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Title: UCLA


1
UCLA CEESSecurity Issues and ImpactsThe
Caspian Region and the New Canon of Security
Alexandre Babak HedjaziInstitute of
Environmental Studies -University of GenevaJune
1st 2007
2
We are not in the same Geopolitical realm as in
the 1970s
  • Post-Cold War Security Environment
  • The end of the cold war and the equilibrium that
    a US-USSR rivalry has been superseded by a much
    more fluid yet volatile global order.
  • The end of US-USSR sponsorship in international
    relations, coupled with the rise of independent
    regional and international actors implied a new
    epoch in which security issues became
    multifaceted and involved many actors in addition
    to nation-statesbut in face of growing
    insecurities, states are still expected to
    address many rising insecurities.
  • Economic world order
  • Economies and markets across the globe had never
    had the level of integration they have today.
  • As Yergin phrases it there is only one oil
    market, a complex and worldwide system that moves
    and consumes about 86 million barrels of oil
    everyday. For all consumers, energy security
    resides in the stability of this market

3
The Security Debate
  • Where as the traditional state centric
    approach to security views the state as the main
    referent object of security and the physical
    violence from outside the main source of threat,
    the human centric approach to security stresses
    that human being are the referent objects and
    threats are increasingly nonmilitary and can
    arise from within the states.
  • Development and humanitarian approach to
    security acknowledge new threats, hunger,
    diseases and disruptions in patterns of daily
    life as critical elements of todays world.
  • UNDP in the Human Development Report (1994)
    categorizes these threats under seven headings
  • food security,
  • environmental security,
  • personal security,
  • community security,
  • political security,
  • economic security

4
The Energy Security Trap
  • From the Arab oil Embargo in 1970s to Russias
    disruption of gas delivery to Ukraine during the
    winter of 2006, energy insecurities have become
    one of the central elements of the global
    economy.
  • It has become central to many official national
    and international agendas and even a subject of
    concern to end users.
  • There is little consensus on its definition,
    scope and adequate policies for its provision

5
The new economic environment is one of.
Interdependence of economies and markets
Energy Security illustrates the best these
interdependencies
6
Is energy security a matter of interdependence
or scarcity?
  • For many Americans, energy security means
    producing energy at home and relying less on
    foreign oil. (Sebastian Mallaby, Washington
    Post)
  • Real energy security requires setting aside the
    pipedream of energy independence and embracing
    energy interdependence. (Daniel Yergin, Foreign
    Affairs)
  • The scale of global trade of energy grows
    substantially as world market become more
    integrated

7
Economic and political elements of Global Energy
Equation
  • 1- What are the risks that demand and supply
    induced scarcity impose on global hydrocarbons
    market?
  • 2- How does the geopolitics of energy interact
    with these fundamentals of the market?
  • 3- To what extend do emerging regimes of
    governance of energy mitigate new sets of
    economic and geopolitical risks that state and
    non-state actors are increasingly required to
    confront?

8
1- What are the fundamentals of demand and
supply induced scarcity of hydrocarbons?
  • With the prospect of global trade growing in the
    years to come, risks of global conflict or
    economic dislocation aside, world markets will
    become even more interdependent than they are
    today.
  • Increasing Global trade of Hydrocarbons
  • As the global consumption of hydrocarbons rises,
    per capita availability of oil and gas from fixed
    stocks begins to decrease.
  • Increasing interdependence of producer and
    consumer countries
  • Interdependence under conditions of geographic
    and political mismatch.

9
Increasing Global trade of Oil
  • Most projections indicate that fast growing
    developing economies (Asia china included) will
    begin to consume more than the developed world.
  • According to International Energy Agency a
    significant increase in international trade of
    oil and gas will meet a widening gap between
    consumption and indigenous output in many parts
    of the world. The projected net imports and
    exports of each major region from 28 mb/d in
    1997 is to reach over 60 mb/d in 2020

Projected Net Oil Imports and Exports (mb/d)
Soruce International Energy Agency, energy
outlook 2003
10
Increasing (inter)dependence
  • Regions that depend on imports to meet a
    significant part of their oil needs will become
    even more dependent on imports over the
    projection period.
  • Oil dependence in Europe rises from 53 to 79
    over the projection period. In OECD Pacific, it
    goes from an already very high 89 to over 92.
  • China, which became a net importer of oil
    products only in 1993, is projected to import
    more than three-quarters of it needs, over 8mb/d
    by 2020. All other regions remain net importers.
  • Meanwhile, the Middle East, already the biggest
    exporting region, will see exports rise from
    17mb/d in 1997 to over 41mb/d by 2020.

