BAKU
Azerbaijan exported 2.3 billion cubic metres (bcm) of gas to Europe and 4.1 bcm to Turkey from its giant Shan Deniz offshore gas field through the Southern Gas Corridor in January to May, according to Parviz Shahbasov, the country’s energy minister, as it continued to make inroads into an energy market until now dominated by Russia.
The country started commercial natural gas supplies to Europe from the second stage of the Shah Deniz project via its $40-billion Southern Gas Corridor in December 2020, when the corridor’s last part, the Trans-Adriatic Pipeline (TAP), was launched. The project is aimed at reducing Europe’s dependence on natural gas supplies from Russia, which currently controls 34 percent of the continent’s gas market.
The 878 km TAP pipeline connects to the Trans-Anatolian Pipeline (TANAP) on the Turkish-Greek border in Kipoi, crossing Greece, Albania, and the Adriatic Sea before reaching Italy’s southern coast.
Gas to Europe was delivered through the TAP. Exports to Turkey were made through the TANAP and Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum pipelines.
Around 10.6 bcm of gas was exported to Turkey since TANAP was put into operation in the summer of 2018, according to data ending June 1, 2021.
The BP-led consortium, which develops the Shah Deniz project in Azerbaijan, has been pumping gas from the offshore field’s first phase since 2006, delivering more than 10 bcm a year of gas to Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey.
The second phase started output in 2018, adding 16 bcm of gas production capacity at its peak to bring total capacity to 26 bcm.
Azerbaijan aims to supply European gas markets with 10 bcm of gas a year, including 8 bcm to Italy and a combined 2 bcm to Greece and Bulgaria. This year the country plans to export 5 bcm to Europe and over 12 bcm to Turkey.
Apart from BP and Azerbaijan’s state energy firm SOCAR, participants of the Shah Deniz consortium are Turkey’s TPAO, Malaysia’s Petronas, Russia’s Lukoil and Iran’s NIOC.