Nov 16, 2021
The BBC reported, “Germany’s energy regulator has suspended the approval process for the controversial Nord Stream 2 natural gas pipeline from Russia to Germany.
It said the pipeline’s operating company needed to be compliant with German law before it would certify the €10bn (£8.4bn) project. The decision sent UK and mainland Europe wholesale gas prices, already under pressure, to three-week highs.
Critics fear the pipeline will increase Europe’s energy dependence on Russia. Russia’s state-owned Gazprom said the pipeline was ready in September, but it has been beset by delays. Running under the Baltic Sea, Nord Stream 2 will double Moscow’s gas exports to Germany, but it will also circumvent Ukraine, which relies on existing pipelines for income and would be hard-hit by the loss of transit fees.
German businesses have invested heavily in the 1,225km (760-mile) pipeline and former Chancellor Gerhard Schröder has played a big role in its development.
The German regulator said ‘it would only be possible to certify an operator of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline if that operator was organised in a legal form under German law.’
The decision is likely to set the project back several months and even when it receives German approval it will require a green light from the European Commission.
The regulator said its approval procedure would remain suspended until ‘the main assets and human resources’ had been transferred from the Swiss-based Nord Stream 2 parent company to its German subsidiary, which owns and operates the German part of the pipeline.
Ukraine has opposed Nord Stream 2, described by President Volodymyr Zelenskyy as a ‘dangerous geopolitical weapon.’
This week, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson said a choice was coming shortly ‘between mainlining ever more Russian hydrocarbons in giant new pipelines and sticking up for Ukraine and championing the cause of peace and stability.’
The German regulator’s decision to suspend certification has been welcomed by Ukrainian energy firm Naftogaz. And Polish gas company PGNiG responded with a call for energy solidarity in the EU to ensure security of supplies.
The Nord Stream 2 consortium declined to comment on possible delays to gas exports.
Under the EU’s gas directive, gas producers have to be separate from the company that owns the pipeline.”