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ISSUE 5.1: WINTER/SPRING 2004 |
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Pipelines
in the Caspian: Fiona Hill
With questions over future prospects for Iraqi oil-the world's second
largest reserves after Saudi Arabia-at the forefront of attention, along
with widespread instability in the Middle East, the Caspian Basin and
its oil and natural gas resources are back on the agenda. The Caspian,
along with Russia, West Africa, and Canada, where new discoveries in
the tar sands have been made, are the great new potential sources of
world energy. These regions are increasingly vital to addressing the
need for new energy suppliers and bypassing OPEC members and Persian
Gulf states. Although these regions pose significant difficulties in
terms of production and export possibilities and would not necessarily
be competitive with the Persian Gulf under a low oil price regime, current
high crude oil prices combined with the fact that Iraq's production
potential will not be restored any time soon make them major commercial
contenders. Fiona Hill is Senior Fellow in the Foreign Policy Studies program at the Brookings Institution. The full text of this article is available in print-locked form. To purchase the full text of this article, please visit the reprints page. |
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