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Sources say that Chevron's Tengiz will resume Ceyhan oil exports to Kazakhstan in November.

Three industry sources confirmed on Wednesday that a Chevron-led group developing Kazakhstan's biggest oilfield Tengiz, will resume oil exports through the Baku-Tbilisi - Ceyhan pipeline by November.

The pipeline connects Georgia with Turkey, and is primarily used to export oil produced by the Azeri Chirag and Guneshli fields, operated by BP.

In July, organic chloride contamination was found in Azeri BTC crude shipments. This caused several days of delays in loadings at BTC Ceyhan in Turkey. The TCO consortium halted exports along the route in the month following.

Tengiz did not return to the pipeline when Kazakhstan recommenced oil supply last month. According to one source, the consortium will ship more than 1,000,000 barrels of oil or 130,000 metric tonnes next month.

Requests for comments from the TCO consortium or Azerbaijan’s state energy company SOCAR were not answered.

Kazakhstan also uses the pipeline to reduce its dependency on Russia as its main export route. The Caspian Pipeline Consortium ships more than 80% Kazakhstan's oil via the Black Sea terminal Yuzhnaya Ozereevka in Russia.

BTC receives oil from Kazakhstan by tankers, mainly Tengiz but also the Kashagan field.

Azerbaijani official data shows that oil exports through the BTC pipeline have declined from 21.681 millions tons to just 20.569 in the first nine month of this year. Reporting by Kirsten Doovan; Editing by Kirsten D.

(source: Reuters)