Oil import Dependence (per cent)
Soruce International Energy Agency, energy
outlook 2003
11
Energy Security and the question of Scarcity
  • Energy security and the conditions of its
    provision is at the junction of
  • 1- demand and supply scarcity.
  • 2- structural scarcity.

12
Demand induced scarcity
  • Demand-induced scarcity is in conjunction with
    three types of factors
  • The first factor is the population growth in
    consuming countries.
  • The second factor consist in rising per capita
    income in high-income countries, which are the
    major consumers and importers, and in late
    industrializing economies, particularly in South
    and East Asia.
  • Finally ,the third factor regards the history of
    technological change which since the 1850s has
    rendered access to fossil energy more, not less,
    important for the production of wealth and power.

13
Supply induced Scarcity
  • Supply induced Scarcity is caused by the
    dwindling of the hydrocarbon stock and the
    capacity of producer countries to develop their
    hydrocarbon resources.
  • In reality, demand and supply-induced scarcity
    interact. Extraction cost, refinery and retail
    plus profit marks-ups determine oil and gas offer
    price.
  • Increasing international trade of oil and gas,
    under conditions of growing dependence on OPEC
    production added to the geographic mismatch
    between location of consumption and production
    suggest that consumer countries seek to develop
    non OPEC sources of energy and diversifying the
    geographic source of imports away from an
    increasingly volatile Middle East. This brings
    us to structural scarcity

14
2- How does the geopolitics of energy interact
with these fundamentals of the market?
  • Supply-induced scarcity, or its anticipation,
    provoke power projection by military capable and
    import-dependent nations (US, E.U., Russia,
    China) aiming at getting control over the stock
    by either internally engineered regime change or
    by conquest of territory.
  • Structural scarcity is induced by deliberate
    action of a major power, by non state actor such
    as major oil companies, or by producer cartels
    such as OPEC.
  • Thus, a major power that manages to get control
    over conditions of access by third parties to the
    stock has the option to induce scarcity for
    selected outsiders.

15
The Geopolitical paradigm of Energy Security
  • Due to hydrocarbons strategic significance,
    limited volume and highly territorial nature,
    securing energy entails that one who controls
    access to oil and gas reserves and the transit
    routes could exercise global influence by
    excluding or limiting their availability to
    potential competitors.
  • Energy security is thus not exclusive to the
    security of energy supply. It also encloses
    diversion of trade, when traders of one group are
    ousted from the network to be replaced by the
    traders from another group. In this case the
    collusion of some states against one producer or
    a group of producer countries creates new
    barriers for third parties to project their
    power.

16
Caspian Sea Poster Child of Geographic mismatch
between Energy Security and the Security of a
region
  • Caspian littoral states have often been heralded
    as holding together one of the worlds largest
    oil and gas reserves. According to the
    Statistical Review of World Energy (British
    Petroleum 2002), the total proven oil reserves is
    15.5 billion bbl and the total proven gas
    reserves are 196 tcf.
  • The combined Caspian output will never rival
    that of Saudi Arabia or Russia which produce
    respectively 8.8 million and 7.1 mbd. So why all
    the Caspian Hype?
  • If the Caspian oil reserves are not so extensive,
    why is it so essential to the diversification
    rationale of the west?

17
Energy Security and the question of Global power
  • The heartland of the heartland
  • The Silk Road Act, the US created an
    extension of the countrys defense perimeter into
    the heartland of energy supply. This is the issue
    at the center of Caspian pipeline geopolitics.
    The growing economic rivalry between the US, the
    EU, Russia, China, Turkey and Iran for influence
    on the Caucasus and Central Asia is prompting
    analysts to turn to century-old notions of
    control of the Eurasian heartland, as they
    develop responses to new geopolitical
    developments.
  • Caspian source of power
  • In a world were putative great powers such as
    Europe, China, and India will be totally
    dependent on the Persian Gulf and the Caspian Sea
    oil to sustain economic growth, access to oil
    -not only as source of fuel but also as source
    of power-- become the key to the control of the
    global new economic and political order. In other
    terms, whoever controls the Persian Gulf and the
    Caspian Sea, controls the worlds economy and
    therefore has the ultimate lever over other
    competing powers

18
Energy economics vs. control over territory
  • As the post Soviet Caspian region was not
    divided into stable and agreed upon zones of
    influence, extra regional states and non-state
    actors projected their power and influence into
    the region.
  • In the Caspian Sea region, pipeline diplomacy, as
    stated earlier, required the US governments
    involvement as the driving force of its main
    component, the Baku-Ceyhan-Tbilissi pipeline
    (BTC) as well as the much heralded Trans-Caspian
    Gas Pipeline (TCGP). The project was endorsed by
    the US as it evaded Iran and Russia and aspired
    to move Azerbaijan and consecutively Turkmenistan
    and Kazakhstan away from the Russian and Iranian
    sphere.

