In order to participate in the GunBroker Member forums, you must be logged in with your GunBroker.com account. Click the sign-in button at the top right of the forums page to get connected.

New Player in the Oil Game (C&P)

HAIRYHAIRY Member Posts: 23,606
edited February 2004 in General Discussion
The odd couple: Israel and Russia challenge OPEC

Pipeline becomes vital artery for shipments to far east markets
Moscow seeks to supplant Riyadh as world's top supplier - and `Tipline' across Jewish state fits into that plan

Ed Blanche
Special to The Daily Star

BEIRUT: Israel's vice-premier and trade minister, Ehud Olmert, was in Moscow last week with a particular message: "We want more Russian oil."
Moscow is only happy to oblige, because a 250-kilometer pipeline running from Ashkelon on the Mediterranean to Eilat on the Gulf of Aqaba has become a vital artery for Russian oil exports to the Far East, the fastest-growing energy market in the world and one Moscow wants to dominate. By sidestepping the Suez Canal, the Trans-Israel Pipeline, known as the Tipline, opens up a shorter and cheaper route for Russian oil exports to Asia and thereby threatens Arab exports from the Gulf.
The first tanker to sail from Israel with a cargo of Russian crude pumped through the Tipline left Eilat, bound for Asia, in November. According to British energy analyst Simon Henderson, an expert on the Gulf, that event "has the potential to greatly impact the international oil market. Russian oil exports are unconstrained by the quotas of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, and a steady stream of expanded Russian shipments via the Tipline could . lower prices worldwide."
The new route also puts Israel firmly on the oil industry map, but more importantly it will strengthen Russia's position in the global energy market, challenging Saudi Arabia's as the pre-eminent oil producer. These days, Russia and Saudi Arabia are jockeying for the No. 1 spot as a world oil supplier with around 8 million barrels per day (bpd). A confrontation between Saudi-dominated OPEC and Moscow seems inevitable.
With oil hovering around $30 a barrel, the Russians have little interest in aiding OPEC dampen prices, and it is expected to push up production this year. According to French energy analyst Francis Perrin: "Russia has no interest in collaborating with OPEC."
The Americans have long wanted to undermine OPEC and US control of Iraq's oil, wealth could go far to achieve that. But the Russians seem to be ones making the running right now, and want to overtake Saudi production levels within five years. According to Simon Kukes, chief executive officer of Russia's giant Yukos oil company, Russian output could reach 11 million bpd by 2009.
The Tipline connection also cements Israel's relations with Russia, a mortal enemy throughout the Cold War, at a time when many oil-consuming states are growing nervous about the security of energy supplies from the Arab world and are seeking ways to reduce their dependence on countries like Saudi Arabia. The Japanese, for instance, get 85 percent of their oil from the Gulf but want to cut that back to 65 percent.
It is possible that the Russians may at some point open another export route to the Far East through Iran's Gulf terminal at Bandar Abbas, which could also reduce Asian demand for Saudi crude. Russia, Iran and India signed an agreement to develop a north-south transportation corridor in September 2000 that would also rival the Suez Canal. But that involves investing of billions of dollars and years of work, and would thus seem to lie far in the future.
For now, the Tipline is the testbed for Russia's ability to pump up the volume of oil it ships to energy-thirsty Asia, where the market is being enlarged by China's growing demand for oil to fuel its burgeoning economic expansion.
The Tipline was built in 1968 to carry oil shipped up the Red Sea from Iran, then still ruled by Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, to Eilat and on to the Mediterranean for transshipment to Europe. At that time, the Suez Canal was still closed following the 1967 war, with the Israelis holding the eastern bank and the Egyptians the western bank, so the Tipline saved tankers having to make the long and costly haul around Africa to reach markets in Europe and the US.
Israel took what it needed of the Iranian oil for its own consumption. But the 1979 revolution in Iran changed all that. The new regime cut off all links to Israel. The surge in Russian oil exports following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 gave the Tipline a new lease on life. By reversing the flow, with Eilat instead of Ashkelon as the loading terminal, the Russians found a new outlet as they drove to develop new markets.
So now tankers from the Black Sea carry the oil to Ashkelon. These are of necessity not large supertankers because Turkey prohibits ships of that size using the Bosphorus Straits. But big tankers can be used to carry shipments from Eilat. The Tipline has the capacity to handle 55 million tons of oil a year.
According to the Russian media, Moscow is expected to pump 20 million-30 million tons through Israel this year, as well as provide most of Israel's requirement of 240,000 bpd that formerly came for such diverse sources as Egypt and the North Sea.
"Even if the pipeline route was used to its full potential," Henderson says, "Russian oil transported to Eilat would only be enough to fill one Asia-bound oil tanker every two or three days." But boosting the line's capacity would increase exports.
Henderson noted that Russian oil shipped through Israel is made more attractive to Asian buyers because it eliminates the so-called "Asian premium," the extra $1 per barrel arbitrarily imposed on Asian consumers by Gulf producers. This has caused considerable resentment against the Gulf exporters, and provides another incentive to reduce their dependence on Arab oil.
Crown Prince Abdullah bin Abdel-Aziz of Saudi Arabia, the country's de facto ruler since King Fahd fell ill six years ago, made a landmark visit to Moscow in September 2003 hoping to improve relations, in large part because of the strains in Riyadh's relations with the US since Sept. 11, 2001. The Saudis signed a five-year oil and gas cooperation agreement, but the Russians, while cordial enough, were not inclined to curtail their campaign to boost oil exports that are the main driver of Russia's economic boom or to see prices cut back.
The Russians have not forgotten how in 1985 the Saudis used their excess production capacity to flood the market and drive down oil prices to $12 a barrel, which wrecked any hopes that the then-Soviet Union had of an economic revival and contributed to the collapse of communism soon after.
Yet the Saudis remain increasingly desperate for Russia's help, especially as the US agenda becomes more belligerent and insistent upon speedy political reform that the House of Al-Saud is reluctant to introduce.
Just how desperate Riyadh is was evident in January, when the pro-Moscow president of Chechnya, Akhmad Kayrov, said after visiting the Saudi capital that Riyadh had halted all funding for Islamic rebels in the war-torn republic and recognized his government. That can only bolster Al-Qaeda in its campaign inside the kingdom by convincing many Saudis that their government is collaborating with those who seek to crush fellow Wahhabis fighting the infidel.
Moscow's improving relations with Israel, despite some tensions, underline how Russia's policies in the region are changing. Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has visited Moscow three times since his election in early 2002. Commercial relations are flourishing with trade running at several billion dollars a year. Russia and Israel are collaborating on programs that have strategic and military implications. Both states are threatened by Islamic extremists, and the Israelis, busy fighting suicide bombers, have been uncritical of Moscow's harsh measures against the Chechen separatists.
With Israel as a vital artery for oil exports, the relationship is bound to consolidate, undoubtedly at the Arabs' expense.

Ed Blanche, a member of the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London, is a Beirut-based journalist who has covered Middle Eastern affairs for three decades.





There is always one more imbecile than you counted on.

Hypocrisy is the homage paid by vice to virtue.

Don't assume malice for what stupidity can explain.

Comments

  • ElMuertoMonkeyElMuertoMonkey Member Posts: 12,898
    edited November -1
    Interesting article. I wonder how things will play out once this relationship is further exploited. As is, most OPEC nations don't like Israel for political and religious reason... throw in economic competition and it wouldn't surprise me if things got a whole lot worse a whole lot faster.
Sign In or Register to comment.