Oil producers across the South Caucuses and Central Asia are navigating a more fluid global market, as long-standing export models give way to faster, demand-driven trading dynamics.
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
At the second Caspian and Central Asia Oil Trading and Logistics Forum in Baku, industry experts described a clear pivot towards flexibility and away from predictable, long-term contracting.
“Markets are very volatile now, and volatility always creates niche opportunities,” said Colin Nesbeth, founder and CEO of Central Asia Marketing.
“From a trading point of view, opportunities appear that simply weren’t there before.”
That volatility, however, cuts both ways. Companies shut out of one route are being pushed toward alternatives that would normally be too costly to bother with, Nesbeth continued.
“In this kind of situation, they become economic. That’s an opportunity for traders, but for producers it’s a big challenge.”
Asia drives the pricing conversation
A central theme running through the discussions was the growing dominance of Asian refining hubs, particularly China and India, in determining crude demand and pricing structures.
Suppliers are increasingly moving away from fixed pricing formulas instead of reacting to short-term signals and arbitrage windows.
“No one really knows how it’s going to go,” Nesbeth said. “But in volatile markets, adaptability becomes more important than ever.”
Even so, he struck a cautiously optimistic tone. “My own belief is that it will stabilise.”
Infrastructure steady, but under pressure to adapt
While export routes remain largely unchanged, their strategic use is evolving.
Kazakhstan continues to export most of its crude via the CPC pipeline to the Black Sea, while Azerbaijan relies on the BTC corridor. Turkmenistan’s energy flows remain gas-focused and oriented eastward.
But beyond pipelines, attention is turning to broader connectivity, particularly links being developed under China’s Belt and Road Initiative.
“Very large investment has gone into improving road corridors,” said Shehryar Omar, CEO of the Petroleum Institute of Pakistan.
“China has invested approximately $70 billion into Pakistan, not just in roads but in power generation and related infrastructure.”
“That network has improved immeasurably over the last four or five years,” he added.
Omar pointed to a recent milestone. “Just this week, the first dry cargo shipment came into Pakistan from Kyrgyzstan. So that route is already activated and it’s a difficult route.”
Pipelines still dominate oil flows
Despite these developments, Omar stressed that oil logistics remain constrained by geography and risk.
“For oil products, it could be even more difficult,” he said. “At this point, pipelines, either through Iran or through China are probably more viable.”
There is, however, uncertainty around Afghanistan as it continues to limit its role as a transit corridor.
“We’re uncertain about the situation there,” he noted. “So as a corridor, we don’t know whether that would make sense right now.”
Still, he emphasised the long-term opportunity. “There are a lot of opportunities. Pakistan alone has a population of 240 million, growing fast. Central Asian states can’t afford to ignore that.”
“If it requires $10–20 billion in investment,” Omar added, “it will pay out over the next 15 to 30 years.”
Quality becomes a competitive edge
As market conditions tighten, crude quality and not just volume are becoming defining factors in competitiveness.
“Caspian crude is very competitive in the global market,” said Anar Habib, a senior middle distillates trader, noting that the region’s output is well-suited to what global refiners actually need.
Kazakhstan and the broader Caspian area are supplying grades that are increasingly in demand, he said and Azerbaijan’s flagship blend stands out in particular.
Azeri Light, Habib explained, is a high-quality crude that European refiners rely on to produce cleaner end products — above all diesel and jet fuel, which remain critical to global economies.
“Cleaner fuels are in demand everywhere,” he added. “And these grades are essential for producing them.”
External shocks ripple into the region
Even without direct exposure to disrupted maritime routes, the Caspian region is feeling the impact of global shipping tensions.
Tanker availability has tightened, while freight and insurance costs have climbed, squeezing margins across the trading system.
“In general, it’s a big challenge,” Nesbeth said. “The whole market is trying to adjust at the same time.”
A market learning to adapt
The overall picture emerging from Baku is one of transition and recalibration. Producers are rethinking export strategies, and traders are scanning for arbitrage openings.
Infrastructure is being reassessed not just for capacity, but for flexibility. And across the board, responsiveness is becoming the defining capability.
Volatility creates opportunities, Nesbeth said — but it also forces everyone to rethink how they operate.
For the Caspian and Central Asian oil sector, that rethink is already well underway, with Asia, infrastructure investment, and crude quality at the centre of a rapidly evolving global equation.
Source:
www.euronews.com


