
The North Caspian
- what am I bid?
Horatio
Morpurgo's travels
to the newest oil frontier provoke some uncomfortable questions,
from sturgeon with muscular dystrophy to oil corporations in deep
denial.
When the first Soviet atom bomb was exploded
in 1949 what the world heard was the starting gun for the arms
race. It was a less abstract sensation for Kazakhstan, where the
test took place and where uranium exploration had begun the previous
year. A new phase in the country’s fateful relationship with
its own mineral wealth was under way. In due course this vast territory
would ‘host’ some 470 nuclear weapons tests. All such
weapons were returned to Russia after independence in 1991 and
the clean-up remains a contentious issue.
Aktau, on the eastern shore of the Caspian
Sea, was founded in 1963 as large uranium deposits were discovered
nearby. Intended
as a showcase city for the then-new technology, its power station
and desalination plant were both nuclear-powered. The city’s
main east-west axis still runs between a war memorial which looks
quite a lot like a missile silo opening, and the ‘statue’ of
a Russian jet fighter, frozen in mid-take-off.
The place feels less sure of itself these
days. Uranium mining in this region ended in 1994 and the city’s
BN-350 fast reactor was shut down in 1997. The old botanical gardens
have reverted
to wilderness and the glamour has faded from the row upon row of
identical south-facing apartment blocks.
But hardly had the weapons been returned
to sender than the new country’s fate became once again inseparable from its abundant ‘raw
commodities’. There are two major pipelines now under construction
in Kazakhstan: one will connect the Caspian oilfields with China
and the other will connect the massive new offshore field at Kashagan
with a terminal at Aktau. Here, in full view of the city, the oil
will be transferred to a specially built fleet of Russian freighters
and shipped across the Caspian to Baku in Azerbaijan. From there
it will flow along a recently opened pipeline over the Caucasus
to southern Turkey, from which Western markets will be supplied.
For environmentalists the focus of concern
has been and remains Kashagan. Discovered in 2000, it is the first
full-scale project
on the North Caspian shelf. The water which covers this shelf is
only a few metres deep. Its salinity is also very low, with the
Volga delta close by, so that it freezes over each winter. Thousands
of seals haul out onto the ice to have their pups and these seals
are themselves a relic of just one phase of the Caspian’s
long and strange history. During the last ice age it formed the
southernmost part of a sea reaching northwards across what is now
Russia. The Caspian still has its own breed of salmon as a result,
as well as its own species of seal.
The Caspian’s famous sturgeon meanwhile easily supplied the
bulk of the world’s caviare so long as fishing remained under
some effective form of regulation. This has not been the case since
1991 and the result appears to have been an unprecedented collapse
of fish numbers. Heavy metal contamination of the Volga has been
rising consistently for 15 years – copper, zinc, lead, cadmium
and mercury all exceed Kazakh government limits by a factor of
five or more. Many sturgeon appear to have developed a form of
muscular dystrophy. Liver abnormalities are now endemic.
To the east of the Caspian semi-arid deserts
stretch away into Central Asia. The contrast between these two
environments, onshore
and offshore, could hardly be more stark, but the attraction for
modern big business lies about five kilometres below both of them.
The Kashagan oilfield will consist of about 100 wells operating
from 17 artificial islands, situated between 40 and 70 kilometres
from the delta of the River Ural. It is thought to contain roughly
11 billion barrels.
| It is futile to expect a country sunk
in post-Soviet depression to pass up the opportunities afforded
it by big oil strikes. But what of the foreign companies
here, for which the host country's poverty is all opportunity? |
Oil found at this depth is known as ‘old oil’. The ‘younger’ reserves
exploited in Kazakhstan for more than a century do not bear comparison
with the scale, or chemical composition, of what is now being extracted.
Three of the world’s largest drilling platforms are already
employed by a local subsidiary of ChevronTexaco at the Tengiz onshore
field, the fifth-largest oilfield in the world. The problems peculiar to the extraction
of such oil are well known from Chevron’s experience there. It is pumped at a temperature
of about 125°C and at enormously high pressure – typically
about 1,000 kg per cm2. In addition some 25 per cent of reserves
are in the form of ‘sour gas’ – mainly hydrogen
sulphide, with sulphur dioxide also present in large quantities.
Tengiz is probably the closest we can get
to an idea of what to expect at Kashagan – a deposit of similar proportions and
chemical composition. A fire there in 1985 shot a column of flame
200 metres into the air and took more than a year to extinguish.
This, it is argued, is because the field was then being run by
a Russian company not technically equal to the task. Similar oil
is found in western Canada, however. A blow-out at a remote field
in Alberta in 2000 still took a month to bring under control. Also
in 2000, the first year of drilling at Kashagan, an estimated 11,000
seals, bleeding from the nose and ears, were washed up dead in
the North Caspian. The multinational consortium, led by an Italian
company, Agip, was worried enough to pay a Russian university to
investigate what had happened. It was concluded that death was
from canine distemper, against which the seals’ immunity
defences were abnormally low.
