Tbilisi (GBC) - In May 2026, Georgian electricity exports to Turkey decreased by 4.8 times in volume and 7.8 times in value, falling to a 10-year low. This is stated in the monthly review of the Galt & Taggart electricity market.

According to the investment bank, last month the export volume to Turkey amounted to only 36.2 GWh (compared to 172.3 GWh in May 2025), and the income received - $1 million (compared to $7.8 million in the same period last year). The researchers explained that the decline was also due to falling prices - in May, the average export price to Turkey was 2.7 US cents per kWh, which is a decrease of 39.4% year-on-year.

Such a decrease in export price, volume and revenue is associated with a sharp decline in prices on the Turkish market. In May 2026, the average electricity price on the Turkish market was 1.8 US cents/kWh (vs. 6.4 US cents/kWh in May-25). Such a low price significantly reduces the economic attractiveness of exports, as exporters also had to cover system-related costs, including transmission tariffs and guaranteed capacity fees.

According to the Galt & Taggart study, the difference between the Turkish market price and the average export price from Georgia is likely related to the hourly/daily structure of exports and direct contracts.

The decrease in electricity prices in Turkey, in turn, is related to the construction of solar power plants and favorable hydrological conditions.

In May, only four companies exported to Turkey: Adjara-Energy 2007 LLC, Energy Development Georgia LLC, Svaneti Hydro LLC, and Kasleti-2 LLC. Despite the low market prices, the continued exports may be related to both the existing transmission and dispatch agreements and the individual contractual conditions of the companies.

In addition to Turkey, exports were also recorded in Azerbaijan on the balance sheet, although these were not commercial exports. The mentioned synchronous volume was a technical exchange carried out for parallel operation with Azerbaijan and was balanced by imports of the same volume and value. Since April 2026, the accounting methodology has changed and this exchange, which was previously reflected as a net in the balance, is now recorded in imports and exports.

Balancing market and prices

The average price of balancing electricity in May increased by 3.5% year-on-year and amounted to 5.1 US cents per kWh.

In addition, the balancing volume increased by a negligible 0.7% year-on-year and amounted to 0.3 TWh, which represents 23% of the total supply.

On June 12, 2026, an amendment was made to the grid rules, according to which:

  • The transmission system operator is obliged to cancel the grid connection agreements for power plant projects that do not have a confirmation from the Ministry of Economy that they are at the stage of feasibility study or construction. Electrosystem will request this information from the Ministry by August 1. Project developers have the right to appeal the decision made by Electrosystem within 10 working days.
  • Canceled projects will be refunded the paid grid connection fee.
  • An agreement signed with the government on project development or a written confirmation from the Ministry has become mandatory for applications for connecting a new generation facility to the Energo-Pro and Telasi grids.

This amendment aims to bring the power plant construction process into a single framework and release reserved capacities at grid connection points.