Bretton Woods Project - Critical voices on the World Bank and IMF

Jump to main content | Jump to sidebar | Jump to navigation menu



Pipe dreams shattered in Georgia

News|Manana Kochladze|26 September 2008|update 62|url
print|email |bookmark FacebookTweet thisdel.icio.usDigg!Stumble UponRedditGoogle BookmarksYahoo Buzz

By Manana Kochladze, CEE Bankwatch Network

Western governments and international financial institutions like the World Bank and European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) have tried to convince the region's poor that oil pipelines in the Caucuses would bring economic prosperity and strengthen democracy in the region. However, this Caspian oil game is partly to blame for the increased poverty, conflict and misery that now plagues the thousands of citizens displaced in the August conflict in Georgia.

The construction of the Baku-Tblisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline (see Update 52, 46) in an unstable region like the Caucasus - with its existing ethnic, religious, political and military tensions - is a risky business. Despite numerous requests, the security risks and impacts on local populations were never adequately assessed by project sponsor, oil multinational BP.

In order to quell threats of a terrorist attacks, security zones and military forces were established along the pipeline route that ultimately exacerbated conflicts with local inhabitants. Just prior to the BTC pipeline's "hot" August, while underlining that more efforts to return, reinstate and compensate for lost land in Azerbaijan and Georgia were needed, the EBRD requested even more land for security zones in Azerbaijan.

The Russian-Georgia conflict erupted just a few days after an attack and explosion along the Turkish section of the BTC pipeline. Russian jets bombed the pipeline near the town of Ristavi, creating more than 50 craters as missiles landed as close as one hundred metres from the pipeline itself. The following day the Baku-Supsa pipeline, the predecessor to BTC, was also bombed. Fires raged in numerous areas of the Borjomi-Kharagauli National Park immediately following Russian military helicopter flights over the forested areas in the vicinity of the BTC pipeline.

It appears that troubles for the BTC pipeline continue, as the Russian News Agency reports that a feeder pipeline for BTC burst near the Baku terminal on 12 September.

BP and Russian Premier Vladimir Putin fiercely deny that Russia's actions have damaged the pipeline. Mr. Putin even states that "We are treating our energy facilities carefully and we do not intend to cause damage to anything. We do not have and will never have such an aim". While it is difficult to know what is happening behind closed doors, it is clear that poorly constructed pipelines in an unstable region of the world are a new front line for attacks and pose a threat to local people and the environment.

Published: 26 September 2008 , last edited: 26 September 2008

Viewings since posted: 7720

Articles: 3365

Advanced article search
Search newswire and resources

Επίκεντρο η Ελλάδα (Articles in Greek)
http://www.brettonwoodsproject.org/el/
Με αφορμή την χωρίς προηγούμενο δραστηριότητα του ΔΝΤ στην Ελλάδα, το Bretton Woods Project παρέχει ορισμένα απο τα άρθρα του στα Ελληνικά.

Recent briefings & reports

Gender WDR: Limits, gaps, and fudges  8 February 2012

Time for a new consensus: Regulating financial flows for stability and development  15 December 2011

Breaking the Mould: How Latin America is coping with volatile capital flows  15 December 2011

No fairy tale: Singrauli, India, still suffering years after World Bank coal investments  18 November 2011

Climate Investment Funds Monitor: October 2011   27 October 2011

Power surge: Lessons for the World Bank from Indian women's participation in energy projects  21 September 2011

Subscribe

Bretton Woods Update, 6 emails/year:
highlights fulltext pdf
Alerts of new web content
Weekly newswire email

Email:


Bretton Woods Project on Facebook


home | subscribe | donate | search | help | contact


validate: | XHTML | CSS | RSS | 508

powered by Action Apps | hosted by GreenNet | Credits