Analysis-Shocked by Ukraine war, Russian neighbour Kazakhstan looks west
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[November 17, 2022]
By Olzhas Auyezov
ALAMATY (Reuters) - There is little doubt
that Kassym-Jomart Tokayev will extend his rule over Kazakhstan by seven
years in presidential elections on Sunday. What is less clear is how the
former diplomat can reduce his resource-rich country's dependence on
Russia without alienating it.
Tokayev – who opinion polls predict will comfortably win reelection at
the weekend - has pushed back publicly against territorial claims made
by Russian President Vladimir Putin in Ukraine, souring relations
between the former Soviet republic and Moscow.
Russia and Kazakhstan share the world's longest continuous land border,
prompting concern among some Kazakhs about the security of a country
with the second-biggest ethnic Russian population among ex-Soviet
republics after Ukraine.
At a forum in St. Petersburg in June where Tokayev shared the stage with
Putin, he said his government did not recognize Russian-controlled
regions in eastern Ukraine and that Kazakhstan upheld the inviolability
of internationally recognised borders.
His blunt remarks took observers by surprise and prompted angry threats
from some pro-war commentators in Russian media. And last month, when
Tokayev hosted a summit of Central Asia presidents, he held face-to-face
meetings with other leaders but no bilateral talks with Putin, amid a
cooling in relations.
The 69-year-old Tokayev took office in 2019 after Kazakhstan's previous
president resigned amid protests. After surviving unrest in January
triggered by fuel price rises, Tokayev unveiled sweeping reforms -
including changes to the constitution and a hike in the minimum wage -
and called snap elections.
Amid popular demand for sweeping change, he has also accelerated plans
to increase the amount of Kazakh oil exported west across the Caspian
Sea, avoiding Russia to the north.
Kazakhstan currently relies heavily on the Caspian Pipeline Consortium
(CPC), one of the world's largest pipelines that crosses Russia to the
Black Sea port of Novorossiisk. Out of total exports of 68 million
tonnes a year, 53 million tonnes of Kazakh oil move through it.
While there is nothing to replace that volume, a push announced last
week to increase trans-Caspian shipments tenfold in the coming years, to
20 million tonnes, was the clearest sign yet of a move by Tokayev's
government to limit economic reliance on Russia.
"We have developed a roadmap to diversify (oil) exports," Prime Minister
Alikhan Smailov told reporters. "Work is underway to expand and increase
oil export capabilities in all directions."
But meeting that target will not be easy. The chief executive of
Khazakhstan's state oil firm KazMunayGaz said this week that the target
of 20 million tonnes was a "medium-term" aim.
"Comparing something that is good, cheap, and works (CPC) with something
new, unknown, and more expensive: this is not an easy decision to make
from the economic point of view," Magzum Mirzagaliyev said.
Kazakstan's presidency and Russia's foreign ministry did not immediately
respond to a request for comment to this story. A spokesman for Tokayev
said in July that Russia remained a strategic partner and that plans to
diversify energy supply routes were not driven by politics.
CAPACITY PROBLEMS
The main alternative route to the CPC is the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC)
pipeline, which originates in Azerbaijan on the opposite side of the
Caspian to Kazakhstan. From Baku, oil can also travel by pipeline to the
Black Sea port of Supsa in Georgia and from there onto world markets.
But getting Kazakh oil to Baku requires either tanker shipments across
the sea or the construction of a trans-Caspian pipeline. The existing
fleet is modest, and pipeline talks between the sea's littoral states
have stalled for decades over territorial disputes.
Both options would be needed to reach the 20 million tonne target as
Kazakh ports on the Caspian lack the necessary capacity and there is no
tanker fleet in place to move such volumes.
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A view shows the Monument of
Independence in front of the city administration headquarters in
Almaty, Kazakhstan, November 17, 2022. REUTERS/Pavel Mikheye
Smailov said last week that Kazakhstan would start by sending an
additional 1.5 million tonnes a year via BTC starting from 2023,
gradually rising to 6-6.5 million tonnes.
He did not detail how the target would be reached. Kazakhstan's
Aktau port, the only one equipped to load oil tankers, can handle up
to 5.5 million tonnes. Another port, Kuryk, can be used to load
train ferries carrying oil.
Smailov said Kazakhstan's biggest oil producer, Chevron-led
Tengizchevroil, had doubled its railcar fleet to move crude to
Georgia's Black Sea port of Batumi, which is owned by Kazakhstan and
can be reached via Russia or the Caspian.
The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Three traders said the Kazakh unit of France's TotalEnergies had
started regular shipments via BTC since September, taking a hit to
profits in favour of stability. TotalEnergies did not immediately
respond to a request for comment.
Tokayev has also called for oil storage facilities to be built on
the Caspian coast, which would prevent pipeline disruptions from
immediately affecting production.
To the east, a pipeline running from Kazakhstan to China is
currently used to transport about 10 million tonnes of Russian crude
a year, roughly half of its capacity, plus some 2 million tonnes of
Kazakh crude.
Kazakhstan's ability to fill that pipeline is limited by demand on
the Chinese side and pricing, which is reviewed annually.
NEW CONFIDENCE
Since the outbreak of war in Ukraine, Central Asia's five former
Soviet republics have increasingly been standing up to Moscow, aware
of their new-found leverage as Russia looks to their markets and
trade routes in a bid to circumvent Western sanctions.
One senior government official said a resounding election win for
Tokayev could embolden him to further distance himself from Russia.
The official, who declined to be named to discuss sensitive
political issues, said Tokayev wants to prove he can lead his
country of 20 million people without a patron, after he split from
his long-serving predecessor Nursultan Nazarbayev in January
following the unrest over fuel price increases that escalated into
an attempted coup.
Putin backed Tokayev and a Russia-led military bloc sent troops to
Kazakhstan at a time when the Khazak leader could not fully trust
his own security forces, prompting criticism that he would now be in
Moscow's debt.
His actions since Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine in
February suggest otherwise.
Kazakhstan has called for peace and refused to recognise referendums
by which Russia claimed to have annexed some Ukrainian regions -
votes derided as a sham by Ukraine and the West.
Even before the war, the official said Kazakhstan had resisted a
push by Moscow in 2020 for a single currency and joint parliament
within the post-Soviet Eurasian Economic Union, as part of a
five-year strategic plan.
The official said Kazakhstan's government was reassessing its
relations with Russia, although the giant neighbour still has
significant leverage.
The CPC has suffered more disruptions this year than at any other
time, forcing Kazakhstan to trim its 2022 oil production and exports
in a setback to state finances.
The pipeline twice reported damage to mooring points, limiting
throughput, and a Russian court also sought to suspend the
pipeline's operations, citing spill concerns.
(Additional reporting by Tamara Vaal in Astana; Editing by Mike
Collett-White and Daniel Flynn)
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