2. Materials and Methods
Therefore, case studies will be presented for every relevant republic of the region, with general background and conclusions for the whole of them. As a consequence, this paper will not have the need to enter into theoretical debates of contemporary realism [
4] (26, 27), although this paradigm has been crucial in the understanding of Russia’s international attitude. This paper will focus on empirical data and connections between the aforementioned phenomena instead of trying to create or rigidly apply a theory.
After almost thirty years since the fall of the Soviet Union, Russia remains an energy superpower, being the largest country in the world despite the losses of territory and power that came with the end of the Soviet regime. Even so, the 1990s were a debacle for the Russian state due to several factors, including falling oil prices, loss of state control over the energy sector, widespread violence in large cities, including Moscow, and the rise of separatism.
This situation began to reverse with the arrival of President Vladimir Putin to power in 2000, the recovery of oil prices since 1998, and the Gulf War [
2] (p. 2) [
3] (p. 486). Thanks to these factors, among others, Russia regained its position as a global superpower between the highly energetically dependent EU and Central Asia and, therefore, controls the important pipelines that provide hydrocarbons to many European states [
4] (p. 18, 19). Thus, Russia practices an “energy nationalism” to ensure its national security, with significant interventionism in the states that it considers “under its zone of influence”, whether or not they are transit states for Russian gas (38, 39).
This strategy, based on identifying Russia’s “natural sphere of influence” (called, “Near Abroad”) within the third generation of Euroasianism or Neo-Eurasianism [
5], on the strategic position of several key transit states for Russian natural resources, and on the existence of secessionist conflicts in some post-soviet States, has caused Russia to intervene in some of the conflicts in order to ensure its own energetic interests, as has happened in the South Caucasus, post-Soviet Europe [
2,
3], and Central Asia.
But this recovery of power and action abroad does not imply a lack of internal conflict. During the first years of post-Soviet Russia, there were severe conflicts in the North Caucasus that have condemned the region to violence and economic misery up untill today. In fact, there was even a weak and failed attempt at independence by the republic of Tatarstan, in the heart of European Russia [
6].
A direct connection between Russia’s military interventions and the protection of its geo-energy interests is scarce, as is an organized presentation of the geo-energetical benefits of these interventions [
2] (p. 1) [
3] (p. 487). This lack is due to the fact that Russia’s intervention on its main (and practically unique) secessionist conflict is regarded mainly as an internal one, which switches the focus of the analysis to the protection of Russian territorial integrity.
We investigate how Russia has benefited, apart from in the protection of its national integrity, in geo-energy terms, from its intervention in the internal conflict of the North Caucasus. Our hypothesis is that Russia has defended its sovereignty in a dangerous territory, particularly with “recently” separated republics in the south of the region (as shown in
Figure 1). The energy significance of these republics is relatively low for the Russian energy superpower (mostly in export terms). The exception is Dagestan. Dagestan not only disposes of considerable energy reserves, it is also of vital importance due to its strategical and geopolitical situation on the Caspian Sea and its frontier with the South Caucasian countries.
In
Figure 1, the problematic regions of the North Caucasus are presented, including, on the one hand, Dagestan, Chechnya, Ingushetia, North Ossetia, and Kabardino-Balkaria, which are republics of the Russian Federation (a federal division with high autonomy and based on national particularities), and are, therefore,
de jure and
de facto parts of Russia. On the other hand, also represented are South Ossetia and Abkhazia, which are,
de jure, part of Georgia for most of the International Community, but are,
de facto, independent republics controlled by their own government and supported by Russia. Georgia considers Abkhazia as an autonomous republic (a federal entity similarly to the Russians), while South Ossetia is considered part of several regions (less autonomous administrative divisions).
In order to study the energetic, social, and economic situation of the country and the region, we will use, among several other secondary sources, the 69th edition of BP Statistical Review of World Energy, CIA data, and official data from the Russian Federal State Statistic Service, which, sadly, has not reported the new apportioned energy data of the North Caucasian republics since 2010, possibly, in part, to corrupt and decrease transparency.
In the following, we present the region’s importance in relation to Russian energy power and territorial integrity and its political composition, as well as the federal subjects chosen to explain the conflicts in geo-energy terms.
3. Results
It is necessary to resort to the concept of an energy superpower in order to describe the Russian Federation. Its natural resources are its greatest geopolitical asset [
2] (p. 2) [
3] (p. 487), especially, vis-à-vis, the European Union, along with its military power, particularly its nuclear arsenal. Because hydrocarbons (gas and oil) are the most relevant sources in the current global mix of energy, this work will focus mainly on these two energy sources. As the European Union still depends on the importation of Russian oil and gas, the Russian geo-energetical strategy is vital for the success of the European Green Deal and the transition toward a more self-sufficient green energy.
