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Turkey Freight Transport Report Q1 2008

Product Type: Market Research Report
Published by: Business Monitor International
Published: December 2007
Product Code: R302-2049
Description
Having reached agreement in principle during the third quarter of 2007, Turkey and Iran were expected
by the end of October of that year to sign a formal contract for the further development of Iran’s South
Pars natural gas deposits and the construction of a pipeline to bring the gas to Turkey and onwards to
Europe. The deal is strategically important to Turkey, and part of its wider ambition to turn the country
into a ‘energy bridge’ between Asia, the Middle East, and Europe. It also faces intense opposition from
the US which is trying to isolate Iran because of Iran’s refusal to stop its nuclear enrichment programme
as requested by the United Nations. Under the terms of the discussions between the two countries, the
state-owned Turkish Petroleum Corporation (TPAO) will invest some US$3.5bn in the development of
Phases 22-24 at the South Pars deposits. According to news agency Dow Jones, in August Gholam-
Hussein Nozari, Iran’s interim oil minister, said the aim was to set up a joint venture between the two
countries to build a 35bn cubic metre gas pipeline from Assaluyeh to the Turkish border, and from
Turkey onwards to Europe. An additional pipeline would also be required to transit gas from fields in
Turkmenistan through Iran and onwards to Turkey. On the long term the Turkish government sees the
South Pars agreement not only meeting the expected energy shortfall in Turkey, but also matching
Europe’s strategic desire to reduce its dependence on Russian gas. Turkey is also involved in other
pipeline projects, such as the Baku Tbilisi Ceyhan (BTC) oil pipeline, which cost about US$4bn to build,
and was officially opened in in 2006. The US$6bn European-backed Nabucco pipeline project is designed
to carry natural gas from Caspian and Middle Eastern countries via Turkey, Bulgaria, Romania and
Hungary to Austria and Western Europe. A new gas pipeline to Greece began operating in 2007. In our
latest Turkey Freight Transport Report, BMI concludes that oil and gas pipeline throughput is set to grow
by an annual average of 10.1% across the 2007-2011 forecast period.


Various factors support this prediction. Strong Turkish economic growth, set to average 5.7% per annum
in the next five years, will underpin rising energy demand. More importantly, however, Turkey is set to
become a pipeline hub for Europe. The BTC and the Nabucco line are among several projects, initially
devised to meet Turkish energy demand, that have also drawn growing European interest as a gas supply
route from the energy-rich Caspian. Among other plans for the energy corridor are an oil pipeline
between Samsun on the Black Sea and Ceyhan, as well as two gas pipelines from Russia, which wants to
extend the Blue Stream pipeline to Israel. Turkey receives gas via a pipeline from Iran, while the Shakh-
Deniz project, now functioning, is bringing Azerbaijani gas from the Caspian to Turkey.


Pipeline developments come against a generally favourable outlook for the freight sector as a whole. By
the end of the forecast period to 2011, sea freight is anticipated to be the largest sub-sector, accounting for
approximately 49% of all shipments, compared with 44% for road freight. The total volume of freight
transport in 2011 will be 577.869bn tonnes-km. By transport mode, we expect the fastest growing to be
air freight at an annual average of 10.8%; followed by pipeline throughput at 10.1%; maritime cargo at
8.6%; road haulage at 6.0% and rail freight at 2.8%. Turkey’s overall business environment rating is
significantly above the average for the Middle East and Africa (MEA) region. Turkey scores well in terms
of infrastructure growth, regulatory and competitive environments and the transport intensity index.
For the 2007-2011 forecast period, we expect the transport and communications sector to continue
outpacing the economy as a whole in value terms. It will achieve average annual growth of 6.0%, versus
5.7% for overall GDP. The total value of transport and communications GDP will rise to US$69.2bn in
nominal terms by 2011, representing 11.3% of Turkey’s GDP.


Table of Contents
Executive Summary
SWOT Analysis
The Baku-Ceyhan Oil Pipeline Industry SWOT
Turkey Business Environment SWOT
Business Environment Overview
Table: Africa And Middle East Countries Freight
Turkey - Business Environment Ranking
Economics - Long-Term Risk
Politics - Long-Term Risk
Freight Transport Growth
Transport Infrastructure Growth
Regulatory Environment
Competitive Environment
Transport Intensity Index
Political Risk Summary
Economic Risk Summary
Business Environment
Legal Code/Corruption
Red Tape
Labour Force
Industry Trends And Developments
Rail
Air
Sea And River
Pipelines
Industry Forecast Scenario
Macroeconomic Outlook
Table: Turkey - Economic Activity
Transport Outlook
Table: Freight Turnover, Domestic And International
Table: Transport Industry Macroeconomic Indicators
Trade Environment
Table: Total Value Of Imports (US$mn)
Table: Total Value Of Exports (US$mn)
Table: Top Export Destinations (US$mn)
Table: Export Trade (% y-o-y)
Table: Top Import Sources (US$mn)
Table: Import Trade (% y-o-y)
Trade Environment
Multi-Modal
Infrastructure
Competitive Landscape: Multi-Modal
Company Profile
DHL Turkey
Road
Competitive Landscape: Road
Company Profile
Exel
Rail
Competitive Landscape: Rail
Air
Competitive Landscape: Aviation
Company Profile
Türk Hava Yollari - Turkish Airlines
Water
Competitive Landscape: Maritime
Company Profile
Eregli Denizcilik
Pipelines
Competitive Landscape: Pipelines
BMI Forecast Modelling
How We Generate Our Industry Forecasts
Transport Industry
Sources


Ordering and More Information
Price and Delivery Options



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