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The People’s Republic
of China’s Pursuit of
Energy Security in
Central Asia
Sun Hwak Kwon
PSC192W- Oil and Politics
Prof. Reich
5/5/11
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. INTRODUCTION
II. WHICH CENTRAL ASIAN COUNTRIES MATTER TO CHINA IN
TERMS OF ITS OWN ENERGY SECURITY?
III. HOW DOES CHINA GO ABOUT NEGOTIATING FOR CONTOL
AND PURCHASING THE VAST OIL FIELDS AND NATURAL GAS
FIELDS IN CENTRAL ASIA? WHAT ARE ITS STRATEGIES?
IV. PIPELINE POLITICS OF CENTRAL ASIA: COSTS AND BENEFITS,
CURRENT AND POTENTIAL SECURITY ISSUES, AND
GEOPOLITICAL TENSIONS
a. Scenario #1
b. Scenario #2
V. SHANGHAI COOPERATION ORGANIZATION (SCO): WHAT
ROLE DOES THE SCO PLAY IN THE ENERGY POLITICS OF
CENTRAL ASIA?
VI. HOW DOES BEIJING VIEW THE SCO ENERGY CLUB? HOW
COULD BEIJING USE THE SCO ENERGY CLUB TO FURTHER
PROMOTE ITS ‘ENERGY DIPLOMACY’ AGENDA?
VII. CONCLUSION: THE FUTURE OF CHINA’S ENERGY SECURITY
Kwon, 1
I. INTRODUCTION
Obtaining sources of energy, primarily oil and natural gas, for the purposes of energy
security is high on the agenda list for the People’s Republic of China. In today’s global political
and economic climate, energy sources have become essential for any state’s security and survival
because these energy sources fuel economies, militaries, and societies. With that in mind, it is
important to note that the global energy market is unpredictable and at times, volatile. Because of
these reasons, China is seeking out ways to secure sources of energy outside of its own borders
to fuel its burgeoning economy, military, and society. To meet increasing energy needs, Beijing
has implemented a foreign policy strategy that can be referred to as ‘energy diplomacy’ to secure
its goals in relation to obtaining and securing oil and natural gas outside of China’s borders.
Beijing’s ‘energy diplomacy’ seeks “to secure external oil and gas supplies through state-to-state
negotiation as well as cooperation within multilateral organizations.”1
China’s main source of
energy for now is coal, which it has plenty reserves of and accounts for approximately 60% of
China’s energy uses. “Despite China’s sizeable coal reserves, estimated at about 114.5 billion
metric tonnes with another 11 trillion cubic metres of coal-bed methane, reserves may be
exhausted in half a century.”2
Add to this, the environmental consequences that are usually
associated with the use of coal as an energy source, there is more of an incentive for China to
seek out alternative routes in securing energy sources (oil and natural gas) from foreign
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
1
	
  Lanteigne,	
  Marc.	
  "China,	
  Energy	
  Security	
  and	
  Central	
  Asian	
  Diplomacy:	
  Bilateral	
  and	
  Multilateral	
  Approaches."	
  
Caspian	
  Energy	
  Politics:	
  Azerbaijan,	
  Kazakhstan	
  and	
  Turkmenistan.	
  New	
  York,	
  NY:	
  Routledge,	
  2010.	
  Print.	
  (Pg.101)	
  
2
	
  Lanteigne, Marc. "China, Energy Security and Central Asian Diplomacy: Bilateral and Multilateral Approaches."
Caspian Energy Politics: Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. New York, NY: Routledge, 2010. Print.
(Pg.104)
	
  
Kwon, 2
countries. To secure ample amounts of oil and natural gas, China has turned its attentions to its
western neighbors in Central Asia. “Energy resources in Central Asia have made the region an
important foreign policy focus for China’s government. By the numbers, the importance of the
Caspian region in the global energy equation (its oil accounts for only 2-3 percent of the world’s
known reserves) is quite small. However, its proximity to China’s market and the tightness of the
world oil market make this 2 percent potentially critical. As China’s energy demand skyrockets,
it seeks reliable supplies closer to home, and Central Asia can become an important source of
energy.”3
II. WHICH CENTRAL ASIAN COUNTRIES MATTER TO CHINA IN TERMS OF ITS
OWN ENERGY SECURITY?
Beijing has a tendency to view energy security in more than just purely economic terms.
For the Beijing leadership, energy security is not just about securing more oil and natural gas to
drive and fuel its burgeoning economy, but a geopolitical and strategic game of tactics and
negotiations that have implications far beyond just obtaining oil and natural gas from Central
Asia. “In particular, Beijing has been concerned about countering Western energy initiatives in
the region. As one Chinese scholar argued, projects such as the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) oil
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
3
	
  Garrison,	
  Jean	
  A.	
  "The	
  "Great	
  Game"	
  in	
  Central	
  Asia."	
  China	
  and	
  the	
  Energy	
  Equation	
  in	
  Asia:	
  The	
  Determinants	
  of	
  
Policy	
  Choice.	
  London,	
  UK:	
  FirstForumPress,	
  2009.	
  Print.	
  
Kwon, 3
pipeline- the first regional pipeline directly supported an controlled by Western countries- imply
American motives of containing Russia and China.”4
This could also imply that Western powers,
particularly the United States, are attempting to undermine the Russians, Iranians, or Chinese
from gaining dominance in the ‘energy game’ in Central Asia and the Caspian Sea region. For
the leadership of Beijing particularly, and especially for those involved in the ‘energy
diplomacy’ initiative, possessing oil and natural gas resources to fuel the economy, military, and
society is one thing, but controlling the oil and natural gas resources in Central Asian territory is
of higher importance because control over the vast oil fields and natural gas fields in Central
Asia will guarantee steady and consistent flow of large quantities of oil and natural gas that will
effectively secure China’s energy needs for the foreseeable future and beyond that as well. With
control over the energy sources, Beijing has a free hand, meaning it may choose to use them for
domestic consumption or re-export it other markets around the world. The unique location and
its abundant energy sources gives Central Asia a geostrategic importance and this has provided a
platform for rather intense rivalries for influence and control in this region. For Chinese leaders,
securing China’s energy future is a matter of national security and China’s leaders “have decided
that energy security was too important to be left to market forces alone, and Beijing has
prioritized the issue as a matter of national security.”5
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
4
	
  Lin, Christina. "The New Silk Road: China's Energy Strategy in the Greater Middle East." The Washington
Institute for Near East Policy (2011). Http://washingtoninstitute.org/pubPDFs/PolicyFocus109.pdf. Apr. 2011. Web.
Apr. 2011. (Pg. 15)	
  
5
	
  Lin, Christina. "The New Silk Road: China's Energy Strategy in the Greater Middle East." The Washington
Institute for Near East Policy (2011). Http://washingtoninstitute.org/pubPDFs/PolicyFocus109.pdf. Apr. 2011. Web.
Apr. 2011. (Pg. 15)	
  
	
  
Kwon, 4
China’s involvement in Kazakhstan also confirms that the Beijing leadership’s ‘energy
diplomacy’ initiative places Central Asia as a vital source of energy for China. For analysis sake,
it can be said that Beijing chose to establish close relations with Kazakhstan for a variety of
reasons. First, Kazakhstan is the only major oil producer in Central Asia aside from Azerbaijan,
holding about estimated 40 billion barrels of proven oil reserves in its four major oil fields (on-
shore and off-shore): Uzen, Karachaganak, Tengiz, and Kashagan). Out of those four oil fields,
the recently discovered Kashagan oil fields has been deemed by analysts as the most significant
discovery of a proven oil reserve in the last 30 years after preliminary drilling and exploration.
Also, the Karachaganak oil fields are estimated to hold approximately 2.4 billion barrels of oil
reserves and 16 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, which can be recovered in the next 40 years.
Although Azerbaijan holds substantial amounts of oil in its oil fields, transporting Azerbaijani oil
to China is a potentially complicated and contentious issue, which will require various stages of
negotiations, be it multi-lateral or bi-lateral, with many different countries regarding transfer
fees. Second, Kazakhstan and China share a common border, so thus they have geographical
proximity with each other. This geographical proximity is important for the Beijing leadership
because of the issue of transporting oil or natural gas. Thus, for China, Kazakh oil is
geopolitically desirable because Kazakhstan is the only country in the Central Asia region where
oil imports can directly go overland into China without passing through Russia first, eliminating
the need for separate bi-lateral negotiations with Russia over transit fees.
At present, China’s oil imports are dominated by the Middle East, especially from Saudi
Arabia, Oman, Yemen, and Iran. To transport oil from the Middle East to China, oil tankers must
Kwon, 5
travel through international waters, which require navigating through several straits and passages
known as ‘oil choke points.’ Oil choke points are narrow straits on international waters that pose
certain security risks such as terrorist or pirate attacks for ships seeking to pass through them.
Examples of such choke points on international waterways include the Strait of Hormuz, which
is a narrow waterway between the Gulf of Oman in the southeast and the Persian Gulf in the
southwest, and the Strait of Malacca, which lies between Malaysia and Singapore and connects
the Indian Ocean with the South China Sea and the Pacific Ocean. The risk here for China is it
does not yet possess naval forces neither sophisticated nor strong enough for safeguarding
China’s maritime oil transports from the Middle East. If China’s naval forces were sophisticated
enough, China would seek to use its naval forces to protect its oil interests in the Middle
East/Gulf region, but again, this is not the case. “At the closing of a Chinese Communist Party
November 2003 economic work conference, Chinese President Hu Jintao used the term ‘Malacca
Dilemma’ to describe the risks of China’s increasing dependence upon oil imports that require
transport by sea.”6
For these complex reasons, the emerging states of Central Asia are being
viewed as promising energy trade partners, especially Kazakhstan in this case. Kazakhstan and
China have already struck deals to build pipelines that will transport large quantities of oil to
China, which effectively gives China a legitimate secondary alternative to Middle Eastern oil.
Although oil pipelines originating from Kazakhstan going into western China (Xinjiang Province
to be precise) present several issues of its own (which will be discussed later on), compared to
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
6
	
  Lanteigne, Marc. "China, Energy Security and Central Asian Diplomacy: Bilateral and Multilateral Approaches."
Caspian Energy Politics: Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. New York, NY: Routledge, 2010. Print. (Page
104)
	
