Kazakhstan and the South Caucasus Corridor in the Wake of the Georgia-Russia War
Kazakhstan and the South Caucasus Corridor in the Wake of the Georgia-Russia War
Author(s): Nargis Kassenova
Subject(s): Energy and Environmental Studies, Governance, Environmental and Energy policy, International relations/trade, Economic development, Geopolitics, Peace and Conflict Studies, Transport / Logistics
Published by: CEPS Centre for European Policy Studies
Keywords: European energy market; oil pipe line; geopolitics; South Caucasus transit corridor; Kazakhstan; Georgia; Georgia-Russia War;
Summary/Abstract: The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) oil pipeline links Azerbaijan and Georgia to European energy markets, establishing the basis for their geopolitical reorientation of recent years. These two countries also created the South Caucasus transit corridor for resourcerich Central Asian states. Kazakhstan has slowly but surely worked to develop this westbound route for its oil exports. It has been building port facilities on its side of the Caspian, bought tanker ships and acquired a terminal in Georgia. The August war between Georgia and Russia revealed the insecurity of transit through Georgia and reminded us of the fragile stability of the region of South Caucasus. It seemed to put Kazakhstan’s plans of ’going west’ in jeopardy. However, developments that took place this autumn show that Astana is not ready to give up the South Caucasus route, which is highly important for commercial and geopolitical reasons.
Series: EUCAM - Policy Brief
- Page Count: 6
- Publication Year: 2009
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF