That dollar amount results from a 95.7% increase from $19.5 billion in 2018.
From 2021 to 2022, the overall value of Azerbaijani exported products accelerated by 71.8% compared to $22.2 billion.
Azerbaijan’s 3 most valuable export products are crude oil, petroleum gases, and processed petroleum oils. Collectively, that trio of major energy products represent 91.8% of the total revenue paid for all Azerbaijani exports during 2022. Such a high percentage indicates an intensely concentrated portfolio of exports.
Azerbaijan’s Best Exports Customers
The latest available country-specific data shows that 84.1% of products exported from Azerbaijan were bought by importers in: Italy (46.6% of the Azerbaijani total), Türkiye (9.3%), Israel (4.41%), India (4.36%), Greece (3.6%), Spain (2.65%), Russia (2.56%), Croatia (2.5%), Czech Republic (2.4%), United Kingdom (2%), Portugal (1.9%) and Georgia (1.7%).
From a continental perspective, 72.7% of Azerbaijani exports by value was delivered to fellow European countries while 25.1% was sold to Asian importers. Azerbaijan shipped another 1.5% worth of goods to Africa.
Tinier percentages went to buyers in Oceania’s Australia and New Zealand (0.4%), North America (0.2%), then Latin America (0.1%) excluding Mexico but including the Caribbean.
Given Azerbaijan’s population of 10.24 million people, its total $38.1 billion in 2022 exports translates to roughly $3,700 for every resident in the Middle Eastern country. That dollar metric eclipses the average $2,200 per capita one year earlier during 2021.
Azerbaijan’s Top 10 Exports
The following export product groups represent the highest dollar value in Azerbaijani global shipments during 2022. Also shown is the percentage share each export category represents in terms of overall exports from Azerbaijan.
- Mineral fuels including oil: US$35.3 billion (92.5% of total exports)
- Fruits, nuts: $448.7 million (1.2%)
- Plastics, plastic articles: $386.2 million (1%)
- Vegetables: $218.9 million (0.6%)
- Aluminum: $217.6 million (0.6%)
- Cotton: $213.8 million (0.6%)
- Fertilizers: $210.7 million (0.6%)
- Gems, precious metals: $190.2 million (0.5%)
- Organic chemicals: $138.5 million (0.4%)
- Iron, steel: $90.2 million (0.2%)
Azerbaijan’s top 10 exports accounted for 98.1% of the overall value of its global shipments.
Mineral fuels including oil was the fastest grower among the top 10 export categories, up by 79.8% from 2021 to 2022.
In second place for improving export sales was fertilizers exported from Azerbaijan via a 73.7% advance.
Azerbaijan’s shipments of organic chemicals posted the third-fastest gain in value, up by 38.8%.
The leading decliner among Azerbaijan’s top 10 export categories was cotton, pulled down by a -21.7% year-over-year reduction.
At the more granular four-digit Harmonized Tariff System code level, crude oil represents Azerbaijan’s most valuable exported product at 51.5% of the country’s total global sales. In second place were petroleum gases (39.3%) trailed by processed petroleum oils (1.4%), nitrogenous fertilizers (0.5%), unwrought gold (0.5%), uncarded cotton (0.5%), miscellaneous fresh fruits (also 0.5%), fresh or chilled tomatoes (0.4%), ethylene polymers (0.4%), then propylene or olefin polymers (also 0.4%).
Products Behind Azerbaijan’s Best Trade Surpluses
Overall Azerbaijan achieved a US$23.6 billion trade surplus for 2022, expanding by 124.8% from the $10.5 billion in black ink one year earlier in 2021.
The following types of Azerbaijani product shipments represent positive net exports or a trade balance surplus. Investopedia defines net exports as the value of a country’s total exports minus the value of its total imports.
In a nutshell, net exports represent the amount by which foreign spending on a home country’s goods or services exceeds or lags the home country’s spending on foreign goods or services.
