Crude exports via CPC terminal fall 6.9 percent in Jan-Aug
Crude oil shipments in January-August 2012 through the terminal of the Caspian Pipeline Consortium (CPC) based near Novorossiysk shrank by 6.9 percent compared to the same period of 2011, to 20.2 million tons, the Consortium statistics said.
In August, the CPC terminal saw a 21.83-percent slump in crude oil exports from last year’s numbers, to 2,43 million tons.
CPC pipeline system is the largest investment project with foreign participation implemented in the CIS countries. The cost of the project’s Phase 1 is $2.6 billion. The total pipeline length, connecting oil deposits in western Kazakhstan to the Russian marine oil terminal is 1,510 km. The first phase of CPC pipeline system was commissioned in April 2003. In 2010, shipments of crude oil from the terminal rose nearly 0.9% to 34.9 million tons.
Russia is CPC' major stockholder (through Transneft company) with a 31-percent stake, Kazakhstan (represented by KazMunaiGaz - 19% and Kazakhstan Pipeline Ventures LLC –1.75%) owns 20.75% of shares, Chevron Caspian Pipeline Consortium Company - 15%, LUKARCO BV – 12.5%, Mobil Caspian Pipeline Company – 7.5%, Rosneft-Shell Caspian Ventures Ltd – 7.5%, BG Overseas Holding Limited - 2%, Eni International N.A. N.V. - 2%, Oryx Caspian Pipeline LLC – 1.75%.