This eastern shoreline is also a migration
route for the more than 200 bird species that travel each year
between Iran and western
Siberia. During the spring migration bird densities as high as
6,500 per square kilometre have been recorded in the Ural delta.
But along with migratory whooper and mute swans, resident flamingos
and pelicans have been in decline for more than 10 years and were
recently placed on the country’s red list of endangered species.
The gas flares at Kashagan recently attracted and then killed hundreds
of migrating bulbuls, prompting a demand for compensation and assurances
from the oil companies that in future they will halt production
during the peak migration periods.
But the Government’s concern for the environment should not
be taken entirely at face value. This is a regime now considering
new legislation that will force all NGOs to ‘re-register’,
after recent upheavals in Ukraine, Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan. It
finds itself a ‘much-consulted partner’ as consumer-economies
east and west, new and old, do the sums on their projected energy
needs for the 21st century. It holds some very strong cards and
a few hundred dead bulbuls can be turned to useful propaganda effect.
The more closely you look into the new economic paradigm establishing
itself in this region, the more tortuous the reasoning of the different
players begins to seem. But even as you lose yourself among these
ever more intricate motives, there are questions on another level
that don’t seem to get asked at all.
The Kashagan field, for example, is expected
eventually to pump some 1.2 million barrels of oil per day. Agip’s Environmental
Impact Assessment (EIA) includes calculations of the refinery’s
projected greenhouse gas emissions for 2009. These will amount
to the equivalent of two million tonnes of CO2, or 1.3 per cent
of Kazakhstan’s total emissions for 2001. ‘The impact
on climate change,’ it concludes, ‘will be negligible.’ It
points meanwhile to the benefits that will accrue locally.
These points are probably true as far as
they go. It is futile to expect a country sunk in post-Soviet depression
to pass up the
opportunities afforded it by big oil strikes. But what of the foreign
companies here, for which the host country’s poverty is all
opportunity? Any oil company knows full well that what drives climate
change is not the refining but the burning of fossil fuels. There
exists no serious alternative to educating future generations in
reduced dependency on hydrocarbons. It’s hard to see how
pumping more than a million barrels per day plus training up an
entire society for long-term total dependency on fossil fuels will
have a ‘negligible’ effect on climate change. But it’s
only an EIA. Of course Agip is only extracting, marketing and delivering
a product. If customers take it into their heads to go and burn
it, that’s their own lookout.
But if you listen to everyone defending
their own ‘negligible’ part
in the process, that ends with droughts and retreating glaciers
and plainly something is adding up wrong. You are left with the
sense of a culture, a global one, your own, defending itself continually
by reference to its local effect because its global impact is just
too frightening to face.
Further north along the Caspian shoreline,
just upstream from the Ural delta, the same conundrum is at work
shaping this country’s
future. Whole districts of the Kazakh ‘oil-hub’, Atyrau,
have already been transformed by the new wealth. It has a new bridge
across the Ural and a new university building courtesy of Chevron.
It has been able to build itself a new mosque and surround a new
central plaza with banks and engineering company headquarters.
A stroll around this town is a salutary experience for anyone accustomed,
as so many of us are, to deriding ‘the big oil companies’.
Nobody talks like that in Atyrau, because the only realistic alternative
to them was a continued agonizing decline against the backdrop
of decaying Soviet-era infrastructure. It’s much easier to
wish that on someone else than to wish it for oneself.
From this truth the companies draw the inference
that they are a benefit to the countries they work in and hence
net contributors
to global prosperity. But, as we’ve seen, to draw that inference
requires blinding oneself to a bigger picture of planetary degradation
that is no longer seriously contested by anybody.
There is another conclusion that suggests
itself in a place like Kazakhstan. It is that the system which ‘triumphed’ over
the Soviet Union had no serious programme beyond the defeat of
its rival and the securing of its resources. The advantages of
the Western way – its freedoms of movement and expression – would
indeed now be made available, but only on terms agreeable to big
business. Meaning, on at least one count, that they would not be
made available at all. On any logic other than that of shareholders,
opening an oilfield on the scale of Kashagan now is a profoundly
questionable act. To do so 50-odd kilometres from the Ural delta
is breathtaking effrontery. But the new order sees to it that no
one, in Kazakhstan at least, will express that truth to any effect.
And where else can it be expressed to serious effect?
By all ecologically measurable indices,
the ideology of big business is at least as deeply in denial as
its predecessor in this part
of the world. Set out magnificent botanical gardens in a city founded
on the atom bomb. Carefully construct your pipeline to go round
a river delta, as temperatures rise all over the planet from the
oil that flows along it. What do either of these gestures ‘prove’,
beyond an enduring capacity for self-deception?
Horatio Morpurgo is a regular contributor
to the NI on issues of environmental politics.
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