Russia shares the first position as global oil producer with Saudi Arabia, depending on the year, while the largest reserves of shale oil is shared by Russia, and Iran [
8] (pp. 16, 32). In addition to this, some sources point out that Russia may also have the ninth largest reserves of shale gas, although this is a controversial matter, as recent geological and empirical studies show [
9]. This position explains why Russia provides about one-third of Europe’s requirement of oil and gas, and why oil exports to East Asia are still increasing. Obviously, this has a repercussion on the Russian economy. In fact, around 50% of its revenues derive directly from energy exportation, although “the energy sector is far more than a commercial asset for Moscow; it has been one of the pillars of Russia’s stabilization and increasing strength for more than a century” [
10].
Besides, albeit that the “instrumentalization of power for political purposes is a well-known strategy in Russia […] and goes back to Soviet times […], with Putin’s arrival to power, a policy was established to restore Russia’s influence—increase its power—in neighboring regions but also beyond. It is also the case that this has been based on its energy capacity” [
4] (p. 234).
Russia’s energy policy can be described as having these two attributes. On the one hand, the state has taken control, practically, over all Russian gas sectors via its state-owned monopoly, Gazprom. In addition, since 2003, there has been a disguised re-nationalization process of the oil sector by the use of state-owned companies (Rosneft and Gazpromneft) and state-linked private companies (Lukoil, TNK-BP, and Surgutneftegaz) [
11,
12]. Consequently, similarly to Algeria and Venezuela, Russia has carried out an energy nationalism [
13], while it has also used highly coercive measurements concentrated on the control of pipelines, all of it supplemented with the expeditious and opaque character of Russian approaches to political power [
14,
15,
16].
Regarding foreign energy policies, the Federation has modified the balance of power by using energy in nearby regions: South Caucasus [
2], Central Asia, and finally, post-Soviet Europe [
3]. Russia has ensured that the former European Soviet Republics were still energetically dependent after their independence of the USSR; it has also remained a hegemon in the European energy market, by exercising control over the pipeline systems that travel from post-soviet Europe to Western Europe. In like manner, Russia has managed to maintain its position as the main export route for gas and oil from Central Asia.
The geographical situation of North Caucasus (or Ciscaucasia) includes seven federal republics and two Krai (provinces), which are limited by the Caspian Sea to the east, the Black Sea to the west, the (Russian) Southern Federal District to the north, and two states to the south: Georgia and Azerbaijan. The region is crucial, both for the Russian and North American geopolitical interests, due to the proximity of the region to Iran, Turkey, and the Black Sea [
17] (p. 330). This zone, which also includes the Rostov Oblast, is administratively framed, on the one hand, by the Economic Region of the North Caucasus, mixing territories with a Russian ethnic majority with republics that have diminishing Russian minorities, and on the other hand, by two Federal Districts, the South District and the North Caucasus District.
Even though the media and academia usually refer to six republics when talking about the North Caucasus, an incorporation of all six republic would go beyond the scope of this article. Thus, we will exclude from our analysis, the federal subjects that have a large Russian majority (Krasnodar and Stavropol) and the republic of Adygea, due to its economical and energetically insignificance and because it lacks a secessionist conflict. We also exclude the Karachay-Cherkess republic and North Ossetia for similar reasons, though this last republic will be mentioned.
On the contrary, the following will be integrated: Chechnya republic, because it is an epicenter of conflict; Dagestan republic, both because of the conflict and because of natural resources; and Ingushetia and Kabardino-Balkaria, which are of less relevance but have some impact in geo-energy terms. All the federal subjects that compose the object of the analysis are framed in the North Caucasian Federal District.
From the district, in 2014, Dagestan was the most populated federal subject, with 30.90% of the district population (with more than three million inhabitants), followed by the Stavropol Krai, which contains 29.10% of the population. On the other hand, Chechnya has slightly more than 1.4 million people (around 14% of the District). In total, the Federal District includes 9.6 million people, which implies that 6.7% of the population of the Russian Federation live in this region [
18] (p. 41).
The North Caucasus District has been relegated to a position of economic insignificance due to the conflict, which is reflected in unemployment, especially youth unemployment, and the lack of participation in the economic growth coming from the Russian energy boom in the Putin era [
19] (p. 44). However, the existence of oil and gas in the eastern region of the North Caucasus, today part of Dagestan, has been known for centuries, with oil having been extracted since 1898, though the main discoveries of deposits occurred in the 1980s [
20] (p. 353).