  
Kwon, 6
transporting oil through international waters, oil pipelines present a real opportunity for China to
secure its energy future, as the risks and issues involved with maritime transportation won’t be
resolved anytime in the near future.
“Significant natural gas reserves are more broadly dispersed across Central Asia.
Uzbekistan leads the way in the region in terms of natural gas production, followed by
Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan, but Turkmenistan leads the way in terms of reserves, with
Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan about even….Central Asia’s three natural gas providers with the
greatest potential- Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, and Kazakhstan- all face the challenge to diversify
their markets to make planned natural gas exports viable. Both countries need new investment
dollars to increase production.”7
In terms of statistical figures of natural gas reserves in these
countries, the gas reserves and production potential are significant. Uzbekistan holds about
1,798,000 billion centimeters in reserve and has a potential annual production rate of 62,500
billion centimeters per year. Turkmenistan holds about 2,820,000 billion centimeters in reserves
and can potentially have an annual production rate of 60,420 billion centimeters per year. Lastly,
Kazakhstan holds about 1,765,000 billion centimeters in reserve and can potentially produce
approximately 25,930 billion centimeters per year. Although natural gas does not make up a
significant percentage of China’s energy use, the close proximity of Central Asia’s vast natural
gas reserves to China opens the door for the leadership in Beijing to negotiate bi-laterally with
each country to purchase control of stakes in the natural gas fields. The goal of Beijing’s energy
initiative is not necessarily to negotiate for securing oil and natural gas to fuel its economy,
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
7
	
  Garrison, Jean A. "The "Great Game" in Central Asia." China and the Energy Equation in Asia: the Determinants
of Policy Choice. Boulder, CO: FirstForumPress, 2009. Print. (Pg. 44)	
  
Kwon, 7
military, or society, but to negotiate for control of stakes in the vast natural gas fields in Central
Asia, thus guaranteeing steady flow of these energy sources into China without interruption.
Also by controlling certain stakes in the natural gas fields of Central Asia, China will be able to
keep Russian and Western ambitions in the region in check. Through its energy diplomacy
initiative, China seeks to become the pre-eminent and dominant player in Central Asia’s “great
energy game.” Having control over vast natural gas fields will give China complete and
undeterred access to some of the most fertile natural gas fields in the world. Although natural gas
may not figure prominently in China’s current energy use, negotiating for control and purchasing
stakes in the natural gas fields of Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, and Kazakhstan will undoubtedly
put China as one of the leading holders of vast natural gas sources. As China’s energy arsenal
mostly includes non-renewable resources, in the eyes of the Beijing leadership, the more it
possesses and controls, the more secure and powerful China can become.
III. HOW DOES CHINA GO ABOUT NEGOTIATING FOR CONTOL AND
PURCHASING THE VAST OIL FIELDS AND NATURAL GAS FIELDS IN CENTRAL
ASIA? WHAT ARE ITS STRATEGIES?
With the collapse of the United Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) in 1991, the Central
Asian republics (Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Turkmenistan in the context of this work) became
independent and sovereign countries. It would take these newly independent and sovereign
countries a few years to stabilize themselves domestically before entering the fray of the oft-
Kwon, 8
complicated and complex nature of foreign diplomacy and relations. The abundance of energy
sources in the Central Asian republics is not a new or recent phenomenon. During the Cold War
era, the Russians were the dominant force in the Soviet Union and were keen to exploit the
energy source potentialities in the Central Asian republics for its own benefit. (Perhaps this is the
reason why modern-day Russia still is considered a major player in Central Asian energy politics
in the modern age). After the collapse of the Soviet Union and achieving independence and
sovereignty of the Central Asian republics, Russia was no longer the single major force in
Central Asia. Competing Western influences started looking at this region with keen interest with
possible ambitions (i.e. negotiating for control of oil fields or natural gas fields) of their own. At
the same time, realizing that the vast sources of energy they possess, the Central Asian republics
sought to use its vast reserves of energy sources to pave their ways into the international arena
and establish formal relations with other countries. Noticing the geostrategic importance of
Central Asia and its vast reserves of oil and natural gas, China sought to get involved as soon as
possible to negotiate for purchasing of and control of stakes in the vast oil fields and natural gas
fields in the Central Asian republics. For China, this was a huge opportunity to secure its energy
security future, as Central Asia is essentially right next door to China and it has shown strong
resolve and willingness to get involved in the region for the sake of its future energy security.
“An initial breakthrough was achieved in 1996 at the meeting between President Jiang
Zemin and President Nazarbaev, when the border delimitation between the two countries was
finally achieved. Kazakhstan was eager to sign deals with Chinese companies in order to
strengthen its ‘multi-vector’ foreign policy, and the first contract on building a pipeline to
Kwon, 9
Xinjiang was quickly drafted.”8
China’s first deal came in 1997, when its CNPC (China National
Petroleum Corporation) bought a 60 percent share of the Aktobemunaigaz oil company for $4.3
billion and later that year won the controlling interest in Uzen, the second-largest oil field in
Kazakhstan. The next year the two countries agreed to principle to build a nearly 3,000 km oil
pipeline linking Kazakh oil fields with China’s Xinjiang Province in a deal to be financed by the
CNPC over twenty years. Despite, initial enthusiasm for these deals, however, no progress
occurred for several years due to a lukewarm reception on the Kazakh side and reluctance by
China to invest in the needed infrastructure.”9
This was the very beginning of Beijing’s
involvement in Central Asia in search of energy security, so it isn’t a surprise that both sides
showed reluctance towards each other and this could simply be because one side did not know
the other side too well, perhaps breeding a sort of mutual distrust for time being. Debatably, it
could be said that this is the first time that the ‘energy diplomacy’ initiative of Beijing was
applied and put to the test. This negotiation and transaction process put the CNPC (China
National Petroleum Corporation), which is China’s state-owned oil corporation, in the thick of
things in Central Asia’s “great energy game.” Through these initial deals, CNPC had taken
center stage for future Chinese negotiations and purchases of oil fields and natural gas fields of
Central Asia and arguably became an indispensable tool in Beijing’s Central Asian energy
diplomacy initiative arsenal. Despite these early deals though, it was not until the new
millennium that China started making significant inroads and expanded into Central Asian oil
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
8
	
  Baev, Pavel K., Bjorn Brunstad, Indra Overland, and Stina Torjesen. "4.8: China Increases Its Influence and Is Met
by Scepticism." The Caspian Sea Region toward 2025:. By Morten Anker. CW Delft, The Netherlands: Eburon
Academic, 2010. Print. (Pg. 82)	
  
9
	
  Garrison,	
  Jean	
  A.	
  "The	
  "Great	
  Game"	
  in	
  Central	
  Asia."	
  China	
  and	
  the	
  Energy	
  Equation	
  in	
  Asia:	
  The	
  Determinants	
  of	
  
Policy	
  Choice.	
  London,	
  UK:	
  FirstForumPress,	
  2009.	
  Print.	
  (Page	
  45)	
  
Kwon, 10
and natural gas development projects. The Chinese government slowly started to build up
significant influence in Central Asia, often by providing non-commercial loans. The reason for
Beijing and its energy diplomacy initiative’s focus on Central Asia is to strike a balance in the
geopolitical and geostrategic maps in the region as China primarily involved themselves in
Central Asia to keep a check on the influence of the Western entities (i.e. United States of
America and the European Union), who primarily involved themselves in the Caucasus region,
which is further west from Central Asia.
The CNPC was also involved in a major deal with Kazakhstan when “the discovery of
Kazakhstan’s giant Kashagan oil field (estimated to be the fifth-largest in the world)…and
domestic energy shortages became important factors to make the Chinese leadership again look
to Central Asia for energy. As a result, in March 2003 CNPC and the Kazakh state oil company,
KazMunaiGaz (KMG), jointly constructed the western-most section of the cross-border oil
pipeline running 448 km from Atyrau to Kenkiyak in Kazakhstan. The eastern-most part of the
pipeline, running 988 km from Atasu in Kazakhstan to Alshankou at the Chinese border, was
completed at the end of 2005 and became operative in May 2006 with a total investment of just
under $800 million.”10
(In addition to the 60% stake in KMG, CNPC also won contracts to
Kazakhstani oilfieds). KazMunaiGaz was previously a state-owned oil and gas company of
Kazakhstan. It was founded in 2002 by the merging of Kazakhoil and Oil and Gas
Transportation. Further adding to the purchase of a 60% stake in KazMunaiGaz (KMG) and
winning contracts to develop Kazakhstani oilfields, “In 2005, CNPC purchased PetroKazakhstan
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
10
	
  Garrison,	
  Jean	
  A.	
  "The	
  "Great	
  Game"	
  in	
  Central	
  Asia."	
  China	
  and	
  the	
  Energy	
  Equation	
  in	
  Asia:	
  The	
  Determinants	
  
of	
  Policy	
  Choice.	
  London,	
  UK:	
  FirstForumPress,	
  2009.	
  Print.	
  (Page	
  45)	
  
Kwon, 11
for US$4.2 billion. This sale was the largest Chinese overseas purchase to date…Another hefty
cheque (US$1.9 billion) was written by China’s CITIC group to purchase the Karazhanbas
oilfield in western Kazakhstan in December 2006.”11
All these purchases are in line with the
original intentions of Beijing’s energy diplomacy initiative in Central Asia. The goal of the
energy diplomacy initiative is not to merely seek to obtain energy sources to fuel the Chinese
economy, but to win or purchase control of the energy sources itself, as to absolutely guarantee
there will be no interruptions in obtaining the energy sources needed for its energy security and
to keep a check on penetration of foreign influences and interests in Kazakhstan as well. Beijing
uses the CNPC as a means to end, using the CNPC as a strategic tool to purchase stakes in or
entirely purchase Kazakhstani oil corporations. Through these purchases of Kazakhstani oil
corporations, it can be argued that Beijing essentially exerts significant influence and control
over Kazakhstani oil. It can be said that Beijing has a significant say in the fate and destiny of
Kazakhstani oil. It also has to be said that Beijing’s energy diplomacy efforts in Kazakhstan were
not just effective, but very successful as well, as it attained its goals of gaining control over the
energy sources.
“In addition to seeking oil in the region, Beijing has been pursuing natural gas, especially
from Turkmenistan….In 2006, Ashgabat and Beijing agreed to develop a dedicated natural gas
pipeline to China via Kazakhstan. Beijing also signed a production-sharing agreement (PSA)
giving China the power to jointly develop the gas fields that will be feeding the line- the only
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
11
	
  	
  Lanteigne,	
  Marc.	
  "China,	
  Energy	
  Security	
  and	
  Central	
  Asian	
  Diplomacy:	
  Bilateral	
  and	
  Multilateral	
  Approaches."	
  
