Gazprom does not resume gas transport through Nord Stream 1

Moscow Contrary to what has been announced, no gas will flow through the Nord Stream 1 Baltic Sea pipeline from this Saturday. The state-owned company Gazprom announced this on Telegram on Friday evening.

The reason is an oil leak in the Portovaya compressor station. The gas flow remains stopped until it is eliminated. It had been expected that gas would flow through the line again from Saturday morning after the announced three-day maintenance work had been completed.

According to Gazprom, the leak was discovered during maintenance work on the station, which was carried out jointly with experts from Siemens Energy. The leaked oil was found in several places. It is not possible to guarantee the safe operation of the last remaining gas turbine there. It was said that such oil spills had happened in the past.

A letter about the complaints about the Trent 60 unit with the number 24 and about the necessary repairs went to the head of Siemens Energy, Christian Bruch, Gazprom said.

Top jobs of the day

Find the best jobs now and
be notified by email.

The first gas deliveries had previously been announced for Saturday morning. This emerged from preliminary data on the Nord Stream AG website. According to this, gas deliveries were scheduled again from 2 a.m. on Saturday morning.

No gas has flowed through Nord Stream 1 since Wednesday morning

The volume of the announced deliveries initially corresponded to the level before the interruption, i.e. around 20 percent of the maximum possible volume and thus 33 million cubic meters of natural gas daily. In the late Friday afternoon, the preliminary data then showed only a hardly significant amount.

graphic

Since Wednesday morning, no gas has flowed through the last most important pipeline for Russian gas to Germany. According to the Russian energy company Gazprom, the reason is maintenance work on a compressor station. The company had announced that the delivery stop would last until September 2nd.

The Russian energy giant Gazprom is not to blame for the fact that the reliability of the line through the Baltic Sea is at risk, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told the Interfax agency at noon. There are no technical reserves. “Only one turbine is running,” he said when asked by a journalist about possible further interruptions.

More: G7 wants to cap the price of Russian oil – and make changes to the previous sanctions

source site-13