Turkey’s Black Sea gas find to raise output to 25% of EU capacity

A recently discovered natural gas field in the Black Sea is set to provide nearly a third of Turkey’s domestic needs when it reaches peak production capacity by 2027, Energy Minister Fatih Donmez said, unveiling details of his ambitious timeline to bring last year’s find on stream.

 

Turkey may be able to start with initial annual production capacity of 3.5 billion cubic metres of gas in 2023, Mr Donmez told Bloomberg News in an exclusive interview in the capital, Ankara.

 

The aim would be to increase that to about 15 billion cubic metres annually within four years of first production, roughly one quarter of the European Union’s output today.

 

State-run energy company Turkiye Petrolleri AO plans to drill 40 wells over four phases in the Sakarya field, which is estimated to have recoverable gas reserves of about 540 billion cubic metres. President Erdogan has touted the find — the biggest ever in the Black Sea — as a boost to Turkey’s US$765-billion economy.

 

He has promised to start production in 2023, the centennial of the founding of modern Turkey, in a bid to boost his re-election campaign the same year.

 

The government has no plans to invite international oil companies to operate fields because state-run Tpao has the technical capacity to do it alone, Mr Donmez said. Turkey is conducting seismic studies before it starts drilling another exploratory well in a prospective area to the west of the Sakarya field during the first half of next year, he added.

 

Tpao will be targeting a similar geological formation which was found some 4,500 metres (15,000 feet) beneath the seabed in the original discovery.

 

Similar work is underway also in Turkey’s own economic exclusive zone in the Mediterranean Sea, Mr Donmez said. However, there have been political disputes as Turkey has explored for gas in waters also claimed by European Union states such as Greece and Cyprus and signed a maritime boundary deal with Libya in 2019.

 

Turkey aims to cut its annual energy bill of around US$44 billion by reducing its reliance on imports, which currently account for nearly all of the country’s gas consumption.

 

Domestic gas demand is expected surge by a quarter to reach 60 billion cubic metres this year, due to lower hydropower production amid dry weather and rising coal prices, Mr Donmez said.

 

The desired plateau production from Sakarya amounts to just over 31% of last year’s gas demand. But increased domestic output could push Turkey’s annual consumption to as much as 80 billion cubic metres by 2030, a Turkish official said in 2020.

 

The government and gas importers, including state-owned pipeline operator Botas International Ltd, are now in talks with Russia for a possible extension to a long-term supply contract for eight billion of cubic metres of gas before the agreement’s expiry in December.

 

Increasing Turkey’s gas imports from Russia by two billion cubic metres using spare capacity at TurkStream was one option under discussion, Mr Donmez said.

 

Source: WorldOil