Caspian	
  Energy	
  Politics:	
  Azerbaijan,	
  Kazakhstan	
  and	
  Turkmenistan.	
  New	
  York,	
  NY:	
  Routledge,	
  2010.	
  Print.	
  (Pg.	
  108)	
  
Kwon, 12
such agreement Turkmenistan had struck with another state as of 2008.”12
Although it is not
clear exactly how much natural gas reserves Turkmenistan holds within its borders (there have
been numerous statistical figures published, but they are disputed to this day and there are
questions about the government of Turkmenistan’s capacity to get an accurate statistics on how
much natural gas it holds), this deal was a breakthrough for Beijing. Through signing the
product-sharing agreement with Turkmenistan regarding natural gas, Beijing recorded another
success in its energy diplomacy policy in Central Asia. The product-sharing agreement
essentially gives Beijing the rights and powers to develop natural gas fields in Turkmenistan, but
on the conditions that China and Turkmenistan work to develop the natural gas fields jointly.
Although it is a joint project, Beijing would have relatively uninterrupted access to Turkmen
natural gas because ‘joint development’ means that Beijing has made investments and
commitments to develop the natural gas fields of Turkmenistan that will be passing through the
proposed pipeline, therefore giving Beijing a great degree of control and influence of how
Turkmen natural gas will be developed and used in the future.
IV. PIPELINE POLITICS OF CENTRAL ASIA: COSTS AND BENEFITS, CURRENT
AND POTENTIAL SECURITY ISSUES, AND GEOPOLITICAL TENSIONS
With the achievement of acquiring control over petroleum corporations in Kazakhstan
and natural gas field development rights in Turkmenistan, Beijing has kept in line with its energy
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
12
	
  	
  Lanteigne,	
  Marc.	
  "China,	
  Energy	
  Security	
  and	
  Central	
  Asian	
  Diplomacy:	
  Bilateral	
  and	
  Multilateral	
  Approaches."	
  
Caspian	
  Energy	
  Politics:	
  Azerbaijan,	
  Kazakhstan	
  and	
  Turkmenistan.	
  New	
  York,	
  NY:	
  Routledge,	
  2010.	
  Print.	
  (Pg.	
  108)	
  
Kwon, 13
diplomacy initiative to gain control of a significant stake in Central Asian oil and natural gas.
The next logical step for Beijing to take would be to work through the issue of transporting the
oil and natural gas into China. Since Central Asia is landlocked, the best option in this case
would be to construct pipelines and supporting facilities to transport oil and natural gas into
Western China, into the Xinjiang Province, which shares common border with Kazakhstan.
However, there are a multiplicity of issues involved with constructing these pipelines for both
Beijing and its Central Asian counterparts. These issues range from costs and benefits related to
constructing pipelines and supporting facilities, security issues surrounding the proposed
pipelines, and geopolitical tension among countries in and around the Central Asian region
where the pipeline construction projects will go underway. These complications and issues
surrounding pipelines threaten to delay the process of pipeline construction or even worse,
cancellation of pipeline construction projects before it even starts or stopping in the middle of the
construction process. Because of these issues and risks surrounding the construction of pipelines,
meticulous negotiations and strategic planning are required by both Beijing and its Central Asian
counterparts. Especially in joint projects, cooperation between the partners will be very
important. First, Beijing and its Central Asian counterparts must work together to draw out
precise modifications and measurements for the pipelines, which must be drawn out by specialist
engineers and architects. Pipelines built for the purpose of transporting oil and natural gas must
be constructed with meticulous detail and attention because one default in the construction
process can potentially damage the entire pipeline structure. For China, the successful
completions of numerous pipeline projects are essential for its energy security because without
the pipelines, there isn’t another viable alternative to bring in oil and natural gas from Central
Kwon, 14
Asia into China aside from pipelines, so therefore, control of the oil and natural gas fields that
Beijing worked hard on obtaining would be rendered as questionable or even empty-handed
achievements. “The proposed pipelines shipping oil and gas from Central Asia to China for
domestic consumption or re-export have several problems that are yet to be resolved. The first is
the requirement for foreign investment. Neither China nor Kazakhstan have the funds to build
the pipeline. Without substantial loans from the developed nations, the viability of the project is
questionable. The second problem is the technical difficulty of constructing a pipeline. The
remoteness of Xinjiang coupled with the lack of adequate roads and railways to transport
materials make the project even more daunting….The third problem China and Kazakhstan face
is the separatist movement within Xinjiang that might dissuade foreign investors from putting
money into the pipeline. Addressed above, this is a psychologically important influence, though
practically speaking, there is little evidence to date that separatists intend to disrupt development
projects.”13
Another complicated issue that surrounds the construction and use of pipelines for the
purpose of transporting oil and natural gas across a large landmass such as Central Asia and
China is the issue of geopolitical tension. To elaborate further, ‘geopolitical tension’ in this
context covers the issue of transit fees (as pipelines have to be constructed across borders of
various countries in an out of the region) and in the case that the pipeline bursts or experiences
malfunctions, the country in which those bursts or malfunctions happened will inevitably have to
shoulder the blame for that damage from its neighboring countries that share the pipeline with it.
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
13
	
  Gladney, Dru C. "China's Interest in Central Asia: Energy and Ethnic Security." Ed. Robert E. Ebel and Rajan
Menon. Energy and Conflict in Central Asia and the Caucasus. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2000. Print.
(Pg. 218)	
  
Kwon, 15
If these damages happen on Chinese territory, Beijing will inevitably face a flurry of criticism
from its Central Asian neighbors and Beijing may lose credibility in the eyes their Central Asian
counterparts and thus as a result, Beijing’s energy diplomacy policy could potentially be
weakened in wake of such an event and its position of influence in Central Asia’s energy politics
could take a massive hit. Below, there are two real-life scenarios that illustrate the wider
geopolitical tension surrounding pipelines in and out of the Central Asia region and how these
scenarios could possibly play out for China. The results will most likely vary for China
depending on the scenarios.
a. Scenario #1
“The proposed pipeline network between China and Turkmenistan will be a significant
engineering challenge. With an estimated cost of US$6.7 billion, the pipeline will commence in
Turkmenistan’s Amu Darya River region, crossing wide expanses of the Eurasian landmass. This
includes portions of Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan, leading to expected complications regarding
transit fees.”14
Potential results for China and possible actions it may choose to take in this particular scenario:
Construction of the Uzbekistan segment of this proposed pipeline began in late June 2008. China
projected that this pipeline would be able to go online in 2009, but experienced delays because of
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
14
	
  Lanteigne, Marc. "China, Energy Security and Central Asian Diplomacy: Bilateral and Multilateral Approaches."
Caspian Energy Politics: Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. New York, NY: Routledge, 2010. Print. (Pg.
108)
	
  
Kwon, 16
a delay in the construction of a processing plant at the Saman-Tepe gas field in Turkmenistan.
Because of this delay, the pipeline is projected to be officially operational sometime in 2011 or
2012. Delays in construction won’t necessarily hurt China badly because these delays aren’t
long-term delays (i.e. one decade) but rather short and temporary delays. China possesses partial
control and ownership over Turkmen natural gas fields under the terms of the product-sharing
agreement that was signed by both sides in 2006. Turkmenistan stands to be hit harder than
China in this case because Turkmenistan would only start earning profits once the pipelines are
complete and natural gas starts flowing into China. China is the recipient of the natural gas that
will flow through this proposed pipeline, so thus, for Beijing, this could either be merely a
‘waiting game’ with small consequences (only if the delays are short and temporary) or a serious
problem because there are always possibilities of further delays in the construction process that
could potentially result in China experiencing significant financial losses due to long-term delays
in the construction process.
In regards to transit fees, Beijing has three options on its table, which would be to either
negotiate the transit fees through a bi-lateral channel, a multi-lateral channel, or choose both
options. Each option has its advantages and disadvantages for Beijing. If Beijing is to negotiate
transit fees only through a bi-lateral channel, it will be dealing with just one of its Central Asian
counterparts at a time. In this particular scenario, China would be negotiating with Uzbekistan or
Kazakhstan individually. The advantages for Beijing in regards to bi-lateral negotiations would
be that it may be able to dictate the negotiations on its own terms as it possesses significant
political clout and influence in the Central Asia region and may be able to negotiate for transit
Kwon, 17
fee terms favorable towards China. The disadvantages of bi-lateral negotiations in this particular
scenario would be that either Uzbekistan or Kazakhstan could threaten to refuse passage of
natural gas pipelines through its territory if it does not get its own favorable terms regarding
transit fees, which will inevitably result in further delays in the pipeline construction process. In
the case of multi-lateral negotiations over transit fees (which could be organized under the clout
of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization), the advantage here is that there is potential for a
consensus on one fixed transit fee across all territories that the pipeline resides in, which could
prove to be the most beneficial for Beijing because there are no complications about paying
different amounts of transit fees in different countries. The disadvantage in multi-lateral
negotiations is that it could possibly be a very dragged out process that takes a long time to come
to acceptable terms for all sides. There is also the option of negotiating through either bi-lateral
or multi-lateral channel for Beijing. This is a rather risky option to pursue because in the case
that both channels fail to produce adequate results, Beijing would be out of options.
b. Scenario #2
“The Kazakh-China pipeline project is a 50-50 joint venture between KMG and CNPC,
although the Chinese company paid 85 percent of the cost. Only 44,000 bpd of crude oil flowed
through it in 2006, but its capacity is estimated to be ten times that amount after connecting
pipelines within China and Kazakhstan are completed. The pipeline can accept crude oil
deliveries from the west, from the north (Russian sources in western Siberia), or from the south
Kwon, 18
from Kazakhstan’s Turgai basin. To function effectively, the pipeline needs Russian oil to
supplement Kazakh contributions because of inefficient fill and viscosity issues.”15
Potential results for China and possible actions it may choose to take in this particular scenario:
The Sino-Kazakh Oil Pipeline was completed on July 2009 although it was scheduled to
be completed three months later in October 2009. This is a particularly important matter of
energy security for Beijing just based on the fact that Beijing paid 85% of the cost of the pipeline
alone, and so, it can be assumed that Beijing has 85% ownership rights on the Sino-Kazakh Oil
Pipeline. If there are to be any sort of damages, small or significant (damages can range from
physical damage on the pipeline to small or significant amounts of leaked oil), China will have to
take a huge hit financially because of the amount of money Beijing has invested in this particular
pipeline and its credibility as majority owner can possibly come into question from Kazakhstan.
Also Russia is involved in this picture, albeit as an outsider, but Russia’s previous history
in the Central Asia region, its present presence and influence in Central Asia, and its position as
a threat to Chinese pre-eminence in Central Asia potentially renders Russia as major player in
this scenario. The fact that this pipeline needs Russian oil to function effectively and supplement
Kazakh contributions because of insufficient fill and viscosity issues, most likely does not sit
well with Beijing. One of the tenets of Beijing’s ‘energy diplomacy’ initiative in Central Asia is
to counter and check Russian influence in Central Asian energy politics and become the
dominant player in Central Asian energy politics and Russia’s involvement in a joint pipeline
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
15
	