The enormous social gap that exists between an ostentatious and opulent stratum, made up of high-level officials and newly formed oligarchs, stands out, while the general context for the population is poverty, so it is not surprising that corruption is a widespread practice. In fact, “[t]he difference in income by the share of 10% of the richest and, consequently, 10% of the poor is 25 orders of magnitude, while in the whole of Russia it does not exceed 15. The middle class is also a fairly narrow segment, only around 25–30%” [
21] (pp. 113–114).
In addition to poverty as a common characteristic of the population, the weight of unemployment in this territory is extremely important (it reached 52% in Ingushetia and 42% in Chechnya, but was lower in Daguestan, in 2010), especially in the rural population and the young population. By comparison, 18% of the workforce in 2010 was unemployed, as opposed to 8.2% in all of Russia [
21] (p. 114).
Despite this harsh reality, attempts to create businesses in the area are even greater than in the Russian Federation as a whole, with up to 20% of the workforce expressing their desire to participate in business activities. Additionally, although there are problems to ensure employment for the population, the greater proportion of citizens that are employed in private companies (including self-employed entrepreneurs) as opposed to public entities stands out [
21] (p. 116).
Regarding energy in the North Caucasus, although the energy reserves of the Russian Federation in the Caspian region are of some size (as can be seen in
Figure 2), it is smaller in relation to its competing states in the region, namely Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, and Turkmenistan [
22] (p. 342).
Apart from that, this strategic position has its purely geopolitical facet, as the loss of this republic would imply an easier access to the Caucasus region for Russia’s strategic competitors. A corridor from Central Asia to Europe could be opened, ignoring Russia’s territory. This hypothetical corridor is, for obvious reasons, a great threat to Russian interests, as energy is a great pillar of Russian power in Europe. Furthermore, this also applies to the South Caucasus regions as there is a very important security risk for Russia in the region’s future; the support that had been granted for the Abjasia and South Ossetia republics in Georgia under the precedent of Kosovo (a country not recognized by Russia) could mean that both territories (as precedents) would also be used against Russia in a future conflict in the region [
19] (p. 39). An example of the delicate balance of power involves a very important pipeline for Azerbaijan, known as the Baku–Novorossiysk pipeline, which transits an important part of Dagestan as well as other republics in the North Caucasus. An independence of several republics in the region would obviously make it easier for the South Caucasian country to avoid Russian influence on its own energy policies towards Europe’s supply.
One of the most important geopolitical elements for Russia and its competitors in the region is the establishment of routes for oil and natural gas exports. In fact, as Gsell points out, for producing countries like Azerbaijan: “[O]il evacuation becomes a vital issue, since it has designed an economic policy based on the exploitation of its potential oil” [
23] (p. 108). Linked to these supply lines are the “passage permits” (or licenses) that are needed in order to go through neighbor States territory, which Russia takes advantage of as a weapon of negotiation; this is part of the soft power it holds against its competitors in this complex and competitive region (as revealed in
Figure 2).
As Gsell continues: “At the economic level, the crises and tensions in the region affect the economies of the new republics and, therefore, those based on oil production. Thus, the conflicts that take place in three key areas of this region, such as Azerbaijan (producer), Chechnya (producer and transit area for Azeri crude) and Georgia (refining and oil exit ports) have acted negatively for the obtaining and production of hydrocarbons” [
23] (p. 108).
Besides all this, a tricky controversy related to public international law must be mentioned, because the region’s states are opposing each other around the use of the seabed to exploit its resources [
22] (p. 343). The point is the legal consideration of the Caspian Sea as a lake, as Russia and Iran defend, or an inner Sea, as Azerbaijan, Kazajstan, and Turkmenistan defend. The first option would imply that the exploitation zones could not be limited by alluding to exclusive property rights (based on the Exclusive Economic Zones). The second option, instead, would imply a distribution of the Sea between riparian states [
23] (p. 108).
“[T]he Caspian Sea can be divided into four main areas of oil and gas production: (1) the Northwest, in Russia and centered offshore proximate to the cities of Astrakhan and Makhachkala; (2) the Apsheron peninsula in Azerbaijan, near the country’s capital of Baku; (3) the Atyrau-Mangustau complex in Kazakhstan; and (4) the West Balkan province of Turkmenistan. The region’s potential oil and gas reserves play an important role in prospective development plans for the five states—Russia, Azerbaijan, Iran, Turkmenistan, and Kazakhstan—that border the Caspian Sea” [
22] (p. 343).
In energy terms, Chechnya held the 24th position in oil production (within the Russian Federation) in 2010, and 16th in gas production in 2009 [
25,
26].
