Yamal–Europe pipeline


The Yamal–Europe natural gas pipeline is a long pipeline connecting natural gas fields in Western Siberia and in the future on the Yamal peninsula, Russia, with Germany.

History

Planning for the Yamal–Europe pipeline started in 1992. Intergovernmental agreements between Russia, Belarus and Poland were signed in 1993. In 1994, Wingas, the joint venture of Gazprom and Wintershall, a subsidiary of BASF, started building the Poland section of the pipeline. The first gas was delivered to Germany through the Belarus-Polish corridor in 1997. The Belarus and Polish sections were completed in September 1999 and the pipeline reached its rated annual capacity of about of natural gas in 2005, after completion of all compressor stations.

Route

The pipeline starts at the Torzhok gas hub in Russia and is fed by the Northern Tyumen Regions – Torzhok gas pipeline. Its length includes around in Russia, in Belarus and in Poland. The German gas system is connected to the Yamal–Europe pipeline through the JAGAL pipeline.
Notwithstanding its name, the pipeline is initially supplied by gas fields in the Nadym Pur Taz District of the Tyumen Oblast and not from Yamal peninsula. It would be supplied from the Bovanenkovo field of Yamal peninsula after construction of the long Bovanenkovo-Ukhta pipeline, a part of the Yamal project.

Technical features

The capacity of the pipeline is of natural gas per annum. The diameter of the pipeline is. The pressure in the pipeline is provided by 14 compressor stations.

Ownership

The Russian section of the pipeline is owned and operated by Gazprom. The Belarusian section is owned by Gazprom and operated by Gazprom Transgaz Belarus. The Polish section is owned and operated by EuRoPol Gaz S.A., a joint venture of the Polish PGNiG, Russian Gazprom and Polish Gas-Trading S.A..

Second pipeline

Since 2005, there have been plans to build the second leg of the pipeline. On 1 November 2007, the Russian minister of industry and energy Viktor Khristenko said that Russia has dropped the idea of building the second leg of a pipeline, preferring construction of the Nord Stream pipeline. In 2013 Russia showed interest in reviving the project, with an estimated $5 billion investment that could lead to the completion of the pipeline by 2019. This has not happened as of 2020.