Type: | Natural gas |
Map: | South Caucasus Pipeline (BTE Pipeline).svg |
Country: | Azerbaijan Georgia Turkey |
Direction: | East–west |
Start: | Baku (Sangachal Terminal), Azerbaijan |
Through: | Tbilisi |
Finish: | Erzurum, Turkey |
Par: | Baku–Tbilisi–Ceyhan pipeline |
Partners: | BP (29.99%) Lukoil (19.99%) TPAO (19.00%) SOCAR (14.35%) NICO (10.00%) SGC Upstream (6.67%) |
Operator: | BP |
Est: | 2006 |
Length: | 692 |
Diameter In: | 42 |
The South Caucasus Pipeline (also known as Baku–Tbilisi–Erzurum Pipeline, BTE pipeline, or Shah Deniz Pipeline) is a natural gas pipeline from the Shah Deniz gas field in the Azerbaijan sector of the Caspian Sea to Turkey. It runs parallel to the Baku–Tbilisi–Ceyhan pipeline (oil).
On 21 May 2006, the commissioning gas was pumped to the pipeline from the Sangachal Terminal.[1] First deliveries through the pipeline commenced on 30 September 2006. Deliveries of gas from Shah Deniz gas field started on 15 December 2006.[2]
On 12 August 2008, the pipeline operator BP closed the pipeline for safety reasons because of the South Ossetia conflict.[3] Gas supplies were resumed on 14 August 2008.[4]
The 42-1NaN-1 diameter gas pipeline runs through the same corridor as the Baku–Tbilisi–Ceyhan pipeline until Erzurum, where BTC turns south to the Mediterranean. It is 692km (430miles) long, of which 442km (275miles) is in Azerbaijan and 248km (154miles) in Georgia.[1] The initial capacity of the pipeline was 8.8e9m3 of gas per year.[5] For the second stage of the Shah Deniz development, the capacity was increased up to 24e9m3 by adding additional looping and two new compressor stations,[6] costing $3 billion. As the pipeline has the potential to be connected to Turkmen and Kazakh producers through the planned Trans-Caspian Gas Pipeline, Azerbaijan has proposed expanding its capacity up to 60e9m3 by building a second line of the pipeline.[7]
The first aim of the pipeline is to supply Turkey and Georgia. As a transit country, Georgia has rights to take 5% of the annual gas flow through the pipeline in lieu of a tariff and can purchase a further 0.5e9m3 of gas a year at a discounted price. It supplies Europe with Caspian natural gas through the Southern Gas Corridor pipelines, through the Trans Adriatic Pipeline and Trans-Anatolian gas pipeline.
The pipeline is owned by the South Caucasus Pipeline Company, a consortium led by BP. As of 2022, the shareholders of the consortium are:[6]
The technical operator of the pipeline is BP and the commercial operator was Statoil. According to the PSA agreement, the commercial operatorship of the SCP was transferred to SOCAR starting on 1 January 2015.
As a part of the Shah Deniz Full Field Development (FFD), otherwise called the Shahdeniz-2 project, BP will expand the pipeline through capacity extension by putting two additional compressor stations in Georgia and Turkey. This will almost triple the current transportation capacity of the pipeline up to 20 bcm/year. [9]
This capacity increase would be able to accommodate an additional 16 bcm gas coming from the SD-2 project.
The SCPX follows the line of the earlier BTC and SCP pipelines across Azerbaijan. The project included an archaeological programme and supplemented the discoveries of the earlier two projects. [10] [11]