MOSCOW (Reuters) – The last section of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline has been welded into place, its operator said on Monday, meaning the two long stretches of the pipe can now be joined to complete the Baltic subsea link.
The $11 billion pipeline, which will double Russian gas exporter Gazprom’s capacity via the Baltic Sea, has drawn opposition from the United States, Ukraine and others opposed to Europe increasing its reliance on Russian energy imports.
The project is also seen allowing Russia to forego piping gas to Europe via Ukraine, thereby denying Kyiv of transit fees.
The Russian pipelaying vessel Fortuna welded the last of the double pipeline on to a stretch of the pipeline in German waters, the project’s operator said, adding this would now need to be welded to a long section in Danish waters to complete the project.
“As the next step, the section of the pipe coming from the German shore will be connected to the section coming from the Danish waters in a so-called above water tie-in,” it said.
“Pipe-laying work on the Nord Stream 2 pipeline has been completed,” Gazprom announced on messaging app Telegram.
The operator said it aimed to have Nord Stream 2 in operation by the end of the year.
The pipeline still needs to be certified and approved for use. Certification is expected to take up to four months but will only start once all paperwork is complete, which entails checks by the German economics ministry and Gazprom.
The new pipeline will be able to transport 55 billion cubic metres of gas per year, enough to supply 26 million households, operator Nord Stream 2 said.
(Reporting by Vladimir Soldatkin; writing by Tom Balmforth; editing by Edmund Blair and Jason Neely)