in the exports running through Turkey's Kilis province Ankara, which supported rebel forces in neighbouring Syria throughout the 13-year civil war that ended in December with the ousting of Bashar al-Assad, has become one of the new Syrian government's main foreign allies while positioning itself to be a major player in Syria's reconstruction.
Syrian Energy Minister Mohammed al-Bashir provided further details on the supply in a statement released by his ministry:
"Starting August 2, Syria will begin receiving 3.4 million cubic metres of gas from Azerbaijan to Aleppo Governorate via Turkey," Bashir said.
He said this would contribute to generating some 900 megawatts of electricity and help enhance the stability of the electricity grid in Syria.
During a visit to Damascus in May, Bayraktar had said Turkey would provide Syria with 2 billion cubic metres of natural gas annually, in addition to 1,000 megawatts of electricity. He had said this month that Azerbaijan's SOCAR may be a partner in the project as well.
On Wednesday, he said the natural gas provision would help Syria address its electricity needs as well, adding this would be used as fuel in electricity production at Syria's existing power plants.
"We made a swap agreement with Azerbaijan, and the gas that will come from Azerbaijan will be exported to Aleppo, Syria, via Kilis," he said, adding Qatar would also be involved in terms of financing, and that ministers from the three countries would mark the start of the gas flow in a ceremony on Saturday.
"With the 6 million cubic metres of gas that we are planning to send there, we will be able to realise 1,200 megawatts of electricity production," he added.
Bayraktar said Ankara would also be supplementing that with 500 megawatts of its own to help address Syria's energy issues.
(Reuters, July 30, 2025)