19
  • Energy Security and Regional Security
  • The result of these competitions is an axial
    regionalism of the Caspian OilEast-West
    pipelines sponsored by the United States and
    endorsed by Azerbaijan (TCGP, BTC, Aktau-Baku)
    and North South pipelines (Turkmenistan, Armenia,
    Irans virtual pipeline Caspian/Persian Gulf,
    Baku-Novorossiysk-CPC).
  • The double East-West and NorthSouth axis
    cooperation with old and new global powers
    (Russia and the US) provides flexibility to
    regional countries.
  • The positive impact of these axial regionalisms
    on the development of the Caspian Sea region seem
    limited and their scope highly questionable.

20
The Security Dilemma?
  • 1)The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) Test.
  • The world class 3 billion BTC pipeline project
    has been strongly supported for economic and
    geopolitical reasons by its three host countries
    namely Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey.
  • Inter-Governmental Agreement (IGA)
  • Host Government Agreements (HGAs)
  • Javakheti region /Borjomi region
  • 2) The Caspian Environment Test.
  • -The fluctuation in the Caspians water level
  • -The increasing offshore and onshore pollution
    on some of the worlds most sensitive marine
    ecosystems (More than 3,000 tons of sulfites,
    3,150,000 tons of chlorides, and 25,000 tons of
    phenols. Furthermore, some 200,000 tons of tar
    entered the Caspian Sea annually. In three rivers
    of Daghestan, considered major spawning grounds
    for the sturgeon, quantities of heavy metals
    found exceeded the maximum permissible values for
    fisheries by 60 to 100 times (Kardavani 1996).
  • - Direct dumping of household and agricultural
    waste into the Caspian and its adjoining rivers
    is commonplace.

21
What to expect..
  • Environmental Caspian Sea Initiative (ECSI). ECSI
    seemed a major step forward and attracted
    Azerbaijan, Iran, Kazakhstan, Russia and
    Turkmenistan around the same goals. to strengthen
    the national institutional, legal and regulatory
    frameworks within UN Capacity 21 agenda.
  • Convention for the Protection of the Marine
    Environment of the Caspian Sea known as the
    Tehran Convention. . A treaty to protect the
    marine environment of the Caspian Sea commits the
    five governments to prevent and reduce pollution,
    to restore the environment, and to use the sea's
    resources in a sustainable and reasonable manner

22
Conclusion remarks
  • Regional environmental agendas have suffered
    from political and economic rivalries in the
    region which misrepresented shared concerns and
    ended up portraying some countries priorities
    and/or those of energy actors rather than
    depicting a comprehensive lay of the land of the
    Caspian environmental degradation
  • For example, in 1995, a report on the Caspians
    environmental challenges made no mention of the
    critical issue of sea-level rise and focused on
    oil related pollution (The World Bank 1998). The
    politicization of the Caspian environmental
    question led in another instance to the rather
    absurd situation where in a conference on the
    Caspian environment in March 1999 in Vienna,
    sponsored by NATO, did not permit Irans
    participation.

23
Conclusion remarks
  • Prospects of improvement of Caspian Seas
    environment is muddied by the uncertainty
    intrinsic to a regionalism intimately tied to
    energy security and aspiration of control over
    resources and their transit routes by many
    regional and extra-regional contenders.
  • At risk are onshore and offshore flora and fauna
    of one of ecologically richest regions in the
    world as well as the livelihood of millions
    depending on the Caspian Seas economic resources
    such as fisheries as well as fertile agricultural
    land.
  • Whether we consider project based regional
    initiatives (BTC) or those dealing with shared
    challenges such as the Caspians environmental
    crisis, the adoption of common grounds needed for
    the Caspian Sea regionalism to mitigate new
    risks, is impeded by distinct legislation,
    economic and political priorities and differences
    in national representations of the regional
    space. In both cases the kind of regionalism at
    play, as in the past, has the potential to
    distort socio-economic and environmental
    realities. Caspian regionalism will be guided by
    states short term domestic and international
    interests rather than long-term development
    strategies based on system of common values.
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