The load capacity of Shah Deniz Pipelines increased to a record-high in 2020. The volume of natural gas moved through the pipeline amounted to 11.1 billion cubic m, which was 21% more comparing to 2019. Such growth is related to the start off the active phase of TANAP project.
The load of this pipeline amounted to 6 billion cubic m on average in 2014-2017, while the capacity increased to 7.1 billion cubic m in 2018 and it totaled to 9,2 billion cubic m in 2019.
The load increased up to 11.1 billion cubic m in 2020.
The Shah Deniz Pipeline (SCP) is connected to the Trans-Anatolian Pipeline (TANAP), which in turn connects to the Trans-Adriatic Pipeline (TAP) on the western Turkish border. The Trans-Adriatic Pipeline crosses Greece and Albania and flows through a pipeline to the bottom of the Adriatic Sea to southern Italy. The total length of the Trans-Adriatic Pipeline is 870 km.
The load on the main gas pipeline North-South Pipeline (connecting the Russian Federation and Armenia) remained unchanged in 2020 and amounted to 2.2 billion cubic m. The gas supply of Armenia depends on this pipeline.
As for other strategically important pipelines - the load of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline was reduced in 2020. The decline is related to the reduced demand on oil due to the COVID-19 crisis. The load of the pipeline was down to a ten-year low, and a total of 27.6 million tons of crude oil was transported through 2020, which was 11.5% less than the previous year.
The pipeline had its maximum load amid the peak oil prices in 2010, when 38.4 million tons of crude oil were supplied to Turkey via Georgia.
According to Reuters, in the first 10 months of 2020, 3.3 million tons of Kazakh oil was moved through the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, which was down by 0.5 million tons y-o-y. In addition, Turkmen oil did not move through the pipeline in 2020.
The capacity of the Baku-Supsa Pipeline was up by 0.5 million tons in 2020 and the total transit amounted to 4.2 million tons of crude oil.
At a length of 1,776 km, the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan carries out Azerbaijan oil from the Caspian Sea to worldwide via Georgia. It is a historic international energy project that has carried more than 3.3 billion barrels of oil since July 13, 2006.