  Garrison,	
  Jean	
  A.	
  "The	
  "Great	
  Game"	
  in	
  Central	
  Asia."	
  China	
  and	
  the	
  Energy	
  Equation	
  in	
  Asia:	
  The	
  Determinants	
  
of	
  Policy	
  Choice.	
  London,	
  UK:	
  FirstForumPress,	
  2009.	
  Print.	
  (Pg.	
  47)	
  
	
  
Kwon, 19
ventured and constructed by Kazakhstan and China, hinders Beijing’s efforts to weaken Russia’s
influence in Central Asian energy politics. A potential course of action that could be considered
by Beijing is to try to persuade the Kazakhstani government that Russia’s involvement in the
Sino-Kazakh Oil Pipeline, although it may be a small role, is not good for both Kazakhstan and
China because Russia may possibly use its involvement in the Sino-Kazakh Oil Pipeline as a
justification to exert its influence over Kazakhstan and Sino-Kazakh Oil Pipeline affairs. So, to
counter this possibility, Beijing could pledge more financial investments in the Sino-Kazakh Oil
Pipeline to find a resolution to the inefficient fill and viscosity issues. If a resolution to this issue
could be found, it’ll effectively put an end to Russia’s involvement in the Sino-Kazakh Oil
Pipeline. Another option Beijing could take into consideration is to keep the status quo and
accept Russia’s involvement in the Sino-Kazakh Oil Pipeline. China and Russia has yet to
antagonize each other or start diplomatic hostilities with each other over the Sino-Kazakh Oil
Pipeline. Russia’s involvement in this oil pipeline is small compared to China or Kazakhstan’s
involvement. It might not be necessary to try to push Russia out of the picture in relation to the
Sino-Kazakh Oil Pipeline, as there is the risk that China could antagonize Russia if it does so.
Although China seeks to become the dominant player in Central Asian energy politics,
antagonizing Russia would most likely have an adverse effect on advancing Beijing’s energy
diplomacy initiative in Central Asia. China and Russia keep each other in check in Central Asia
as it is, and provoking Russia over more influence in Central Asia could undo some of the
concrete results achieved through Beijing’s energy diplomacy.
Kwon, 20
V. SHANGHAI COOPERATION ORGANIZATION (SCO): WHAT ROLE DOES THE
SCO PLAY IN THE ENERGY POLITICS OF CENTRAL ASIA?
“Conceived as a regional security group, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO)
was officially established in June 2001 by the leaders of China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia,
Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. The organization evolved out of the Shanghai Five, which was
founded in 1996 and included the same countries with the exception of Uzbekistan. Parallel to
China’s growing role in Central Asia, the SCO has expanded beyond a security organization to
become a forum for economic cooperation in the region.”16
The Shanghai Cooperation
Organization was originally created to counter-balance Western and US influence in Central
Asia, thus giving backing to the fact that this organization was created out of necessity for
regional security.
In terms of Central Asian energy politics, Russia’s President Vladimir Putin proposed a
creation of an ‘SCO Energy Club’ in June of 2006 in response to China’s increasing involvement
in Central Asian energy politics. The SCO Energy Club’s purpose was to promote dialogue
regarding energy issues and create a forum for member states to coordinate energy policies and
investments. Putin’s initiative received support from all members of the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization. There is also a quiet suggestion among the Western powers, the United States and
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
16
	
  Kassenova, Nargis. "9: The Shanghai Cooperation Energy Club." Ed. Indra Overland, Heidi Kjaernet, and Andrea
Kendall-Taylor. Caspian Energy Politics: Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. New York, NY: Routledge,
2010. Print. (Pg. 162)	
  
Kwon, 21
the European Union, that this new SCO Energy Club could potentially hinder Western interests
in Central Asia and become an ‘OPEC with nukes.’
VI. HOW DOES BEIJING VIEW THE SCO ENERGY CLUB? HOW COULD BEIJING
USE THE SCO ENERGY CLUB TO FURTHER PROMOTE ITS ‘ENERGY
DIPLOMACY’ AGENDA?
“While Beijing officially supports the SCO Energy Club initiative, Chinese experts have
expressed their doubts over its viability. As Huasheng Zhao of Fudan University points out,
Russia and China do not have the same priorities. Russia is the largest exporter in the region; it
monopolizes transportation channels and considers Central Asia an appendix to its export policy.
China, in contrast is an importer interested in the supply of energy resources from Central Asia
and the construction of new pipelines from this region to China.”17
Although Beijing wishes to
keep Russia’s influence in Central Asia in check, at the same time, Beijing is careful not to
antagonize Russia or start any rivalries with Russia. Beijing views the SCO Energy Club as a
forum where a cooperative framework for energy policies and investments can be discussed and
decided upon in a collective group. Beijing perhaps holds this view because it does not want to
antagonize Russia and make relations uneasy between the two because as the ‘two big boys’ of
the SCO Energy Group, both countries are expected to lead the discussions and decision-making
process together in the SCO Energy Group. The presence of Russia in the SCO Energy Club
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
17
	
  Kassenova, Nargis. "9: The Shanghai Cooperation Energy Club." Ed. Indra Overland, Heidi Kjaernet, and Andrea
Kendall-Taylor. Caspian Energy Politics: Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. New York, NY: Routledge,
2010. Print. (Pg. 169)	
  
Kwon, 22
restrains Beijing from promoting its energy diplomacy initiative as much as it would like in a
SCO Energy Club setting. The leadership in China understands that Moscow and Beijing have
very different agendas and interests in Central Asian energy politics and are careful not to get
entangled with the Russians. Also at the same time, Moscow does not have much to gain from
antagonizing Beijing and seems to think that intensifying an already tense relationship with
China will hold back any progress that could be made in the SCO Energy Club. In essence, both
Beijing and Moscow seem to understand that using the SCO Energy Club as a forum to dialogue
with and cooperate with each other would bring benefits to both sides. Further, both Moscow and
Beijing seems to have come to an understanding that as the two pre-eminent powers in the SCO
Energy Club, any conflict between Beijing and Moscow would undermine progress in the SCO
Energy Club.
Despite this, all is not lost for China. There are still possibilities for Beijing to promote its
energy diplomacy initiative in the SCO Energy Club in the future. “China has been very
successful since the turn of the millennium in increasing trade volumes with the other SCO
members…The SCO and Chinese diplomacy in Central Asia have also pushed Beijing closer to
European regional interests.”18
If Beijing is to continuously work on expanding its trade volume
with Central Asia and at the same time, maintain cordial and cooperative relations with the
countries of Central Asia, especially the members of the SCO Energy Club, these factors and
reasons may present more opportunities for Beijing to apply its energy diplomacy initiative to
areas in Central Asia where it was not previously applied because the opportunity was not there.
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
18
	
  Lanteigne, Marc. "China, Energy Security and Central Asian Diplomacy: Bilateral and Multilateral Approaches."
Caspian Energy Politics: Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. New York, NY: Routledge, 2010. Print. (Pg.
111)	
  
Kwon, 23
VII. CONCLUSION: THE FUTURE OF CHINA’S ENERGY SECURITY
In less than two decades, China’s energy diplomacy initiative has achieved much in
China’s quest for energy security in Central Asia. At the core of Beijing’s relationships and
policies with its Central Asian neighbors to the west will always be centered on energy trade.
Abundant energy sources such as oil and natural gas reserves was what initially attracted Beijing
to Central Asia and paved the way for Beijing to implement its energy diplomacy initiative in
Central Asia. And at the same time, when Central Asian republics that achieved independence
and sovereignty after the collapse of the Soviet Union, were welcoming yet a bit cautious about
China’s interest in their abundant natural gas and oil reserves. “As a whole, these policies have
been very successful in establishing China as an energy player in Eurasia… Pipeline projects
which in the 1990s appeared out of reach are now nearing completion, and other such mega-
projects are under discussion.”19
Certainly, China will seek to maintain and further advance its
relationships with Central Asia’s energy-producing countries because in less than two decades,
Central Asia has become a highly important geostrategic and geopolitical region for China. For
China, Central Asia’s energy imports are essential to maintaining and enhancing its energy
security profile. As much reason as there is for Beijing to be optimistic about its future energy-
based relations with Central Asia, unresolved questions and issues remain for China and its
	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  	
  
19
	
  Lanteigne, Marc. "China, Energy Security and Central Asian Diplomacy: Bilateral and Multilateral Approaches."
Caspian Energy Politics: Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. New York, NY: Routledge, 2010. Print. (Pg.
111)	
  
	
  