On the other hand, Dagestan is the most important subject in energy terms, standing out because of its hydroelectric production that had an operating capacity of 4.4 billion kWh in 2004, and multiple resources including gas and oil on the coast, in addition to coal [
27].
Even so, it held the 29th position in oil production in 2010, and 23rd in gas in 2009 [
25,
26]. Having even lower productive numbers than Chechnya, the most important republic of the region in geo-energy terms, due to its reserves and its coastal position, is Dagestan. On the Russian coast of the Caspian Sea, especially between Makhachkala and Izberbash, in Dagestan, there are hydrocarbon reserves that may reach 2 billion tons, including, as far as is known, already controlled reserves of 340 million tons of oil and 540 billion cubic meters of gas. However, production has been crumbling, yet it remains an important reserve to exploit in the future. That is why Dagestan has received, due to its technological deficiencies,
$12 billion in foreign investment [
24] (pp. 2–5). In fact, as Zhantudueva says: “In 2013, the volume of investments in the main capital of the North Caucasian Federal District amounted to 414,361.6 million rubles. The largest rise in specific growth was observed in the republic of Dagestan (43.0%), Stavropol Territory (30.0%), and the smallest (below 10%) in the following republics: Ingushetia (3.2%), Karachay-Cherkessia (4.5%), North Ossetia-Alania (6.9%), and Chechnya (7.0%)” [
18] (pp. 41–42).
Although Ingushetia is a republic with an economy mainly based on agriculture and livestock, 74.6% of the total industrial production corresponds to the oil sector, controlled by the Ingushneftegazprom complex [
28]. Oil production was reduced in the 2000–2010 period from 200 to 50 thousand tons, due to inefficiency, maintenance of reserves, and embezzlement [
29]. In 2010, it was ranked 31st among federal subjects for oil production [
25,
26].
Kabardino-Balkaria is a republic with a strong industrial presence; the republic is not focused on energy but on manufactured products related to mining and construction. Its energy field has been relegated to some small hydroelectric stations, with a production that does not allow more than the small energy trade. In 2010, it was ranked 33rd among federal subjects for oil production [
25,
26].
The Caucasus, especially its northern region, is one of the most ethnically complex and plural regions, being home to more than 100 ethnic groups, communicating in multiple languages: Paleo-Caucasian, Indo-European, Turkic, and Semitic [
30]. In addition, there is a minority of Mongolian descent (the Kalmyks). Within Dagestan alone there are more than 30 ethnic groups, a fact which has generated great internal tensions [
31] (p. 104). In particular, the political struggle between the local Avars, Lezgins, Lakies, and Chechens is noteworthy [
32].
Religiously, mainly in Chechnya, and to a lesser extent in the other republics, there is a confrontation between traditional Sunni (and sometimes also Sufi) Islam, generally in favor of coexistence within the Russian state, and Wahhabism, clearly anti-Russian. [
32], which has served as an ideological framework for secessionists since the Second Chechen War.
Russian expansion in the North Caucasus can be dated back to the alliances between Russia and the Christian Georgians during the reign of Ivan IV “The terrible”. But the real spread of the Russian Empire took place between the 18th and 19th centuries, when the region, until then dominated by its own political entities, began to be invaded by Russian troops in order to gain access to the Black Sea, counteracting the Persian and Ottoman influence in the area. That is, the Russian expansion was not due so much to commercial interests as it was geopolitical, unlike other imperial powers [
33] (p. 398). Noteworthy are the Russo-Circassian conflict (1763–1864), where Russia conquered the western area, now populated mostly by Russians (being the origin of the Circassian exodus from the Caucasus), and the Caucasus War (1817–1864), in which Russia finalized the conquest of the territory today composed of the non-ethnically Russian republics. Furthermore, in this second conflict, the confrontation between Islam (although the Sufi and Sunni variants also clashed with each other) and Orthodox Christianity became more acute [
33] (pp. 404–414).
After the Russian Revolution and the beginning of the Civil War, the non-ethnically Russian part of the region became independent, forming the short-lived Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus (1917–1920), that would become the Mountain Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (1921–1924) after its conquest by the Red Army. After Lenin’s death, the region went through various administrative phases, alternating between a Soviet republic (with high powers), to being an Oblast (a province). However, it is important to mention that the Checheno-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic would exist from 1936 to 1944, and from 1957 to 1991. Its interruption was due to the Chechen-Ingush insurrection supported by the Third Reich against the USSR, which was repressed and answered with the massive deportation subsequent to World War II.
After the fall of the USSR, Chechnya turned, under the leadership of Dzhokhar Dudayev, into the Chechen republic of Ichkeria, without international recognition, but de facto independent. Meanwhile, the rest of the North Caucasus remained under the control of the Russian Federation.