- Mineral fuels including oil: US$34 billion (Up by 76.2% since 2021)
- Fruits, nuts: $299.6 million (Up by 9.2%)
- Cotton: $206.7 million (Down by -22.7%)
- Gems, precious metals: $151.8 million (Up by 80.5%)
- Vegetables: $131.9 million (Down by -0.4%)
- Fertilizers: $123.2 million (Up by 63.1%)
- Organic chemicals: $83 million (Up by 39.4%)
- Aluminum: $46.9 million (Down by -37%)
- Ores, slag, ash: $25.3 million (Up by 2.3%)
- Salt, sulphur, stone, cement: $19.4 million (Up by 153%)
Azerbaijan has highly positive net exports in the international trade of crude oil and, to a lesser extent, petroleum gases and electrical energy. In turn, these cashflows indicate Azerbaijan’s strong competitive advantages under the mineral fuels-related category.
Products Causing Azerbaijan’s Worst Trade Deficits
Below are exports from Azerbaijan that result in negative net exports or product trade balance deficits. These negative net exports reveal product categories where foreign spending on home country Azerbaijan’s goods trail Azerbaijani importer spending on foreign products.
- Machinery including computers: -US$1.7 billion (Down by -1.8% since 2021)
- Vehicles: -$1.3 billion (Up by 14.2%)
- Electrical machinery, equipment: -$1.1 billion (Up by 11.9%)
- Pharmaceuticals: -$650.6 million (Up by 24.1%)
- Articles of iron or steel: -$545.1 million (Up by 9.8%)
- Cereals: -$512.6 million (Up by 35.3%)
- Wood: -$380.4 million (Up by 17.7%)
- Iron, steel: -$358.1 million (Up by 40.3%)
- Animal/vegetable fats, oils, waxes: -$266.9 million (Up by 40.8%)
- Optical, technical, medical apparatus: -$264 million (Up by 26.9%)
Azerbaijan has highly negative net exports and therefore deep international trade deficits under the product category titled machinery including computers.
Azerbaijani Export Companies
Not one Azerbaijani corporation ranks among Forbes Global 2000.
Wikipedia lists exports-related companies from Azerbaijan. Selected examples are shown below.
- Akkord Industry Construction Investment Corp (construction materials)
- Azal Avia Cargo (cargo airline)
- AzMeCo (methanol)
- AzSamand (vehicles)
- Bahra Biscuit Factory (food)
- Ganja Auto Plant (vehicles)
- Gazelli Group (cosmetics)
- Inter Glass (glass products)
- Shollar water (beverages)
- SOCAR (oil, gas)
In macroeconomic terms, Azerbaijan’s total exported goods represent 21.1% of its overall Gross Domestic Product for 2022 ($180.9 billion valued in Purchasing Power Parity US dollars). That 21.1% for exports to overall GDP in PPP for 2022 compares to 13.8% one year earlier. Those percentages indicate a relatively increasing reliance on products sold on international markets for Azerbaijan’s total economic performance, albeit based on a short timeframe.
Another key economic indicator is a country’s jobless rate. The Azerbaijani unemployment rate averaged 5.886% for 2022, down from an average 5.952% in 2021.
Azerbaijan’s capital city is Baku, derived from Persian wording that translates to “Wind-pounded city”.
See also Italy’s Top Trading Partners, Turkey’s Top Trading Partners , Crude Oil Exports by Country and Sweet Cherries Exports by Country
Research Sources:
Central Intelligence Agency, Country Profiles, The World Factbook. Accessed on June 23, 2023
Forbes Global 2000 rankings, The World’s Biggest Public Companies. Accessed on June 23, 2023
International Monetary Fund, World Economic Outlook Database (GDP based on Purchasing Power Parity). Accessed on June 23, 2023
International Trade Centre, Trade Map. Accessed on June 23, 2023
Investopedia, Net Exports Definition. Accessed on June 23, 2023
Wikipedia, Gross domestic product. Accessed on June 23, 2023
Wikipedia, List of Companies of Azerbaijan. Accessed on June 23, 2023
Wikipedia, Purchasing power parity. Accessed on June 23, 2023