Kwon, 24
Central Asian counterparts, for example, in the form of unresolved issues regarding the political
tensions surrounding oil/natural gas pipelines, which will undoubtedly keep Beijing vigilant in
enhancing its own energy security through the Central Asian channel.
BIBLIOGRAPHY PAGE
1.) Lanteigne, Marc. "China, Energy Security and Central Asian Diplomacy: Bilateral and
Multilateral Approaches." Caspian Energy Politics: Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and
Turkmenistan. New York, NY: Routledge, 2010. Print.
2.) Garrison, Jean A. "The "Great Game" in Central Asia." China and the Energy Equation
in Asia: The Determinants of Policy Choice. London, UK: FirstForumPress, 2009. Print.
3.) Lin, Christina. "The New Silk Road: China's Energy Strategy in the Greater Middle
East." The Washington Institute for Near East Policy (2011).
Http://washingtoninstitute.org/pubPDFs/PolicyFocus109.pdf. Apr. 2011. Web. Apr.
2011.
4.) Baev, Pavel K., Bjorn Brunstad, Indra Overland, and Stina Torjesen. "4.8: China
Increases Its Influence and Is Met by Scepticism." The Caspian Sea Region toward 2025:.
By Morten Anker. CW Delft, The Netherlands: Eburon Academic, 2010. Print.
5.) Gladney, Dru C. "China's Interest in Central Asia: Energy and Ethnic Security." Ed.
Robert E. Ebel and Rajan Menon. Energy and Conflict in Central Asia and the Caucasus.
Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2000. Print.
6.) Kassenova, Nargis. "9: The Shanghai Cooperation Energy Club." Ed. Indra Overland,
Heidi Kjaernet, and Andrea Kendall-Taylor. Caspian Energy Politics: Azerbaijan,
Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. New York, NY: Routledge, 2010. Print.
China-Central Asia Energy Security Analysis (1)

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China-Central Asia Energy Security Analysis (1)

