Under sanctions vessel Fortuna starts laying Nord Stream 2 pipes off Germany
Despite sanctions imposed by the US in January, Russian vessel Fortuna has started laying pipes for the Gazprom-led Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline in German waters.
According to an article by Reuters, Germany’s Waterway and Shipping Authority stated that the Fortuna arrived on site and started laying pipes. Fortuna will be working in German waters from the 22nd May to the 30th June, having earlier laid pipes in Denmark.
In December 2020, the Fortuna was involved in completing a 2.6-kilometre-long portion of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline in Germany which was stalled due to a threat of US sanctions.
Initial sanctions by the U.S. were imposed on the project back in December 2019 when offshore installation contractor Allseas suspended pipelaying works.
Following the completion of the short stretch in Germany, the Fortuna proceeded to Denmark to lay the 120 kilometres of pipes in the country’s waters.
In March, a second Russian pipe-laying vessel, the Akademik Cherskiy, was undergoing sea trials ahead of joining the Nord Stream 2 project. The vessel was intended to join the Fortuna in Danish waters. According to the latest AIS data, Akademik Cherskiy is still near Denmark.
But March also was a month for politics as the US State Department stated that any entity involved in Russia’s Nord Stream 2 offshore pipeline project risked US sanctions and should immediately abandon work on the pipeline.
By that time, the Fortuna was already under sanctions imposed by the Trump administration in its last day in office.
Germany’s Greens Party also chimed in by promising to abolish the contested Nord Stream 2 pipeline in their election programme.
This is yet to become a reality as the elections in Germany are set for the 26th September this year. Another problem is the hurdle this promise creates for a potential alliance between Angela Merkel’s conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU) party and the Greens – or Bündnis 90/Die Grünen party, its full name.
While the US is imposing sanctions, the German Greens are promising to stop the project, Russian giant Gazprom is carrying on with the final 30 kilometres of the pipeline in Germany.
Nord Stream 2 told Reuters via e-mail that all of the current works in Germany were performed per available permits.
As for $11 billion-worth Nord Stream 2, it is designed as two parallel 48-inch lines, roughly 1,200 kilometres long, each starting south-west of St Petersburg and ending at the German coast at Greifswald.
The gas pipelines will have the capacity to transport 55 billion cubic metres of Russian gas a year to the EU, for at least 50 years.
Nord Stream 2 will be doubling the capacity of the existing Nord Stream gas pipeline and take gas to Europe via Germany, bypassing Ukraine which would deprive it of lucrative transit fees.
The project is a rising point of contention between Moscow and Washington. The United States, which is looking to sell its liquefied natural gas to Europe, said that Nord Stream 2 would increase Russia’s economic and political leverage over Europe. Moscow and Germany both claim that it is a commercial project.
Source: Offshore Energy Today