Table 1 shows the energy relevance of the inland oil resources of the region:
The table indicates that the richest Federal Subjects in energy terms are not those who are included in the study; that is, those who have suffered from a secessionist conflict. If we attend the Federal Subjects that are included in the study, the oil amount in Dagestan would be the second most important, after Chechnya, which has gathered proved and probable reserves. However, both Chechnya and Dagestan have “practically the same level of production, which indicates a different degree of depletion of fields and the quality of oil” [
34] (p. 3). Besides, “[i]n the Rostov region, the republics of Ingushetia, Kabardino-Balkaria, North Ossetia-Alania, there are from two to seven deposits”, while “in the republic of Adygea and the Karachai-Cherkess republic, they are absent” [
34] (p. 3).
As we base our analysis only on probed hydrocarbons reserves (in land), the Chechen republic will be the first in our analysis and the third in the region as a whole (43,891 million tons), while “[i]n the rest of the republics, proven reserves range from 3.3 to 9.9 million tons” [
34] (p. 3).
5. Conclusions
Russia, in contrast to the European Union, which pursues, with the “European Green Deal”, ideological and environmental goals, follows a real-politik strategy. The EU’s “European Green Deal” does not take the Russian geo-political ambitions fully into account. As long as the European Union continues to depend on Russian energy supplies, the EU remains vulnerable and the success of the “European Green Deal” is in danger.
We have shown how Russia has acted to defend geopolitical interests related to energy. Of course, Russia has also defended its territorial integrity. Indeed, the end of the Soviet Union led to the reappearance of multiple ethnic and religious conflicts, both inside and outside of the current Russian Federation. In the external cases, Russia has intervened to maintain its political influence and assure its “Near Abroad”, opposing the EU and NATO expanse in post-soviet countries. Its internal conflicts have been concentrated in the historical region of the North Caucasus, where its intervention has sought to protect its national sovereignty and achieve two geo-energy objectives:
- (1)
To avoid losing territory in the region, which would facilitate an energy supply line from Central Asia to Europe and the European Union in particular. This was especially relevant in the case of Dagestan.
- (2)
To keep control of the North Caucasian resources; although there is no great amount of proven hydrocarbons reserves, its control assures social pace in the region. Moreover, Dagestan holds a large portion of the Caspian Sea coast. The control of Dagestan will become important when, in the future, the reserves located at the Caspian Sea are exploited, particularly if the Caspian Sea is considered finally a lake and not an internal sea.
The intervention in the rebel Chechen republic, and the region as a whole during the Islamic insurgence phase, has assured the protection of Russian sovereignty in the North Caucasus in all the republics. Yet a conflict between the current Chechen elites and the Federation cannot be ruled out if discrepancies with respect to their pact appear.
The geo-energy factor has not been especially relevant in the Kabardino-Balkaria and Ingushetia republics, and even in Chechnya it has been an instrumental tool for social peace more than a key factor for Russian intervention (yet its reserves still surpass the other republics). This means that, by seeing the republics as different units of analysis, the hypothesis by which Russian intervention had a strategic and mainly geo-energy objective is not fulfilled. Nevertheless, by integrating all the federal subjects with Dagestan, that is, analyzing the intervention as a unity, due to the powerful spill-over effect of the conflicts in the region, the hypothesis is confirmed because of the strategic and energy relevance of Dagestan, which is represented in:
- (i)
The huge amount of resources, mainly natural gas (up to 2 billion tons of hydrocarbons), of the Caspian Sea that Russia can use because they control Dagestan;
- (ii)
There being a frontier with southern Azerbaijan and Georgia, which have been part of the Russian challenge in the South Caucasus region, connected to the Russian energy interest in Europe’s energy supplies;
- (iii)
And, finally, the position of Dagestan and Kazakhstan on the Caspian Sea, in relation to the previous point, because Dagestan could be key for the creation of a corridor from Central Asia to Europe bordering Russia.
Therefore, we argue that the Russian intervention in the North Caucasus’s secessionist conflict has significantly benefited its geo-energy interests in the following dimensions: reserves, territorial security and control, and protection of national sovereignty. The Russian interventions in the North Caucasus perfectly illustrate that Russia has a clear strategy of defending its geo-energy interests. A “European Green Deal” certainly affects Russia´s geo-energy interests. For a successful implementation of the “European Green Deal”, the role of Russia, its interests, and the question of energy security has been neglected. Further research must investigate the intricate implications of Russian interests in the “European Green Deal”. We conclude that the success of the “European Green Deal” would have important geopolitical repercussion by making the European Union less dependent of the Russian energy superpower.