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Nord Stream Pipeline Moves Another Step Closer to Completion

  • Two of the three sections of the 1,224 kilometre gas pipeline to be joined together off the coast of Finland
  • Third section to be joined up off the coast of Gotland, Sweden, in the summer
  • First pipeline to become operational before the end of 2011

May 11, 2011 | Zug | The Nord Stream Pipeline takes another important step towards its target of starting to deliver gas directly from Russia to the European Union by the end of 2011. Preparations for welding together two of the three sections of the 1,224 kilometre pipeline through the Baltic Sea have now started. They will be welded together on the seabed off the coast of Finland in a complex process expected to take about two weeks. The technical completion of the first of the twin pipelines will be achieved in June, when the final section is welded onto the pipeline off the Swedish island of Gotland. Construction of the second of the twin pipelines is scheduled for completion in 2012.

Nord Stream was able to design its offshore pipeline to operate without an intermediate compressor station, but with three different design pressures and pipe wall thicknesses as the gas pressure drops over its long journey from Russia to landfall in Germany.

The connection of these three pipeline sections will be carried out at the two offshore locations where the design pressure changes from 220 to 200 bar and from 200 to 177,5 bar respectively. Today sees the start of the connection of the Gulf of Finland section and the Central section at a sea depth of approximately 80 metres. The connection of the Central and South Western sections off Gotland will take place at a depth of approximately 110 metres.

Each of the three sections is gauged and thoroughly pressure-tested before being joined together by “hyperbaric tie-ins” and subsequently linked to the landfalls in Russia and Germany. The pre-commissioning activities are already underway: for the Gulf of Finland and Central section cleaning, gauging and pressure-testing have been successfully completed, and the pressure test for South Western section now follows. On the site of the German landfall all piping has been completed and successfully pressure tested. For the Russian landfall site pressure testing is expected by the end of May after completion of all welding works. Further rigorous testing will be carried out on the whole system before it becomes operational in the last quarter of 2011.

Remote-controlled underwater welding operations

The contract for the hyperbaric tie-ins is being carried out for Nord Stream by the French company Technip SA and its new-built diving support vessel, the Skandi Arctic. Technip uses equipment supplied by the Pipeline Repair System (PRS) pool administered by the Norwegian company Statoil ASA. This “tie-in” process takes place on the seabed in an underwater welding habitat. Welding operations are remotely controlled from the diving support vessel, and divers assist and monitor the subsea construction work.

The welding habitat supplied by the PRS pool is a dry zone on the seabed where divers work without diving equipment to set up the automatic welding machine. The welding is completely controlled from the dive support vessel. The Skandi Arctic transports and operates all of the equipment necessary to move, lift, cut and weld the pipeline sections together. Pipe Handling Frames (PHFs) move the pipeline ends into tie-in position. They can lift up to 150 tonnes and not only lift the pipeline sections, but also shift them sideways to line them up for welding.

When both of Nord Stream’s twin pipelines lines are completed in late 2012, Nord Stream will have the capacity to transport 55 billion cubic metres (bcm) a year from Russia to Europe, enough to supply 26 million homes. No other major new pipeline with a capacity over 10 bcm is expected to come on-stream before 2015, but as of today all 101,000 large diameter 23-tonne pipes of the first line have already been laid on the seabed.

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