  • 1. The People’s Republic of China’s Pursuit of Energy Security in Central Asia Sun Hwak Kwon PSC192W- Oil and Politics Prof. Reich 5/5/11
  • 2. TABLE OF CONTENTS I. INTRODUCTION II. WHICH CENTRAL ASIAN COUNTRIES MATTER TO CHINA IN TERMS OF ITS OWN ENERGY SECURITY? III. HOW DOES CHINA GO ABOUT NEGOTIATING FOR CONTOL AND PURCHASING THE VAST OIL FIELDS AND NATURAL GAS FIELDS IN CENTRAL ASIA? WHAT ARE ITS STRATEGIES? IV. PIPELINE POLITICS OF CENTRAL ASIA: COSTS AND BENEFITS, CURRENT AND POTENTIAL SECURITY ISSUES, AND GEOPOLITICAL TENSIONS a. Scenario #1 b. Scenario #2 V. SHANGHAI COOPERATION ORGANIZATION (SCO): WHAT ROLE DOES THE SCO PLAY IN THE ENERGY POLITICS OF CENTRAL ASIA? VI. HOW DOES BEIJING VIEW THE SCO ENERGY CLUB? HOW COULD BEIJING USE THE SCO ENERGY CLUB TO FURTHER PROMOTE ITS ‘ENERGY DIPLOMACY’ AGENDA? VII. CONCLUSION: THE FUTURE OF CHINA’S ENERGY SECURITY
  • 3. Kwon, 1 I. INTRODUCTION Obtaining sources of energy, primarily oil and natural gas, for the purposes of energy security is high on the agenda list for the People’s Republic of China. In today’s global political and economic climate, energy sources have become essential for any state’s security and survival because these energy sources fuel economies, militaries, and societies. With that in mind, it is important to note that the global energy market is unpredictable and at times, volatile. Because of these reasons, China is seeking out ways to secure sources of energy outside of its own borders to fuel its burgeoning economy, military, and society. To meet increasing energy needs, Beijing has implemented a foreign policy strategy that can be referred to as ‘energy diplomacy’ to secure its goals in relation to obtaining and securing oil and natural gas outside of China’s borders. Beijing’s ‘energy diplomacy’ seeks “to secure external oil and gas supplies through state-to-state negotiation as well as cooperation within multilateral organizations.”1 China’s main source of energy for now is coal, which it has plenty reserves of and accounts for approximately 60% of China’s energy uses. “Despite China’s sizeable coal reserves, estimated at about 114.5 billion metric tonnes with another 11 trillion cubic metres of coal-bed methane, reserves may be exhausted in half a century.”2 Add to this, the environmental consequences that are usually associated with the use of coal as an energy source, there is more of an incentive for China to seek out alternative routes in securing energy sources (oil and natural gas) from foreign                                                                                                                           1  Lanteigne,  Marc.  "China,  Energy  Security  and  Central  Asian  Diplomacy:  Bilateral  and  Multilateral  Approaches."   Caspian  Energy  Politics:  Azerbaijan,  Kazakhstan  and  Turkmenistan.  New  York,  NY:  Routledge,  2010.  Print.  (Pg.101)   2  Lanteigne, Marc. "China, Energy Security and Central Asian Diplomacy: Bilateral and Multilateral Approaches." Caspian Energy Politics: Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. New York, NY: Routledge, 2010. Print. (Pg.104)  
  • 4. Kwon, 2 countries. To secure ample amounts of oil and natural gas, China has turned its attentions to its western neighbors in Central Asia. “Energy resources in Central Asia have made the region an important foreign policy focus for China’s government. By the numbers, the importance of the Caspian region in the global energy equation (its oil accounts for only 2-3 percent of the world’s known reserves) is quite small. However, its proximity to China’s market and the tightness of the world oil market make this 2 percent potentially critical. As China’s energy demand skyrockets, it seeks reliable supplies closer to home, and Central Asia can become an important source of energy.”3 II. WHICH CENTRAL ASIAN COUNTRIES MATTER TO CHINA IN TERMS OF ITS OWN ENERGY SECURITY? Beijing has a tendency to view energy security in more than just purely economic terms. For the Beijing leadership, energy security is not just about securing more oil and natural gas to drive and fuel its burgeoning economy, but a geopolitical and strategic game of tactics and negotiations that have implications far beyond just obtaining oil and natural gas from Central Asia. “In particular, Beijing has been concerned about countering Western energy initiatives in the region. As one Chinese scholar argued, projects such as the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) oil                                                                                                                           3  Garrison,  Jean  A.  "The  "Great  Game"  in  Central  Asia."  China  and  the  Energy  Equation  in  Asia:  The  Determinants  of   Policy  Choice.  London,  UK:  FirstForumPress,  2009.  Print.  
  • 5. Kwon, 3 pipeline- the first regional pipeline directly supported an controlled by Western countries- imply American motives of containing Russia and China.”4 This could also imply that Western powers, particularly the United States, are attempting to undermine the Russians, Iranians, or Chinese from gaining dominance in the ‘energy game’ in Central Asia and the Caspian Sea region. For the leadership of Beijing particularly, and especially for those involved in the ‘energy diplomacy’ initiative, possessing oil and natural gas resources to fuel the economy, military, and society is one thing, but controlling the oil and natural gas resources in Central Asian territory is of higher importance because control over the vast oil fields and natural gas fields in Central Asia will guarantee steady and consistent flow of large quantities of oil and natural gas that will effectively secure China’s energy needs for the foreseeable future and beyond that as well. With control over the energy sources, Beijing has a free hand, meaning it may choose to use them for domestic consumption or re-export it other markets around the world. The unique location and its abundant energy sources gives Central Asia a geostrategic importance and this has provided a platform for rather intense rivalries for influence and control in this region. For Chinese leaders, securing China’s energy future is a matter of national security and China’s leaders “have decided that energy security was too important to be left to market forces alone, and Beijing has prioritized the issue as a matter of national security.”5                                                                                                                           4  Lin, Christina. "The New Silk Road: China's Energy Strategy in the Greater Middle East." The Washington Institute for Near East Policy (2011). Http://washingtoninstitute.org/pubPDFs/PolicyFocus109.pdf. Apr. 2011. Web. Apr. 2011. (Pg. 15)   5  Lin, Christina. "The New Silk Road: China's Energy Strategy in the Greater Middle East." The Washington Institute for Near East Policy (2011). Http://washingtoninstitute.org/pubPDFs/PolicyFocus109.pdf. Apr. 2011. Web. Apr. 2011. (Pg. 15)    
  • 6. Kwon, 4 China’s involvement in Kazakhstan also confirms that the Beijing leadership’s ‘energy diplomacy’ initiative places Central Asia as a vital source of energy for China. For analysis sake, it can be said that Beijing chose to establish close relations with Kazakhstan for a variety of reasons. First, Kazakhstan is the only major oil producer in Central Asia aside from Azerbaijan, holding about estimated 40 billion barrels of proven oil reserves in its four major oil fields (on- shore and off-shore): Uzen, Karachaganak, Tengiz, and Kashagan). Out of those four oil fields, the recently discovered Kashagan oil fields has been deemed by analysts as the most significant discovery of a proven oil reserve in the last 30 years after preliminary drilling and exploration. Also, the Karachaganak oil fields are estimated to hold approximately 2.4 billion barrels of oil reserves and 16 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, which can be recovered in the next 40 years. Although Azerbaijan holds substantial amounts of oil in its oil fields, transporting Azerbaijani oil to China is a potentially complicated and contentious issue, which will require various stages of negotiations, be it multi-lateral or bi-lateral, with many different countries regarding transfer fees. Second, Kazakhstan and China share a common border, so thus they have geographical proximity with each other. This geographical proximity is important for the Beijing leadership because of the issue of transporting oil or natural gas. Thus, for China, Kazakh oil is geopolitically desirable because Kazakhstan is the only country in the Central Asia region where oil imports can directly go overland into China without passing through Russia first, eliminating the need for separate bi-lateral negotiations with Russia over transit fees. At present, China’s oil imports are dominated by the Middle East, especially from Saudi Arabia, Oman, Yemen, and Iran. To transport oil from the Middle East to China, oil tankers must
  • 7. Kwon, 5 travel through international waters, which require navigating through several straits and passages known as ‘oil choke points.’ Oil choke points are narrow straits on international waters that pose certain security risks such as terrorist or pirate attacks for ships seeking to pass through them. Examples of such choke points on international waterways include the Strait of Hormuz, which is a narrow waterway between the Gulf of Oman in the southeast and the Persian Gulf in the southwest, and the Strait of Malacca, which lies between Malaysia and Singapore and connects the Indian Ocean with the South China Sea and the Pacific Ocean. The risk here for China is it does not yet possess naval forces neither sophisticated nor strong enough for safeguarding China’s maritime oil transports from the Middle East. If China’s naval forces were sophisticated enough, China would seek to use its naval forces to protect its oil interests in the Middle East/Gulf region, but again, this is not the case. “At the closing of a Chinese Communist Party November 2003 economic work conference, Chinese President Hu Jintao used the term ‘Malacca Dilemma’ to describe the risks of China’s increasing dependence upon oil imports that require transport by sea.”6 For these complex reasons, the emerging states of Central Asia are being viewed as promising energy trade partners, especially Kazakhstan in this case. Kazakhstan and China have already struck deals to build pipelines that will transport large quantities of oil to China, which effectively gives China a legitimate secondary alternative to Middle Eastern oil. Although oil pipelines originating from Kazakhstan going into western China (Xinjiang Province to be precise) present several issues of its own (which will be discussed later on), compared to                                                                                                                           6  Lanteigne, Marc. "China, Energy Security and Central Asian Diplomacy: Bilateral and Multilateral Approaches." Caspian Energy Politics: Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. New York, NY: Routledge, 2010. Print. (Page 104)  
  • 8. Kwon, 6 transporting oil through international waters, oil pipelines present a real opportunity for China to secure its energy future, as the risks and issues involved with maritime transportation won’t be resolved anytime in the near future. “Significant natural gas reserves are more broadly dispersed across Central Asia. Uzbekistan leads the way in the region in terms of natural gas production, followed by Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan, but Turkmenistan leads the way in terms of reserves, with Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan about even….Central Asia’s three natural gas providers with the greatest potential- Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, and Kazakhstan- all face the challenge to diversify their markets to make planned natural gas exports viable. Both countries need new investment dollars to increase production.”7 In terms of statistical figures of natural gas reserves in these countries, the gas reserves and production potential are significant. Uzbekistan holds about 1,798,000 billion centimeters in reserve and has a potential annual production rate of 62,500 billion centimeters per year. Turkmenistan holds about 2,820,000 billion centimeters in reserves and can potentially have an annual production rate of 60,420 billion centimeters per year. Lastly, Kazakhstan holds about 1,765,000 billion centimeters in reserve and can potentially produce approximately 25,930 billion centimeters per year. Although natural gas does not make up a significant percentage of China’s energy use, the close proximity of Central Asia’s vast natural gas reserves to China opens the door for the leadership in Beijing to negotiate bi-laterally with each country to purchase control of stakes in the natural gas fields. The goal of Beijing’s energy initiative is not necessarily to negotiate for securing oil and natural gas to fuel its economy,                                                                                                                           7  Garrison, Jean A. "The "Great Game" in Central Asia." China and the Energy Equation in Asia: the Determinants of Policy Choice. Boulder, CO: FirstForumPress, 2009. Print. (Pg. 44)  
  • 9. Kwon, 7 military, or society, but to negotiate for control of stakes in the vast natural gas fields in Central Asia, thus guaranteeing steady flow of these energy sources into China without interruption. Also by controlling certain stakes in the natural gas fields of Central Asia, China will be able to keep Russian and Western ambitions in the region in check. Through its energy diplomacy initiative, China seeks to become the pre-eminent and dominant player in Central Asia’s “great energy game.” Having control over vast natural gas fields will give China complete and undeterred access to some of the most fertile natural gas fields in the world. Although natural gas may not figure prominently in China’s current energy use, negotiating for control and purchasing stakes in the natural gas fields of Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, and Kazakhstan will undoubtedly put China as one of the leading holders of vast natural gas sources. As China’s energy arsenal mostly includes non-renewable resources, in the eyes of the Beijing leadership, the more it possesses and controls, the more secure and powerful China can become. III. HOW DOES CHINA GO ABOUT NEGOTIATING FOR CONTOL AND PURCHASING THE VAST OIL FIELDS AND NATURAL GAS FIELDS IN CENTRAL ASIA? WHAT ARE ITS STRATEGIES? With the collapse of the United Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) in 1991, the Central Asian republics (Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Turkmenistan in the context of this work) became independent and sovereign countries. It would take these newly independent and sovereign countries a few years to stabilize themselves domestically before entering the fray of the oft-
  • 10. Kwon, 8 complicated and complex nature of foreign diplomacy and relations. The abundance of energy sources in the Central Asian republics is not a new or recent phenomenon. During the Cold War era, the Russians were the dominant force in the Soviet Union and were keen to exploit the energy source potentialities in the Central Asian republics for its own benefit. (Perhaps this is the reason why modern-day Russia still is considered a major player in Central Asian energy politics in the modern age). After the collapse of the Soviet Union and achieving independence and sovereignty of the Central Asian republics, Russia was no longer the single major force in Central Asia. Competing Western influences started looking at this region with keen interest with possible ambitions (i.e. negotiating for control of oil fields or natural gas fields) of their own. At the same time, realizing that the vast sources of energy they possess, the Central Asian republics sought to use its vast reserves of energy sources to pave their ways into the international arena and establish formal relations with other countries. Noticing the geostrategic importance of Central Asia and its vast reserves of oil and natural gas, China sought to get involved as soon as possible to negotiate for purchasing of and control of stakes in the vast oil fields and natural gas fields in the Central Asian republics. For China, this was a huge opportunity to secure its energy security future, as Central Asia is essentially right next door to China and it has shown strong resolve and willingness to get involved in the region for the sake of its future energy security. “An initial breakthrough was achieved in 1996 at the meeting between President Jiang Zemin and President Nazarbaev, when the border delimitation between the two countries was finally achieved. Kazakhstan was eager to sign deals with Chinese companies in order to strengthen its ‘multi-vector’ foreign policy, and the first contract on building a pipeline to
