Baku–Supsa Pipeline
Location of Baku–Supsa Pipeline
Location of Baku–Supsa Pipeline
Location
Country Azerbaijan, Georgia, Turkey
General direction east–west
From Baku (Sangachal Terminal), Azerbaijan
Passes through Tbilisi
To Supsa terminal in Georgia
Runs alongside Baku–Tbilisi–Ceyhan pipeline (partly)
General information
Type oil
Partners State Oil Company of Azerbaijan, Azerbaijan International Operating Company
Operator BP
Commissioned 1999
Technical information
Length 833 km (Bad rounding hereScript error mi)
Maximum discharge 145,000 barrels (23,100 m3) per day

The Baku–Supsa Pipeline (also known as the Western Route Export Pipeline and Western Early Oil Pipeline) is an 833-kilometre (518 mi) long oil pipeline, which runs from the Sangachal Terminal near Baku to the Supsa terminal in Georgia. It transports oil from the Azeri-Chirag-Guneshli field. The pipeline is operated by BP.

History

The preparations for the pipeline's construction started in 1994. On 8 March 1996, President of Azerbaijan Heydar Aliyev and President of Georgia Eduard Shevardnadze agreed on the establishment of Baku–Supsa pipeline. The trilateral contract was signed between Azerbaijan International Operating Company, SOCAR and the Government of Georgia.[1] At the same year the lead contract of the project was awarded to Kværner. The pipeline was completed in 1998. On 17 April 1999, the inauguration ceremony of the Supsa Oil Terminal took place. The total costs of the construction of the pipeline and terminal were US$556 million.

The oil transportation by the pipeline was stopped on 21 October 2006 after abnormalities were revealed during the inspections on the pipeline.[2] The large scale repair and replacement included replacement and re-routing of pipeline sections near Zestaponi in Georgia and Kura River crossing in Azerbaijan. Also several defects of the Soviet times sections were repaired. In total, the repair works cost US$53 million. The oil shipment restarted in June 2008.[3]

After a major explosion and fire, which closed the Baku–Tbilisi–Ceyhan pipeline on 6 August 2008, the Baku–Supsa Pipeline was used to re-route Azeri oil deliveries.[4] On 12 August 2008, BP closed the pipeline for the safety reasons because of the South Ossetia conflict.[5]

Technical features

File:Georgian Pipelines.gif
Detailed route map of Baku-Supsa and Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipelines through militarily-contested Georgia.

Essentially, the Baku–Supsa pipeline is a refurbished Soviet era pipeline with several newly built sections. It has six pumping stations and two pressure reduction stations in western Georgia. The four storage tanks at the Supsa terminal have a total capacity of 160,000 cubic metres.[6] The capacity of the pipeline is 145,000 barrels per day (23,100 m3/d) with proposed upgrades to between 300,000 to 600,000 barrels per day (48,000 to 95,000 m3/d).

See also

References

External links

ka:ბაქო-სუფსის ნავთობსადენი ru:Нефтепровод Баку — Супса