Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:885Hits:21425187Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID088543
Title ProperConflict in South Ossetia of the frontiersof struggle for the greater caspian's energy resources
LanguageENG
AuthorMagomedov, Arbakhan
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The oil pipeline projects overshadowed the conflict in South Ossetia from its very beginning. The TV audience was especially impressed by the picture of the Azpetrol tank cars burning somewhere in Georgia. The Caspian oil market promptly responded to the warfare: British Petroleum, the BTC operator, suspended oil pumping along this route; the same was done on the Baku-Supsa pipeline; and the Poti and Kulevi oil terminals were left idling.
Later numerous surveys and analyses stressed the economic aspects and calculated the losses sustained by Azerbaijan and the Western oil companies. It seems that the political analysts were more concerned about how much the war cost Azerbaijan and British Petroleum in lost profit and how many million tons of oil did not reach the market than about anything else. As Azerbaijan and the BTC shareholders regained their lost profits, the issue gradually retreated into the background.
`In' analytical NoteCentral Asia and the Caucasus No. 56; 2009: p32-44p
Journal SourceCentral Asia and the Caucasus No. 56; 2009: p32-44p
Key WordsSouth Ossetia - Conflict ;  Caspian Enegy Resources ;  Russia - Geopolitical Desarmament ;  Energy Policy - Caspian ;  Caspian - Energy Policy