in the East (China) and the West (Europe). All vie to link energy sources (oil and gas) and goods (commodities and manufactured products) with consumers. Contemporary pipelines and transport corridors are presented as cost‑efficient, faster, and profitable, and thus sound economical alternatives to traditional hauling via tankers. Reviewing the political map, continental pathways between East and West must traverse two regional “choke‑points,” each with three alternative routes. First, the “Eastern Gap” at the Caspian Sea: Russia, Iran, and the Caspian Sea. The Caspian Sea region also includes Azerbaijan, of course, since it is the only state (together with Russia and Iran) located on its western bank, with routing options via the Caucasus to reach the Black Sea and Anatolia on to Europe. Second, the “Western Gap” at the Black Sea: Russia (again), the Black Sea, and Anatolia. The South Caucasus’ unique geographical location between East and West as well as between Russia and Iran place it at a strategic crossroads of key geopolitical interest. Furthermore, the Caucasus‑Caspian Sea‑Central Asia region (CCCA) today—this corresponds more or less to what the editors of Baku Dialogues have called the “Silk Road region”—is merging ever closer with Eurasian and Middle East politics. The politicization of energy and transport—with pipeline politics often dealing with opposing economic and partisan interests—as well as sanctions against Russia and Iran, also raises the importance of sanctions‑free routes. Compounding these issues is the fact that several countries in the region are landlocked, dependent on transit states, and vulnerable to the latter’s maneuvers.
- Topic:
- International Trade and Finance, Oil, Natural Resources, and Silk Road
- Political Geography:
- Global Focus