
More gas discoveries expected in Turkey after $30bn reserve find
More gas discoveries are expected in Turkey after the country announced a new reserve as Ankara looks to expand its domestic production, according to experts. Turkey on Saturday said a new gas reserve was discovered in the Black Sea with 75 billion cubic metres (bcm) of natural gas and an economic value of about $30 billion. It was found in the Goktepe-3 well at a depth of 3,500 metres. The reserve is expected to meet Turkey's home gas needs for three and a half years, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Saturday. 'It is expected that further exploration efforts (both for conventional and unconventional gas) will result in additional discoveries and will help reducing Turkey's import dependency,' Sohbet Karbuz, director of natural resources and energy security at Paris based Mediterranean Association for Energy told The National. The phase-1 of the Sakarya field development is being completed, with production from 12 wells reaching almost 10 million cubic metres (mcm) a day. 'Phase-2 will bring the total production to 20 mcm per day next year. By 2028, the production from the field is expected to reach the plateau level of 40 mcm per day, which is equivalent to around 14 bcm per year,' he added. The latest find comes after the country revealed another field in the Black Sea with a gas reserve of 320 bcm in 2020. 'The new field is not as big as the Sakarya field which was discovered in 2020,' Robin Mills, chief executive of Qamar Energy told The National. 'It's reported as being at Goktepe, which was the name of the original wells in Sakarya, so it may be an additional discovery in the same field,' he said. The new discovery is expected to make a 'a useful contribution, especially as Turkey had almost no domestic production before Sakarya', Mr Mills said. Turkey, which imports more than 95 per cent of all the natural gas it needs, is pushing to reduce its reliance on external sources, Mr Karbuz said. It is seeking to boost supply security by developing domestic resources and expanding international partnerships in oil and gas exploration. Last year, Turkey consumed 53 bcm of gas, with its own production only accounting for about 2.3 bcm. It imports gas from Russia, Azerbaijan and Iran through pipelines. It also relies on liquefied natural gas from other countries. The new discovery 'enhances Turkey's energy security by providing a more stable and self-reliant energy supply, less susceptible to geopolitical tensions and market fluctuations', Rania Gule, senior market analyst at brokerage firm XS.com, said. It is also 'likely to attract foreign direct investment and stimulate economic growth' as well as position 'Turkey as a potential energy hub in the region, facilitating the transit of gas from neighboring countries to European markets through key pipelines like the Trans-Anatolian Natural Gas Pipeline (TANAP)'. Turkey is also creating new partnerships with other countries to diversify its supply chain. Earlier this year, it signed an agreement with Turkmenistan to enable the flow of Turkmen natural gas to Turkey, Reuters reported, quoting Turkish Energy Minister Alparslan Bayraktar. It aims to buy up to 2 bcm of gas annually from Turkmenistan, with the gas expected to be transported through Iran's existing natural gas network. A separate project to build a gas pipeline across the Caspian Sea from Turkmenistan to Azerbaijan and further to Turkey is also being discussed as part of long-term co-operation between the countries. Demand for natural gas has been continuing to rise globally as countries seek to cut emissions and reduce global warming. Shell's 2025 LNG Outlook forecasts a 60 per cent increase in global demand for the fuel by 2040, driven by Asian economic growth, emissions reductions in industry and transport, and the rise of AI. The consumption of the fuel – considered a cleaner alternative to coal and crude oil – is expected to reach 630 million tonnes to 718 million tonnes a year by 2040, compared with 407 million tonnes last year, Shell said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The National
3 hours ago
- The National
Turkey boosts domestic gas for leverage over Europe and Iran
Twenty-five years ago, I drove through south-eastern Turkey. The town of Kahta was enjoying an oil boom, modest by the scale of the Gulf, but with basic hotels crowded with roughnecks, and nodding donkey pumps in the valleys. Now, a more sizeable oil and gas rush is making a real difference to energy-hungry Turkey's situation. On the periphery of the Middle East, this big country has not been blessed with hydrocarbons in the same way as its neighbours Iran and Iraq, or even Syria. With the largest population in Europe, if it's counted in that continent, and cold winters in its mountainous terrain, it is also the fourth biggest gas consumer and sixth largest user of oil. Its own resources have historically been minor: a dribble of oil from the Kurdish-dominated south-east, around Diyarbakır and the Kahta field I saw, a little gas from Thrace and the Black Sea near Istanbul. That was both an economic and strategic weakness. The cut-off of the pipeline from Iraq over