BP is positioning itself at the center of new gas exploration in Ustyurt.
Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan both see major strategic upside in recent discoveries. A large Ustyurt find is boosting momentum for a trans-Caspian gas route to Europe.
A flurry of recent deals and announcements suggest significant new reserves of natural gas are contained in the Ustyurt Plateau, which spans western sections of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan. The prospect of a major Ustyurt find is, in turn, helping to fuel interest in building a trans-Caspian gas corridor. The UK energy giant BP is shaping up as the pivotal player in the development of Ustyurt’s potential energy riches. On April 2, a company subsidiary signed an exploration deal with the Kazakh state-run entity KazMunayGaz covering a “promising Ustyurt block.” “The renewal of the partnership opens up new opportunities for the joint implementation of promising initiatives,” a KazMunayGaz statement added.
Importantly, for Kazakhstan, any development of the Zhylyoi field does not fall under a production sharing agreement covering Kashagan. That PSA provided for an injection of foreign investment that made energy production possible at the field, but it also left Astana with only a tiny share of export profits. Any PSA covering Zhylyoi or Ustyurt will presumably provide Kazakhstan with a much larger share of production revenue. The news about recent discoveries and deals seems to be stimulating discussion about the construction of a long-planned trans-Caspian pipeline. The Azerbaijani government-connected news outlet Caliber.az cited a BP geologist based in Azerbaijan as saying the company is interested in developing “a new energy corridor aimed at transporting natural gas from Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan through Azerbaijan to European markets via the Southern Gas Corridor.” “BP intends to leverage its accumulated experience in Azerbaijan to build a synchronized infrastructure,” Caliber quotes the BP representative, Baghir Ibrahimov, as saying.
By Eurasianet
