Uzbekistan media is now against the US...Russia back in favor in the region...
http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/business/eav081505ru.shtmlREBUFFED BY WASHINGTON, CHINA GOES PROSPECTING IN KAZAKHSTAN
Alec Appelbaum 8/15/05
With access to energy investment opportunities in the United States blocked for political reasons, China is turning its attention to Kazakhstan.
Kazakhstan’s energy players have long courted Chinese investment. Now -- following the failed attempt by the Chinese government-controlled oil giant, China National Offshore Oil Co. (CNOOC) Ltd, to acquire the American-based Unocal – Beijing is looking for a more politically friendly environment in which it can secure a steady supply of energy for the country’s fast-growing economy.
CNOOC offered $18.5 billion for Unocal in late June, over $1 billion more than a proposal from Chevron Corp. The attempted Chinese purchase generated fierce political opposition in Washington, and CNOOC eventually abandoned its acquisition effort in early August. In withdrawing its offer, CNOOC said in a statement that strong US political opposition created "an unacceptable risk to our ability to secure this transaction."
With the demise of the Unocal deal, Kazakhstan looks increasingly attractive as a Chinese energy investment destination. In addition to CNOOC, other large state-owned energy entities, such as PetroChina, are cash-rich and on the lookout for takeover targets.
"The Chinese are already active in Kazakhstan and have had more upstream opportunities here in their sights for a long time," echoes Julia Nanay, a senior director with Washington’s PFC Energy consultancy. China’s various stakes in Kazakhstan fields amount to "more than enough" as a production base, according to another analyst, who spoke on condition of anonymity because his employer makes intricate investments in various Central Asian companies.
Helping to spur Chinese-Kazakhstani energy cooperation, the 988-kilometer-long Atasu-Xinjiang pipeline is scheduled to become operational in late 2005. Chinese and Kazakhstani officials have also mulled the construction of a cross-border natural-gas connection that would link to China’s West-East pipeline, which stretches from Western Xinjiang Province to Shanghai.
The pending sale of PetroKazakhstan, a Canadian company with a stock market worth of roughly $3.2 billion, will offer analysts a quick way to gauge China’s determination to raise its profile as a Central Asian energy player. Throughout the summer, PetroKazakhstan, which has had an occasionally contentious relationship with the Kazakhstani government, has mulled takeover offers from a variety of suitors.
. The heftiest, according to published reports, have come from Russian-owned Lukoil and PetroChina, the parent of Beijing’s biggest oil company. On August 14, Indian officials confirmed that the state-run Oil and Natural Gas Corp. had also submitted a bid, reportedly in the $3.5-billion range.
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