political disputes has deprived it of a steady source of oil from Iraq's Kurdistan region. Two-thirds of its oil now comes from Russia, handy as Turkey is not bound by the sanctions that keep EU members off Russian oil. Turkey has domestic soft coal, which is carbon-intensive. It has been expanding renewable capacity, while Russia's Rosatom is constructing a nuclear power station on the southern coast. This is now at least four years overdue because of financing and equipment problems. Otherwise, it has to rely on Russia, Iran and Azerbaijan for gas. This exposes it to sanctions complications, and the increasing unreliability of Iranian supply as its neighbour struggles with meeting its own demand. But things are changing: not in a way that will upset international energy markets, but enough to be very handy for Ankara. In 2021, state-owned Turkish Petroleum (TPAO) finally succeeded in making a sizeable oil find. The discovery in the Gabar mountains, in the south-eastern Şırnak area, was reported to have 150 million barrels of reserves, a minnow for the Gulf, but a whale for Turkey. It continues the geological trend running from Iran through northern Iraq. Several other fields have now been found in the same area. And, unlike Turkey's historical fields which have heavy oil, here is higher-quality light crude. It could become Europe's highest-producing onshore oil province. Turkish oil output has jumped from about 60,000 barrels a day before the find, a sliver of its 1.1 million barrels a day consumption, to more than 130,000 bpd. Promising further oil, last month leading US producer Continental Resources signed a deal to co-operate with TPAO on evaluating shale in the Diyarbakır Basin. Energy Minister Alparslan Bayraktar, who is married to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's daughter Sumeyye, said the area could hold 6.1 billion barrels of resources. The decision of the Kurdish PKK group, considered terrorists by Ankara, to disband should ease operations in this region. But it is gas that makes the biggest difference to both Turkey's and the international situation. It discovered a large gasfield, Sakarya, in the deep waters of the western Black Sea, in August 2020. Then energy minister Fatih Dönmez was optimistic in 2023 that hydrocarbons could also be found in the eastern Black Sea. Sakarya, located close to Istanbul, was followed by further finds, the area now reported to hold up to 25 trillion cubic feet of gas reserves. Last month, Mr Erdogan announced another discovery by the Goktepe-3 well, with 2.6 trillion cubic feet. The water is deep, at 2,200 metres, cold, and lacking oxygen, and the reservoirs are geologically tricky. Nevertheless, production is rising and is expected to reach 14 billion cubic metres annually by 2028. By 2030, the fields here could cover nearly 30 per cent of Turkish consumption, which stood at 45 billion cubic metres last year. These developments are important for several reasons. In the crisis year of 2022, Turkey's energy import bill of $97 billion was twice its current account deficit of $48.8 billion. Without oil and gas imports, Turkey would generally have a positive trade balance. That would ease the pressure on its chronically high inflation and devaluing lira. Mr Erdogan is keenly aware of the importance of keeping down inflation and home energy bills for his political popularity. Additional domestic gas would reduce the risks of dependence on Russia and Iran, and put Ankara in a stronger position for negotiating new contracts. Turkey has long aimed to become a gas hub, profiting by buying and selling gas, instead of simply transiting a large portion on to Europe. It could do this by mixing Russian purchases with its own production to sell to Europe, evading the EU's upcoming ban on gas imports from Russia. Along with the booming renewables sector and the new nuclear reactors, higher gas production and lower prices would aid Turkey in getting off coal. The country targets peak emissions only by 2038, with a net-zero goal of 2053, but it needs a much more robust plan to get there. TPAO is also active internationally, partly as an extension of Turkish foreign policy. It has drilled several wells (apparently unsuccessfully) in waters it claims around the internationally recognised Republic of Cyprus, and the Turkish navy has blocked some other drilling there. It is interested in Libya, site of another contested maritime border claim. In March, it agreed with the federal government of Somalia to look for oil there. And Turkish companies are involved in the Qatari -led consortium which has signed a $7 billion deal to provide the new Syrian government – heavily backed by Ankara – with electricity. Turkey has agreed to send two billion cubic metres of gas per year as a first step. The ability to supply Syria's energy needs could be key in economic reconstruction and future political influence. The humble wells around Kahta were a foretaste of a new policy and economic tool. Domestic oil and gas are just one facet of a complex local and international energy strategy. It will not ever be Saudi Arabia or Iran, but Turkey's complex bridge between two continents and two seas has just gained another pillar.


