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#10
Moscow Times
U.S.-Russia Rapport Put to Test in Caspian
Combined Reports
A new spirit of collaboration between Moscow and Washington in the wake of
the Sept. 11 attacks may end their traditional rivalry over how to pipe the
Caspian Sea's vast oil reserves to markets, analysts said Monday.
U.S. Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham arrived in Russia on Monday to
officially represent the U.S. government at a ceremony marking the completion of
the Caspian Pipeline Consortium route from Kazakhstan to the Black Sea.
But the visit will also give him the chance to meet his Russian counterpart,
Igor Yusufov, and further cement the cozy U.S.-Russian relations established at
the summit between presidents George W. Bush and Vladimir Putin.
"Better U.S.-Russia relations mean the desirability or necessity of
having pipelines that do not go through Russia is much reduced," said
Stephen O'Sullivan, head of research at United Financial Group. "One of the
main tenets of [former U.S. President Bill] Clinton's policy was energy
independence for Central Asia and the Transcaucasus, so we saw a lot of American
diplomatic push aimed at making sure pipelines out of Central Asia did not pass
through Russian territory."
The CPC line carries oil from Kazakhstan's huge Tengiz field to the Black Sea
port of Novorossiisk.
Abraham was due in Novorossiisk on Tuesday for the official launch of the
CPC, in which U.S. companies have invested more than $1 billion. He is scheduled
to return to Moscow later that day and hold talks with CPC and various officials
Wednesday, Interfax reported. On Thursday, the secretary will be meeting Nuclear
Power Minister Alexander Rumyantsev for talks that will focus on nuclear
nonproliferation issues, the Nuclear Power Ministry said.
Sergei Glazer, chief strategist at Alfa Bank in London, said Russia and the
Central Asian countries' roles as secure producers compared to Middle Eastern
OPEC members could speed long-stalled Caspian agreements on status and
territory.
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