  • 11. Kwon, 9 Xinjiang was quickly drafted.”8 China’s first deal came in 1997, when its CNPC (China National Petroleum Corporation) bought a 60 percent share of the Aktobemunaigaz oil company for $4.3 billion and later that year won the controlling interest in Uzen, the second-largest oil field in Kazakhstan. The next year the two countries agreed to principle to build a nearly 3,000 km oil pipeline linking Kazakh oil fields with China’s Xinjiang Province in a deal to be financed by the CNPC over twenty years. Despite, initial enthusiasm for these deals, however, no progress occurred for several years due to a lukewarm reception on the Kazakh side and reluctance by China to invest in the needed infrastructure.”9 This was the very beginning of Beijing’s involvement in Central Asia in search of energy security, so it isn’t a surprise that both sides showed reluctance towards each other and this could simply be because one side did not know the other side too well, perhaps breeding a sort of mutual distrust for time being. Debatably, it could be said that this is the first time that the ‘energy diplomacy’ initiative of Beijing was applied and put to the test. This negotiation and transaction process put the CNPC (China National Petroleum Corporation), which is China’s state-owned oil corporation, in the thick of things in Central Asia’s “great energy game.” Through these initial deals, CNPC had taken center stage for future Chinese negotiations and purchases of oil fields and natural gas fields of Central Asia and arguably became an indispensable tool in Beijing’s Central Asian energy diplomacy initiative arsenal. Despite these early deals though, it was not until the new millennium that China started making significant inroads and expanded into Central Asian oil                                                                                                                           8  Baev, Pavel K., Bjorn Brunstad, Indra Overland, and Stina Torjesen. "4.8: China Increases Its Influence and Is Met by Scepticism." The Caspian Sea Region toward 2025:. By Morten Anker. CW Delft, The Netherlands: Eburon Academic, 2010. Print. (Pg. 82)   9  Garrison,  Jean  A.  "The  "Great  Game"  in  Central  Asia."  China  and  the  Energy  Equation  in  Asia:  The  Determinants  of   Policy  Choice.  London,  UK:  FirstForumPress,  2009.  Print.  (Page  45)  
  • 12. Kwon, 10 and natural gas development projects. The Chinese government slowly started to build up significant influence in Central Asia, often by providing non-commercial loans. The reason for Beijing and its energy diplomacy initiative’s focus on Central Asia is to strike a balance in the geopolitical and geostrategic maps in the region as China primarily involved themselves in Central Asia to keep a check on the influence of the Western entities (i.e. United States of America and the European Union), who primarily involved themselves in the Caucasus region, which is further west from Central Asia. The CNPC was also involved in a major deal with Kazakhstan when “the discovery of Kazakhstan’s giant Kashagan oil field (estimated to be the fifth-largest in the world)…and domestic energy shortages became important factors to make the Chinese leadership again look to Central Asia for energy. As a result, in March 2003 CNPC and the Kazakh state oil company, KazMunaiGaz (KMG), jointly constructed the western-most section of the cross-border oil pipeline running 448 km from Atyrau to Kenkiyak in Kazakhstan. The eastern-most part of the pipeline, running 988 km from Atasu in Kazakhstan to Alshankou at the Chinese border, was completed at the end of 2005 and became operative in May 2006 with a total investment of just under $800 million.”10 (In addition to the 60% stake in KMG, CNPC also won contracts to Kazakhstani oilfieds). KazMunaiGaz was previously a state-owned oil and gas company of Kazakhstan. It was founded in 2002 by the merging of Kazakhoil and Oil and Gas Transportation. Further adding to the purchase of a 60% stake in KazMunaiGaz (KMG) and winning contracts to develop Kazakhstani oilfields, “In 2005, CNPC purchased PetroKazakhstan                                                                                                                           10  Garrison,  Jean  A.  "The  "Great  Game"  in  Central  Asia."  China  and  the  Energy  Equation  in  Asia:  The  Determinants   of  Policy  Choice.  London,  UK:  FirstForumPress,  2009.  Print.  (Page  45)  
  • 13. Kwon, 11 for US$4.2 billion. This sale was the largest Chinese overseas purchase to date…Another hefty cheque (US$1.9 billion) was written by China’s CITIC group to purchase the Karazhanbas oilfield in western Kazakhstan in December 2006.”11 All these purchases are in line with the original intentions of Beijing’s energy diplomacy initiative in Central Asia. The goal of the energy diplomacy initiative is not to merely seek to obtain energy sources to fuel the Chinese economy, but to win or purchase control of the energy sources itself, as to absolutely guarantee there will be no interruptions in obtaining the energy sources needed for its energy security and to keep a check on penetration of foreign influences and interests in Kazakhstan as well. Beijing uses the CNPC as a means to end, using the CNPC as a strategic tool to purchase stakes in or entirely purchase Kazakhstani oil corporations. Through these purchases of Kazakhstani oil corporations, it can be argued that Beijing essentially exerts significant influence and control over Kazakhstani oil. It can be said that Beijing has a significant say in the fate and destiny of Kazakhstani oil. It also has to be said that Beijing’s energy diplomacy efforts in Kazakhstan were not just effective, but very successful as well, as it attained its goals of gaining control over the energy sources. “In addition to seeking oil in the region, Beijing has been pursuing natural gas, especially from Turkmenistan….In 2006, Ashgabat and Beijing agreed to develop a dedicated natural gas pipeline to China via Kazakhstan. Beijing also signed a production-sharing agreement (PSA) giving China the power to jointly develop the gas fields that will be feeding the line- the only                                                                                                                           11    Lanteigne,  Marc.  "China,  Energy  Security  and  Central  Asian  Diplomacy:  Bilateral  and  Multilateral  Approaches."   Caspian  Energy  Politics:  Azerbaijan,  Kazakhstan  and  Turkmenistan.  New  York,  NY:  Routledge,  2010.  Print.  (Pg.  108)  
  • 14. Kwon, 12 such agreement Turkmenistan had struck with another state as of 2008.”12 Although it is not clear exactly how much natural gas reserves Turkmenistan holds within its borders (there have been numerous statistical figures published, but they are disputed to this day and there are questions about the government of Turkmenistan’s capacity to get an accurate statistics on how much natural gas it holds), this deal was a breakthrough for Beijing. Through signing the product-sharing agreement with Turkmenistan regarding natural gas, Beijing recorded another success in its energy diplomacy policy in Central Asia. The product-sharing agreement essentially gives Beijing the rights and powers to develop natural gas fields in Turkmenistan, but on the conditions that China and Turkmenistan work to develop the natural gas fields jointly. Although it is a joint project, Beijing would have relatively uninterrupted access to Turkmen natural gas because ‘joint development’ means that Beijing has made investments and commitments to develop the natural gas fields of Turkmenistan that will be passing through the proposed pipeline, therefore giving Beijing a great degree of control and influence of how Turkmen natural gas will be developed and used in the future. IV. PIPELINE POLITICS OF CENTRAL ASIA: COSTS AND BENEFITS, CURRENT AND POTENTIAL SECURITY ISSUES, AND GEOPOLITICAL TENSIONS With the achievement of acquiring control over petroleum corporations in Kazakhstan and natural gas field development rights in Turkmenistan, Beijing has kept in line with its energy                                                                                                                           12    Lanteigne,  Marc.  "China,  Energy  Security  and  Central  Asian  Diplomacy:  Bilateral  and  Multilateral  Approaches."   Caspian  Energy  Politics:  Azerbaijan,  Kazakhstan  and  Turkmenistan.  New  York,  NY:  Routledge,  2010.  Print.  (Pg.  108)  
  • 15. Kwon, 13 diplomacy initiative to gain control of a significant stake in Central Asian oil and natural gas. The next logical step for Beijing to take would be to work through the issue of transporting the oil and natural gas into China. Since Central Asia is landlocked, the best option in this case would be to construct pipelines and supporting facilities to transport oil and natural gas into Western China, into the Xinjiang Province, which shares common border with Kazakhstan. However, there are a multiplicity of issues involved with constructing these pipelines for both Beijing and its Central Asian counterparts. These issues range from costs and benefits related to constructing pipelines and supporting facilities, security issues surrounding the proposed pipelines, and geopolitical tension among countries in and around the Central Asian region where the pipeline construction projects will go underway. These complications and issues surrounding pipelines threaten to delay the process of pipeline construction or even worse, cancellation of pipeline construction projects before it even starts or stopping in the middle of the construction process. Because of these issues and risks surrounding the construction of pipelines, meticulous negotiations and strategic planning are required by both Beijing and its Central Asian counterparts. Especially in joint projects, cooperation between the partners will be very important. First, Beijing and its Central Asian counterparts must work together to draw out precise modifications and measurements for the pipelines, which must be drawn out by specialist engineers and architects. Pipelines built for the purpose of transporting oil and natural gas must be constructed with meticulous detail and attention because one default in the construction process can potentially damage the entire pipeline structure. For China, the successful completions of numerous pipeline projects are essential for its energy security because without the pipelines, there isn’t another viable alternative to bring in oil and natural gas from Central
  • 16. Kwon, 14 Asia into China aside from pipelines, so therefore, control of the oil and natural gas fields that Beijing worked hard on obtaining would be rendered as questionable or even empty-handed achievements. “The proposed pipelines shipping oil and gas from Central Asia to China for domestic consumption or re-export have several problems that are yet to be resolved. The first is the requirement for foreign investment. Neither China nor Kazakhstan have the funds to build the pipeline. Without substantial loans from the developed nations, the viability of the project is questionable. The second problem is the technical difficulty of constructing a pipeline. The remoteness of Xinjiang coupled with the lack of adequate roads and railways to transport materials make the project even more daunting….The third problem China and Kazakhstan face is the separatist movement within Xinjiang that might dissuade foreign investors from putting money into the pipeline. Addressed above, this is a psychologically important influence, though practically speaking, there is little evidence to date that separatists intend to disrupt development projects.”13 Another complicated issue that surrounds the construction and use of pipelines for the purpose of transporting oil and natural gas across a large landmass such as Central Asia and China is the issue of geopolitical tension. To elaborate further, ‘geopolitical tension’ in this context covers the issue of transit fees (as pipelines have to be constructed across borders of various countries in an out of the region) and in the case that the pipeline bursts or experiences malfunctions, the country in which those bursts or malfunctions happened will inevitably have to shoulder the blame for that damage from its neighboring countries that share the pipeline with it.                                                                                                                           13  Gladney, Dru C. "China's Interest in Central Asia: Energy and Ethnic Security." Ed. Robert E. Ebel and Rajan Menon. Energy and Conflict in Central Asia and the Caucasus. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2000. Print. (Pg. 218)  
  • 17. Kwon, 15 If these damages happen on Chinese territory, Beijing will inevitably face a flurry of criticism from its Central Asian neighbors and Beijing may lose credibility in the eyes their Central Asian counterparts and thus as a result, Beijing’s energy diplomacy policy could potentially be weakened in wake of such an event and its position of influence in Central Asia’s energy politics could take a massive hit. Below, there are two real-life scenarios that illustrate the wider geopolitical tension surrounding pipelines in and out of the Central Asia region and how these scenarios could possibly play out for China. The results will most likely vary for China depending on the scenarios. a. Scenario #1 “The proposed pipeline network between China and Turkmenistan will be a significant engineering challenge. With an estimated cost of US$6.7 billion, the pipeline will commence in Turkmenistan’s Amu Darya River region, crossing wide expanses of the Eurasian landmass. This includes portions of Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan, leading to expected complications regarding transit fees.”14 Potential results for China and possible actions it may choose to take in this particular scenario: Construction of the Uzbekistan segment of this proposed pipeline began in late June 2008. China projected that this pipeline would be able to go online in 2009, but experienced delays because of                                                                                                                           14  Lanteigne, Marc. "China, Energy Security and Central Asian Diplomacy: Bilateral and Multilateral Approaches." Caspian Energy Politics: Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. New York, NY: Routledge, 2010. Print. (Pg. 108)  
