Nord Stream 2 Gas Pipeline edges closer to completion as broader US sanctions come into effect
EU
imported the highest ever volume of LNG in 2019 at 108 billion cubic meters,
marking 27% of total gas imports and 22% of the EU's gas consumption, according
to the European Commission. The gas market report showed that Qatar supplied 30
bcm of LNG to the EU in 2019, followed by Russia with 21 bcm and the US with 17
bcm.
Russian
pipe-laying vessel Akademik Cherskiy, which is expected to be used to
finish the Moscow-led Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline project within the next few
months, is approaching the German Baltic Sea port of Sassnitz where it is
expected to dock tomorrow morning, according to shipping website Vesselfinder.
Sassnitz is
the logistical base for the Nord Stream 2 pipeline projects, and has been in
the spotlight since three prominent US Republican senators, Ted Cruz, Tom Cotton and Ron Jonson, sent a letter to the local City Hall in August threatening not only the
companies' managers – but also port employees – with fines and
sanctions for its role in supplying and loading Russian pipe-laying vessels.
That letter
made reference to the so-called CAATSA law, short for
"Countering America's Adversaries through Sanctions", which was
passed in Congress by both Democrats and Republicans with a large majority.
Local
Officials and Companies Face Sanctions Pressure
Frank Kracht, the mayor of Sassnitz, says he was personally threatened with legal and economic
sanctions because, as mayor, he is legally a partner in the town’s port, which
is operated by the Fährhafen Sassnitz GmbH.
“Our
company, the management, the shareholders and all employees are threatened with
entry bans and the freezing of assets and assets in the USA. American
companies are also prohibited by law from doing business with us,” said Kracht.
Also in the
firing line is Mukran Port Terminals Gesellschaft, the
port’s appointed storage and stevedoring contractor for the
project.
Berlin and
Washington at Odds Over Gas Supplies
The Trump
administration is strongly opposed to Nord Stream 2, which it claims would
leave Germany overly dependent on Russian pipeline gas supplies.
The
opposing view in much of Europe is that the US wants to export more liquefied
natural gas (LNG) to Europe and regards Russian natural gas as a commercial rival that needs to be moved out of
the way as US LNG output is rising rapidly.
The prime minister of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Manuela Schwesig, has strongly supported the project. “The threats coming from Washington are absolutely unacceptable. Germany is free to decide for itself where and how it sources its energy,” she said.
If anything, the US’s heavy-handed approach has served to unite political opinion in Germany behind Nord Stream 2. There is also a wider EU concern that the five European energy companies providing 50% of the finance for the project will also be targeted.
"An act just short of war."
Tensions
over the $11 billion have intensified in recent days as the US has moved to
broaden sanctions on entities associated with the project.
Last
week, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced new sanctions on the Russia-Germany gas link
and said that the United States was building a coalition against the
pipeline. The fresh sanctions are a follow-up to US sanctions on
the Nord Stream 2 project from December 2019 that target individuals and
companies involved in the project.
Now the
United States is including in the sanctions companies “providing services or
facilities for upgrades or installation of equipment for those vessels, or
funding for upgrades or installation of equipment for those vessels,” according
to the latest guidance.
Widening
restrictions on the participants of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline constitute
the “egregious use of the sanctions weapon” targeting both Russia and the US’s
loyal ally Germany, former British MP George Galloway said on 22 October.
“Germany is
not some banana republic in Central America,” the Scottish politician said
last week. “This is an act just short of war against Russia, seeking to
destroy something on which billions have already been expended, and which is
the sovereign will of two sovereign European countries and for the most bogus
of pretexts.”
Increasing
demand for natural gas in Europe
Natural gas
plays an essential role in European and German energy policy as an intermediate
step on the way to the supply of renewable energies. The German government
has decided to phase out nuclear energy by the end of 2022 and
coal by 2038.
Nord Stream
2 runs parallel to the existing Nord Stream pipeline, which came into operation
in 2011 with a capacity of 55 bcm a year, which would be matched by Nord Stream
2. Most of the 1,240 km subsea pipeline has been completed, but Allseas, the
original pipe-laying contractor, suspended activity last November due to the
sanctions threat.
Nord Stream
2 is led by Russian gas giant Gazprom, with half of the funding provided by
Germany's Uniper and BASF's Wintershall unit, Anglo-Dutch oil major Shell,
Austria's OMV and France’s Engie.
Reproduced from Sputnik News

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