Sat, May 26 2012

Russia starts delivering gas to Europe through Nord Stream pipeline

Tue, Sep 06 2011 23:03 CET 1338 Views
Russia starts delivering gas to Europe through Nord Stream pipeline

Russian prime minister Vladimir Putin, centre, with former German chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, right, and Gazprom chief Alexei Miller after arriving in the town of Portovaya, September 6 2011.

Photo: Reuters

Russia has started feeding natural gas into a Baltic Sea pipeline that will deliver supplies to western Europe, while bypassing traditional transit routes in Ukraine.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin attended a special ceremony Tuesday to mark the launch of the pipeline in the city of Vyborg in northwestern Russia.

The pipeline, known as Nord Stream, connects Vyborg to the German port town of Greifswald but bypasses Ukraine.

Meanwhile, Ukraine says it is prepared to take Russia to court to prove it violated accords in a worsening gas dispute between the two countries.

Ukrainian officials are threatening to file an international arbitration suit against Russia’s state-run energy company Gazprom, saying Ukraine is overpaying Russia by billions of dollars for imports from Gazprom.

There have been many price disputes between Moscow and Kyiv about natural gas deliveries to Ukraine, whose pipelines serve other European nations. In 2009, a disagreement between the two nations cut natural gas supplies to western Europe during the cold winter months, leaving many without heat.

Nord Stream is a twin pipeline system. The first line can deliver about 27 billion cubic meters of gas per year.

Source: VOANews.com

  • Print
  • Send via email
  • Translate to
  • Share:

To post comments, please, Login or Register.


Please read the The Sofia Echo forum comments policy.

Ukraine to guarantee gas deliveries

Ukraine says it will guarantee the transit of Russian natural gas to Europe regardless of the outcome of a Ukrainian dispute with Russia about the price of the gas deliveries.

Ukrainian president pursues controversial Russia policies

New president Yanukovych's rapprochement with Russia is fuelling fears he may harm Ukraine's interests and lead the nation toward a break-up.

Squabble Stream

For once, Bulgaria’s reluctance on South Stream takes a back seat as tensions between Gazprom and Eni rise

Heating up

Two-horse race between EU-backed Nabucco and Russia’s South Stream pipelines looks to be heating up, but hurdles remain in the way of each project

Nabucco summit ends with political support but uncertainty about funding

Countries involved in the Nabucco gas pipeline project will sign a deal in June 2009 on the technical and legal aspects of the project, described in a joint declaration as a priority for the European Union, but beyond a statement by the European Investment Bank that it might put up a quarter of the money for construction of the eight billion euro scheme, how and whether Nabucco will be funded remains unclear.

More in this category

Putin takes Russian presidency for historic third term

World leaders acknowledged Putin's victory with reservations, and international observers say the election was skewed in the former president's favour.

France elects first socialist president in nearly two decades

Hollande's call for more spending and economic growth has struck a chord with French voters.

Serge Sarkisian’s ruling party wins Armenian parliamentary elections – exit polls

Gallup International Association poll gives president Sarkisian’s party 44 per cent, while three main challengers alleged ‘machinations’ by ruling party in what – in contrast to 2008 – reportedly was a largely peaceful election.

Report: Only 14.5 per cent of people have access to free press

The Freedom House report says the media environment in the Middle East and North Africa underwent major improvements in 2011, but remained the worst-performing part of the world.

Don’t like the job, time to move on

Dissatisfaction with jobs is a global phenomenon and two-thirds of workers all over the world intend to look for another job in the near future, the survey concluded.