Khaleej Times
4 days ago
- Khaleej Times
As birthrates plunge, Turkey's government steps in
Alarmed by the fact that Turkish women are having fewer children, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has moved to tackle falling birthrates -- "a threat greater than war" -- through policies designed to bring on the babies. After declaring 2025 Turkey's "Year of the Family", Erdogan last month announced 2026 would mark the start of the "Decade of the Family". But his pleas for women to have at least three children and offers of financial incentives for newlyweds may not be enough as Turkey grapples with a deepening economic crisis. Official figures show Turkey's birthrate has fallen from 2.38 children per woman in 2001 to 1.48 in 2025 -- lower than in France, Britain or the United States -- in what Erdogan, a 71-year-old pious Muslim and father-of-four, has denounced as "a disaster". During his 22 years in office -- first as premier, then president -- fertility rates have dropped sharply in this country of 85 million people. Erdogan has blamed both women and LGBTQ "perverts". "Women and LGBTQ+ individuals are considered the only culprits for the declining population growth rate, with no acknowledgement of political mistakes," said retired academic and feminist activist Berrin Sonmez. "People might be hesitant to have children in this chaotic and uncertain environment. Additionally, child support is almost non-existent and education has become the most expensive sector," she said. No education, no jobs High inflation has raged in Turkey for the past four years, forcing education costs up by more than 70 percent over the past year, official data shows. In the first quarter, unemployment stood at 8.2 percent, or 15 percent among 15- to 24-year-olds. Researchers with the DISK union say the real rate is 28.5 percent, and 37.5 percent among young people. But the government seems bent on fixing other issues, such as Turkey's record number of elective Caesarean births -- which stands at 61 percent, rising to 78 percent in some private hospitals. In April, Turkey banned C-section births at private healthcare facilities "without a medical justification". The procedure generally limits the number of pregnancies to two, or a maximum of three. C-sections: The 'safer option' Medical professionals say the high number of C-sections is linked to the rampant privatisation of the healthcare system since the late 1990s. C-sections are more time-efficient for medical staff -- 30 minutes, versus 12 hours for a traditional delivery -- and lower the risk of legal action over complications, said Hakan Coker, an Istanbul-based gynaecologist. "Ultimately, C-sections are perceived as a guarantee of safety" for doctors and women alike, he said. Dr Harika Bodur, an obstetrician at a major Istanbul hospital, said some women ask for a C-section "at the first appointment for fear of pain". "If you refuse, they'll go elsewhere," she said. The fear is rooted in a lack of education and discomfort with sexuality, she said. The health ministry says it is now "aiming for a target rate of 20 percent (of C-sections) by encouraging normal childbirth through education of future parents". But the word "normal" has raised hackles -- notably last month when a football team carried a huge banner promoting vaginal births onto the pitch before a top-flight clash, which read: "Natural birth is normal." Women as 'birthing machines' "If I don't want to, I won't have any children at all, it's my right," said 23-year-old chemistry student Secil Murtazaoglu. "Access to abortion is already difficult. Now they want to limit C-sections. It's all about the oppression of women," she said. In 2012, the Turkish president described abortion as "murder", but stopped short of banning it. By offering interest-free loans of 150,000 Turkish lira ($3,800) for newlyweds and a monthly allowance of 5,000 lira from the third child onwards, Erdogan was trying "to turn women into birthing machines", Murtazaoglu said. Feminist activist Sonmez said women were subjected to huge pressures, both within their families and within society, when the much more pressing issue was the need to tackle gender violence. "We must start by combating violence against women: such policies have been eradicated and protections seriously undermined," she said.


Middle East Eye
4 days ago
- Middle East Eye
Turkey ousts five opposition mayors, probes CHP leader
Turkey has removed five mayors affiliated with the country's main opposition party from office after they were arrested on corruption charges, which the opposition says are politically motivated. In a statement on Thursday, the Turkish interior ministry announced that the Republican People's Party (CHP) district mayors of Avcilar, Buyukcekmece, and Gaziosmanpasa in Istanbul, as well as the mayors of Seyhan and Ceyhan in Adana, were dismissed during the course of the investigation. This recent wave of police operations follows high-profile investigations targeting Istanbul Metropolitan Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu, who was arrested in March on similar charges of financial crimes, including extortion and operating a criminal network. Imamoglu's formal arrest triggered month-long mass protests across Turkey, pushing Turkish markets to the brink. Imamoglu denies the allegations, claiming that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government orchestrated this 'politically motivated' investigation to block his potential presidential candidacy in the 2028 elections. Last year, the opposition handed Erdogan's Justice and Development Party its first defeat in local elections in over two decades. The CHP leader, who won the mayoral election a year ago with 51 percent of the vote, is widely seen as Erdogan's main political rival. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters Tensions continue to run high between the government and the opposition. On Wednesday, state broadcaster TRT reported that prosecutors had opened an investigation into CHP chairman Ozgur Ozel for allegedly insulting Istanbul's chief prosecutor, Akin Gurlek, at a rally in the city. Gurlek, a former deputy justice minister, has faced accusations from opposition figures of pursuing cases targeting Erdogan's political opponents since taking up his post last year. Justice Minister Yilmaz Tunc condemned Ozel's remarks in a post on X, calling any threats against the judiciary 'unacceptable'. The Istanbul Governor's Office announced that, following the suspension of the mayors of Avcilar, Buyukcekmece, and Gaziosmanpasa, the respective municipal councils will convene on 11 June to elect acting (deputy) mayors. With the suspension of these five mayors, the total number of CHP mayors removed from office has now risen to 11 as part of investigations into CHP municipalities. Dozens of other officials have been detained and are awaiting trial.