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Nord Stream Pipeline Inaugurated – Major Milestone for European Energy Security

  • Political and business leaders gather in Lubmin on Germany’s Baltic Sea coast to celebrate the arrival of gas in the European gas grid
  • Nord Stream provides a fixed link between Europe and Russia’s massive gas reserves for at least 50 years

Nov. 8, 2011 | Lubmin/Zug | The Nord Stream Pipeline became operational today and was hailed by political and business leaders as making a significant contribution to Europe’s long-term energy security. German Federal Chancellor Angela Merkel, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, the Prime Ministers of France François Fillon and the Netherlands Mark Rutte, and EU Energy Commissioner Günther Oettinger today formally inaugurated the first of Nord Stream’s twin 1,224 kilometre gas pipelines through the Baltic Sea. When fully operational in late 2012, Nord Stream’s two lines will have the capacity to transport 55 billion cubic metres of Russian gas a year to the EU for at least 50 years.

The heads of government and other political and business leaders were among the 500 guests who gathered today at Lubmin on Germany’s Baltic Sea coast for a formal ceremony to celebrate the arrival in Europe of gas through the Nord Stream Pipeline. The celebrations were led by the heads of the four countries whose companies are shareholders in Nord Stream, EU Commissioner Oettinger as well as the heads of the shareholder companies.

Nord Stream’s five shareholders Gazprom, BASF/Wintershall, E.ON Ruhrgas, Nederlandse Gasunie and GDF SUEZ all echoed the heads of government in hailing the significance of the Nord Stream Pipeline for long-term energy security. Nord Stream is providing this key energy infrastructure on schedule and on budget, at no cost to European taxpayers: the consortium’s five shareholders are shouldering 30 percent of the 7.4 billion euro investment, with commercial loans from a group of almost 30 international banks covering 70 percent.

The value to Europe of this new infrastructure was confirmed by the participation of the EU Energy Commissioner Günther Oettinger. Nord Stream is included in the Trans-European Energy Network Guidelines (TEN-E) of the European Union. In 2006, the project was designated a “project of European interest” by the European Commission, the European Parliament and the Council of the European Union.

Together, the political and business leaders inaugurated the pipeline, which provides a fixed link for at least 50 years between Europe’s gas markets and Russia’s vast gas reserves. The formal ceremony was held next to the site in Lubmin where the Nord Stream Pipeline is connected to the European gas grid, specifically to the onshore pipelines OPAL and NEL.

“Nord Stream has provided Russia’s Gazprom with a safe, modern and efficient additional route through which to supply gas to its partners and customers in the EU, in addition to the existing transit routes through Ukraine and Belarus,” said Matthias Warnig, Nord Stream Managing Director. Nord Stream is a commercial project based on long-term contracts by Gazprom Export to supply customers in Germany, Denmark, the UK, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, the Czech Republic and other countries.

“This new fixed link between Russia and the EU is one of the long-term solutions for the EU’s energy security,” Mr Warnig added. All experts agree that Europe faces a long-term shortfall in gas supplies: the International Energy Agency sees natural gas becoming the most important fuel in the EU energy mix by 2030, but domestic gas production is declining. “To help meet this long-term increase in demand for gas imports, our shareholders have committed to this long-term solution, creating a fixed link for at least 50 years between European markets and Russia’s massive gas reserves,” Mr Warnig added.

Before starting construction in April 2010, Nord Stream invested 100 million euros in the most comprehensive research of the Baltic Sea ever in planning the pipeline, and consulted widely to ensure that the design, routing, construction and operation of the pipeline will be safe and environmentally sound. Nord Stream is investing a further 40 million euros in comprehensive environmental monitoring along the route through the Baltic Sea to guarantee that the environment is not adversely affected.

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