  • 18. Kwon, 16 a delay in the construction of a processing plant at the Saman-Tepe gas field in Turkmenistan. Because of this delay, the pipeline is projected to be officially operational sometime in 2011 or 2012. Delays in construction won’t necessarily hurt China badly because these delays aren’t long-term delays (i.e. one decade) but rather short and temporary delays. China possesses partial control and ownership over Turkmen natural gas fields under the terms of the product-sharing agreement that was signed by both sides in 2006. Turkmenistan stands to be hit harder than China in this case because Turkmenistan would only start earning profits once the pipelines are complete and natural gas starts flowing into China. China is the recipient of the natural gas that will flow through this proposed pipeline, so thus, for Beijing, this could either be merely a ‘waiting game’ with small consequences (only if the delays are short and temporary) or a serious problem because there are always possibilities of further delays in the construction process that could potentially result in China experiencing significant financial losses due to long-term delays in the construction process. In regards to transit fees, Beijing has three options on its table, which would be to either negotiate the transit fees through a bi-lateral channel, a multi-lateral channel, or choose both options. Each option has its advantages and disadvantages for Beijing. If Beijing is to negotiate transit fees only through a bi-lateral channel, it will be dealing with just one of its Central Asian counterparts at a time. In this particular scenario, China would be negotiating with Uzbekistan or Kazakhstan individually. The advantages for Beijing in regards to bi-lateral negotiations would be that it may be able to dictate the negotiations on its own terms as it possesses significant political clout and influence in the Central Asia region and may be able to negotiate for transit
  • 19. Kwon, 17 fee terms favorable towards China. The disadvantages of bi-lateral negotiations in this particular scenario would be that either Uzbekistan or Kazakhstan could threaten to refuse passage of natural gas pipelines through its territory if it does not get its own favorable terms regarding transit fees, which will inevitably result in further delays in the pipeline construction process. In the case of multi-lateral negotiations over transit fees (which could be organized under the clout of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization), the advantage here is that there is potential for a consensus on one fixed transit fee across all territories that the pipeline resides in, which could prove to be the most beneficial for Beijing because there are no complications about paying different amounts of transit fees in different countries. The disadvantage in multi-lateral negotiations is that it could possibly be a very dragged out process that takes a long time to come to acceptable terms for all sides. There is also the option of negotiating through either bi-lateral or multi-lateral channel for Beijing. This is a rather risky option to pursue because in the case that both channels fail to produce adequate results, Beijing would be out of options. b. Scenario #2 “The Kazakh-China pipeline project is a 50-50 joint venture between KMG and CNPC, although the Chinese company paid 85 percent of the cost. Only 44,000 bpd of crude oil flowed through it in 2006, but its capacity is estimated to be ten times that amount after connecting pipelines within China and Kazakhstan are completed. The pipeline can accept crude oil deliveries from the west, from the north (Russian sources in western Siberia), or from the south
  • 20. Kwon, 18 from Kazakhstan’s Turgai basin. To function effectively, the pipeline needs Russian oil to supplement Kazakh contributions because of inefficient fill and viscosity issues.”15 Potential results for China and possible actions it may choose to take in this particular scenario: The Sino-Kazakh Oil Pipeline was completed on July 2009 although it was scheduled to be completed three months later in October 2009. This is a particularly important matter of energy security for Beijing just based on the fact that Beijing paid 85% of the cost of the pipeline alone, and so, it can be assumed that Beijing has 85% ownership rights on the Sino-Kazakh Oil Pipeline. If there are to be any sort of damages, small or significant (damages can range from physical damage on the pipeline to small or significant amounts of leaked oil), China will have to take a huge hit financially because of the amount of money Beijing has invested in this particular pipeline and its credibility as majority owner can possibly come into question from Kazakhstan. Also Russia is involved in this picture, albeit as an outsider, but Russia’s previous history in the Central Asia region, its present presence and influence in Central Asia, and its position as a threat to Chinese pre-eminence in Central Asia potentially renders Russia as major player in this scenario. The fact that this pipeline needs Russian oil to function effectively and supplement Kazakh contributions because of insufficient fill and viscosity issues, most likely does not sit well with Beijing. One of the tenets of Beijing’s ‘energy diplomacy’ initiative in Central Asia is to counter and check Russian influence in Central Asian energy politics and become the dominant player in Central Asian energy politics and Russia’s involvement in a joint pipeline                                                                                                                           15  Garrison,  Jean  A.  "The  "Great  Game"  in  Central  Asia."  China  and  the  Energy  Equation  in  Asia:  The  Determinants   of  Policy  Choice.  London,  UK:  FirstForumPress,  2009.  Print.  (Pg.  47)    
  • 21. Kwon, 19 ventured and constructed by Kazakhstan and China, hinders Beijing’s efforts to weaken Russia’s influence in Central Asian energy politics. A potential course of action that could be considered by Beijing is to try to persuade the Kazakhstani government that Russia’s involvement in the Sino-Kazakh Oil Pipeline, although it may be a small role, is not good for both Kazakhstan and China because Russia may possibly use its involvement in the Sino-Kazakh Oil Pipeline as a justification to exert its influence over Kazakhstan and Sino-Kazakh Oil Pipeline affairs. So, to counter this possibility, Beijing could pledge more financial investments in the Sino-Kazakh Oil Pipeline to find a resolution to the inefficient fill and viscosity issues. If a resolution to this issue could be found, it’ll effectively put an end to Russia’s involvement in the Sino-Kazakh Oil Pipeline. Another option Beijing could take into consideration is to keep the status quo and accept Russia’s involvement in the Sino-Kazakh Oil Pipeline. China and Russia has yet to antagonize each other or start diplomatic hostilities with each other over the Sino-Kazakh Oil Pipeline. Russia’s involvement in this oil pipeline is small compared to China or Kazakhstan’s involvement. It might not be necessary to try to push Russia out of the picture in relation to the Sino-Kazakh Oil Pipeline, as there is the risk that China could antagonize Russia if it does so. Although China seeks to become the dominant player in Central Asian energy politics, antagonizing Russia would most likely have an adverse effect on advancing Beijing’s energy diplomacy initiative in Central Asia. China and Russia keep each other in check in Central Asia as it is, and provoking Russia over more influence in Central Asia could undo some of the concrete results achieved through Beijing’s energy diplomacy.
  • 22. Kwon, 20 V. SHANGHAI COOPERATION ORGANIZATION (SCO): WHAT ROLE DOES THE SCO PLAY IN THE ENERGY POLITICS OF CENTRAL ASIA? “Conceived as a regional security group, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) was officially established in June 2001 by the leaders of China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. The organization evolved out of the Shanghai Five, which was founded in 1996 and included the same countries with the exception of Uzbekistan. Parallel to China’s growing role in Central Asia, the SCO has expanded beyond a security organization to become a forum for economic cooperation in the region.”16 The Shanghai Cooperation Organization was originally created to counter-balance Western and US influence in Central Asia, thus giving backing to the fact that this organization was created out of necessity for regional security. In terms of Central Asian energy politics, Russia’s President Vladimir Putin proposed a creation of an ‘SCO Energy Club’ in June of 2006 in response to China’s increasing involvement in Central Asian energy politics. The SCO Energy Club’s purpose was to promote dialogue regarding energy issues and create a forum for member states to coordinate energy policies and investments. Putin’s initiative received support from all members of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization. There is also a quiet suggestion among the Western powers, the United States and                                                                                                                           16  Kassenova, Nargis. "9: The Shanghai Cooperation Energy Club." Ed. Indra Overland, Heidi Kjaernet, and Andrea Kendall-Taylor. Caspian Energy Politics: Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. New York, NY: Routledge, 2010. Print. (Pg. 162)  
  • 23. Kwon, 21 the European Union, that this new SCO Energy Club could potentially hinder Western interests in Central Asia and become an ‘OPEC with nukes.’ VI. HOW DOES BEIJING VIEW THE SCO ENERGY CLUB? HOW COULD BEIJING USE THE SCO ENERGY CLUB TO FURTHER PROMOTE ITS ‘ENERGY DIPLOMACY’ AGENDA? “While Beijing officially supports the SCO Energy Club initiative, Chinese experts have expressed their doubts over its viability. As Huasheng Zhao of Fudan University points out, Russia and China do not have the same priorities. Russia is the largest exporter in the region; it monopolizes transportation channels and considers Central Asia an appendix to its export policy. China, in contrast is an importer interested in the supply of energy resources from Central Asia and the construction of new pipelines from this region to China.”17 Although Beijing wishes to keep Russia’s influence in Central Asia in check, at the same time, Beijing is careful not to antagonize Russia or start any rivalries with Russia. Beijing views the SCO Energy Club as a forum where a cooperative framework for energy policies and investments can be discussed and decided upon in a collective group. Beijing perhaps holds this view because it does not want to antagonize Russia and make relations uneasy between the two because as the ‘two big boys’ of the SCO Energy Group, both countries are expected to lead the discussions and decision-making process together in the SCO Energy Group. The presence of Russia in the SCO Energy Club                                                                                                                           17  Kassenova, Nargis. "9: The Shanghai Cooperation Energy Club." Ed. Indra Overland, Heidi Kjaernet, and Andrea Kendall-Taylor. Caspian Energy Politics: Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. New York, NY: Routledge, 2010. Print. (Pg. 169)  
  • 24. Kwon, 22 restrains Beijing from promoting its energy diplomacy initiative as much as it would like in a SCO Energy Club setting. The leadership in China understands that Moscow and Beijing have very different agendas and interests in Central Asian energy politics and are careful not to get entangled with the Russians. Also at the same time, Moscow does not have much to gain from antagonizing Beijing and seems to think that intensifying an already tense relationship with China will hold back any progress that could be made in the SCO Energy Club. In essence, both Beijing and Moscow seem to understand that using the SCO Energy Club as a forum to dialogue with and cooperate with each other would bring benefits to both sides. Further, both Moscow and Beijing seems to have come to an understanding that as the two pre-eminent powers in the SCO Energy Club, any conflict between Beijing and Moscow would undermine progress in the SCO Energy Club. Despite this, all is not lost for China. There are still possibilities for Beijing to promote its energy diplomacy initiative in the SCO Energy Club in the future. “China has been very successful since the turn of the millennium in increasing trade volumes with the other SCO members…The SCO and Chinese diplomacy in Central Asia have also pushed Beijing closer to European regional interests.”18 If Beijing is to continuously work on expanding its trade volume with Central Asia and at the same time, maintain cordial and cooperative relations with the countries of Central Asia, especially the members of the SCO Energy Club, these factors and reasons may present more opportunities for Beijing to apply its energy diplomacy initiative to areas in Central Asia where it was not previously applied because the opportunity was not there.                                                                                                                           18  Lanteigne, Marc. "China, Energy Security and Central Asian Diplomacy: Bilateral and Multilateral Approaches." Caspian Energy Politics: Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. New York, NY: Routledge, 2010. Print. (Pg. 111)  
  • 25. Kwon, 23 VII. CONCLUSION: THE FUTURE OF CHINA’S ENERGY SECURITY In less than two decades, China’s energy diplomacy initiative has achieved much in China’s quest for energy security in Central Asia. At the core of Beijing’s relationships and policies with its Central Asian neighbors to the west will always be centered on energy trade. Abundant energy sources such as oil and natural gas reserves was what initially attracted Beijing to Central Asia and paved the way for Beijing to implement its energy diplomacy initiative in Central Asia. And at the same time, when Central Asian republics that achieved independence and sovereignty after the collapse of the Soviet Union, were welcoming yet a bit cautious about China’s interest in their abundant natural gas and oil reserves. “As a whole, these policies have been very successful in establishing China as an energy player in Eurasia… Pipeline projects which in the 1990s appeared out of reach are now nearing completion, and other such mega- projects are under discussion.”19 Certainly, China will seek to maintain and further advance its relationships with Central Asia’s energy-producing countries because in less than two decades, Central Asia has become a highly important geostrategic and geopolitical region for China. For China, Central Asia’s energy imports are essential to maintaining and enhancing its energy security profile. As much reason as there is for Beijing to be optimistic about its future energy- based relations with Central Asia, unresolved questions and issues remain for China and its                                                                                                                           19  Lanteigne, Marc. "China, Energy Security and Central Asian Diplomacy: Bilateral and Multilateral Approaches." Caspian Energy Politics: Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. New York, NY: Routledge, 2010. Print. (Pg. 111)    
  • 26. Kwon, 24 Central Asian counterparts, for example, in the form of unresolved issues regarding the political tensions surrounding oil/natural gas pipelines, which will undoubtedly keep Beijing vigilant in enhancing its own energy security through the Central Asian channel.
  • 27. BIBLIOGRAPHY PAGE 1.) Lanteigne, Marc. "China, Energy Security and Central Asian Diplomacy: Bilateral and Multilateral Approaches." Caspian Energy Politics: Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. New York, NY: Routledge, 2010. Print. 2.) Garrison, Jean A. "The "Great Game" in Central Asia." China and the Energy Equation in Asia: The Determinants of Policy Choice. London, UK: FirstForumPress, 2009. Print. 3.) Lin, Christina. "The New Silk Road: China's Energy Strategy in the Greater Middle East." The Washington Institute for Near East Policy (2011). Http://washingtoninstitute.org/pubPDFs/PolicyFocus109.pdf. Apr. 2011. Web. Apr. 2011. 4.) Baev, Pavel K., Bjorn Brunstad, Indra Overland, and Stina Torjesen. "4.8: China Increases Its Influence and Is Met by Scepticism." The Caspian Sea Region toward 2025:. By Morten Anker. CW Delft, The Netherlands: Eburon Academic, 2010. Print. 5.) Gladney, Dru C. "China's Interest in Central Asia: Energy and Ethnic Security." Ed. Robert E. Ebel and Rajan Menon. Energy and Conflict in Central Asia and the Caucasus. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2000. Print. 6.) Kassenova, Nargis. "9: The Shanghai Cooperation Energy Club." Ed. Indra Overland, Heidi Kjaernet, and Andrea Kendall-Taylor. Caspian Energy Politics: Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. New York, NY: Routledge, 2010. Print.