Kazakhstan has resumed importing European jet fuel through Georgia’s Batumi Oil Terminal after an eight-year break. The route gives the country another source as domestic demand continues to exceed production.
The Batumi Oil Terminal, owned by Kazakhstan’s state pipeline operator KazTransOil, has resumed handling Jet A-1 fuel produced by European refineries. The first shipment, totaling 10,000 metric tons, arrived via the Black Sea and is awaiting onward transport by rail to Kazakhstan along the Trans-Caspian International Transport Route, also known as the Middle Corridor.
Kazakhstan needs the additional supply because its refineries cannot meet domestic demand. As previously reported by The Times of Central Asia, jet fuel demand is expected to reach about 1.18 million metric tons in 2026. Domestic refineries are projected to produce around 750,000 metric tons, leaving a large shortfall to be covered by imports.
The shortfall has grown this year amid maintenance at the Atyrau refinery and rising air traffic. Fuel supplies from Russia have also tightened. Moscow introduced temporary export restrictions to stabilize its domestic market. The restrictions created uncertainty for countries that have traditionally relied on Russian fuel. Kazakhstan has responded by looking for other import routes and expanding storage capacity.
The Batumi terminal offers one alternative. On Georgia’s Black Sea coast, it connects maritime shipments with rail routes through the South Caucasus and across the Caspian Sea. The terminal is a major logistics hub on the Middle Corridor.
According to KazTransOil, the terminal can handle up to 11 million metric tons of cargo a year. Its 132 storage tanks have a combined capacity of more than 585,000 cubic meters.
During the first half of 2026, the Batumi Oil Terminal handled approximately 725,000 metric tons of petroleum products. Along with aviation fuel, it transships crude oil and refined products, including diesel and gasoline. The terminal also handles fuel oil and liquefied petroleum gas.
The Batumi route reopened while global jet fuel supplies remain tight. Reuters reported this week that European inventories had fallen below one month’s supply, leaving the market vulnerable to disruptions caused by tensions in the Middle East. European buyers have turned to the United States and other suppliers in Africa and Asia.
Kazakhstan is also expanding domestic storage capacity. The government has approved new aviation fuel facilities at airports to guard against shortages and build larger reserves.
The first shipment will meet only a small part of Kazakhstan’s annual jet fuel demand. The Middle Corridor carries exports from Central Asia to Europe. The Batumi shipment shows that the corridor can also bring refined petroleum products into the region.
