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Turkish straits focus of oil tangle


Some critics say officials have tightened controls on tankers to set the stage for use of a pipeline

By Catherine Collins
Special to the Tribune

March 9, 2004

ISTANBUL -- The world's oil markets changed after Sept. 11, 2001. The United States and Europe have increased their use of Russian and Caspian region oil to reduce their dependence on the volatile Middle East.

The strategy has put Turkey--and its Bosporus and Dardanelles straits--at the crossroads of the international oil trade and renewed a longstanding conflict over control of the waterways linking the Black Sea with the Mediterranean and Western Europe.

As Russian and Caspian oil output rose with demand, so did traffic on the two straits. The increase raised safety concerns among Turkish authorities, particularly on the Bosporus, which divides this city of 15 million.

`High risk' alleys

"The straits are under the high risk of catastrophic accident, which is potentially just one explosion away," said Capt. Cahit Istikbal, a ship pilot, at a recent meeting of the International Maritime Association.

The Turks have responded to the increased traffic by tightly enforcing safety regulations. When traffic is heavy, ships sometimes wait several days for passage. Freak snowstorms this winter added to the slowdown, stranding huge oil tankers and dozens of smaller vessels at sea until the straits were deemed safe.

Shipping delays have contributed to the worst shortage of crude oil at European refineries since the 1991 Persian Gulf war and have led to a cascade of complaints.

European diplomats and oil company executives accused Turkey of slowing the shipping traffic to promote an alternative to sea transport: the American-backed pipeline under construction from Baku, Azerbaijan, to Turkey's port of Ceyhan on the Mediterranean coast.

There is no doubt that Turkey will gain political and financial benefits from the pipeline, but officials say their main concern is protecting the increasingly busy Bosporus and Dardanelles.

The Turks defended the decisions to close the Bosporus and Dardanelles, also known as the Canakkale Strait, to commercial traffic three times in January and February because of the weather.

"The decision to close the straits is not an arbitrary one," said Baris Tozar, director of the Turkish government's coastal safety office. "The straits are Turkey's territorial water, which is open to international traffic. We have an obligation to protect our city and our environment."

Alexander Fedotov, a top Russian diplomat in Istanbul, suggested that the Turks were using safety as an excuse for moves rooted in politics and economics.

"The Turkish concerns are greatly exaggerated," he said.

S.M. Vainshtok, the president of Russia's oil pipeline monopoly Transneft, recently criticized Turkey for delaying oil tankers. On the company's Web site, he said it was considering building a new pipeline to reduce the amount of oil shipped by sea from Novorossisk, Russia's port on the Black Sea.

For Russia, the transit route through the Turkish straits is a key gateway to its biggest oil customers in Europe. The number of tankers carrying crude oil from Russia and the Caspian Sea through Turkey's waterways more than doubled in the past decade. Last year, 135 million tons of oil passed through the straits.

The Russians and other shipping countries have long demanded free access through the straits within the restrictions of the Montreux Convention of 1936. The Turks have countered that when the agreement was signed, only 20 vessels came through the straits each day. Turkey has the legal authority to regulate traffic for safety, they say.

50,000 ships yearly

On the Bosporus, 50,000 commercial ships compete each year for space with hundreds of daily passenger ferries, fishing boats and pleasure craft.

Turkish maritime regulators recently stopped allowing ships longer than 600 feet to pass through the Bosporus at night.

"If there were a severe accident, it would close the straits for months," said Tozar, the safety director. "The countries bordering the Black Sea would lose their only maritime connection. They should support these regulations for their own good."

Navigation experts say the problem is at its worst in the Bosporus, which runs a twisted 19-mile course, with 12 hairpin turns. Currents move as fast as 8 m.p.h., so vessels must maintain a speed of 15 m.p.h. to maneuver. At its narrowest point, the waterway is about a half-mile wide.

The passage is trickier still because two currents run simultaneously in opposite directions because of the difference in salination and elevation in the Black Sea at the northern end and the Marmara on the south.

Guiding a massive oil tanker through the Bosporus is like "trying to roller-skate on ice," said Istikbal, who pilots ships along the route regularly.

To deal with these challenges, Turkey recently built a $45 million radar-controlled Vessel Traffic and Management System similar to an airport traffic control center. Operators monitor ships from the computer terminals and closed-circuit television at the center on the European side of the Bosporus.

During one recent storm, the screens showed both straits empty. But farther north on the Black Sea, the controllers could see a traffic jam of tankers and cargo ships. At one point, 23 tankers and dozens of smaller ships were weathering waves cresting at 20 feet, resulting in accidents in which 21 sailors were lost at sea.

"Ships that big can't drop anchor and wait, so they have to keep their engines going and keep moving," Tozar said. "We had to arrange them and make sure they didn't come too close to each other."

Emergency measure

Eventually, there were so many vessels tossed on the seas that the Turkish coast guard decided to break its own rules; 46 smaller ships were permitted to enter the strait because of fears they would break up or run aground in the buffeting.

Istanbul is a unique case for maritime shipping, said Bayram Ozturk, director of the Turkish Maritime Research Foundation.

"Imagine Paris or Amsterdam or some small channel somewhere else through a major city allowing this level of risk," he said.


Copyright (c) 2004, Chicago Tribune

 

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