Nord Stream pipeline reaches European mainland

Options

Nord Stream pipeline reaches European mainland

"This construction phase was important and exciting for us, not just from a technological point of view. It also has a symbolic significance, as the Nord Stream pipeline has now reached the European mainland for the first time and, moreover here in Lubmin, the point where WINGAS is planning and already building the natural gas transfer station and the OPAL and NEL onshore pipelines," says Dr. Georg Nowack, Nord Stream AG project manager for Germany.
Since 28 June, on the pipelaying ship "Castoro Dieci" (C10) anchored around one kilometer from the landing point, work has been underway to weld together the approximately twelve-meter-long pipes to form the first pipeline string. The pipeline, which is thus growing at up to 24 meters per hour, is pulled ashore with the aid of a heavy-duty draw winch mounted on land. The winch itself weighs 100 tonnes and in this project it is working with its maximum traction force of around 500 tonnes. This is also necessary in order to pull ashore the pipeline string, which is now around 1,000 meters long and weighs around 2,000 tonnes. Up to around 120 meters inland, this occurs with it floating in a sheet piling trench.Afterwards, the pipeline string is pulled across the ground, supported by large rollers, to the intended final position around 250 meters beyond the shoreline. Once the pipeline string has reached the correct position on land, the floats are removed. The C10 then begins pipelaying in a northerly direction by slowly moving away from the landing point, one pipe length at a time. After around five kilometers, the first pipeline string is then left and the pipelaying ship returns to the starting point. Here, it is once again anchored and begins with the production of the Nord Stream pipeline's second string. The second pipeline string is scheduled to reach land in mid-July.
From fall 2011, natural gas from the Nord Stream pipeline will flow into the transfer station which is currently being built. There, it will first be purified and preheated to the right temperature. The quality, quantity and pressure of the natural gas will then be measured. In order to then transport it southward through the 470-kilometer-long Baltic Sea Pipeline Link (OPAL) via Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Brandenburg and Saxony to the Czech border near Olbernhau in the Erzgebirge mountains, it will be recompressed to as much as 100 bar after half of the total route south of Berlin.
The construction of the building and the boiler house for the natural gas transfer station is currently in preparation. The laying of the foundation stone already took place in February of this year. Construction of the high-pressure systems in the station, which in future will guarantee transport of up to 55 billion cubic meters of natural gas from the Nord Stream pipeline, is to begin in November 2010.
Construction work on OPAL has already been underway since September 2009: between Lubmin and the Erzgebirge mountains, all construction sections are being worked on at top speed. Construction is currently proceeding at around 2,500 meters per day. "We are very satisfied with this and we are well on schedule," says Hans-Georg Egelkamp, OPAL project manager at WINGAS. With a diameter of 1.40 meters, OPAL is the largest natural gas pipeline to be laid in Europe. The pipeline is being built by WINGAS, as commissioned by OPAL NEL TRANSPORT GmbH and E.ON Ruhrgas AG.
Of the 470-kilometer pipeline, 260 kilometers have already been welded. By summer, over half of the line will already have been laid in the ground.
Already now, 160 kilometers have been laid.
In addition to OPAL, construction of the North European Gas Pipeline (NEL) is also planned. This is to run from the Nord Stream pipeline landing point, past Schwerin and Hamburg, to the Rehden gas storage facility in Lower Saxony, thus connecting the Nord Stream to the European pipeline network, just like OPAL.
Nord Stream is a natural gas pipeline that will link Russia and the European Union through the Baltic Sea. The European Union's annual natural gas imports in the year 2007 were approximately 312 billion cubic metres (bcm) and are projected to increase to 516 bcm by the year 2030. This means that by 2030, the EU's annual import needs will have increased by about 200 bcm (Source: IEA, World Energy Outlook, 2009). Nord Stream will
meet about 25 percent of this additional gas import requirement by connecting the European gas pipeline network to some of the world's largest gas reserves. The project will be an important contribution to long-term security of supply and a milestone of the energy partnership between the European Union and Russia.
Nord Stream AG plans to have the first of two parallel pipelines operational in 2011. Each line is approximately 1,220 kilometres long, providing a transport capacity of some 27.5 bcm per year. Full capacity of about 55 bcm per year will be reached when the second line goes on stream. This is enough gas to supply more than 26 million European households. Nord Stream AG is an international joint venture established for the planning, construction and subsequent operation of the new offshore gas pipeline through the Baltic Sea.
Russian OAO Gazprom holds a 51 percent stake in the joint venture. The German companies BASF SE/Wintershall Holding GmbH and E.ON Ruhrgas AG hold 15.5 percent each, and the Dutch gas infrastructure company N.V. Nederlandse Gasunie and the French energy company GDF SUEZ S.A. each hold a 9 percent stake.
European energy provider WINGAS GmbH & Co. KG is active in natural gas trading and distribution in Germany, Belgium, France, Great Britain, Austria, the Czech Republic and Denmark. Its customers include municipal utilities, regional gas suppliers, industrial firms and power plants. Since 1990 WINGAS has invested more than 3 billion Euros in the development of a natural gas transport and storage infrastructure. WINGAS TRANSPORT pipeline network, which is over 2,000 kilometers long, connects the major gas reserves in Siberia and in the North Sea to the growing markets in Western Europe. In Rehden in North Germany, WINGAS has the largest natural gas storage facility in Western Europe - with a working gas volume of over four billion cubic meters, and the company also participates in Central Europe's second largest storage facility in Haidach, Austria. Additional natural gas storage facilities are currently being built in Great Britain and Germany in order to secure the supply of natural gas in Europe.
OPAL NEL TRANSPORT GmbH will perform the tasks of network operator for the OPAL. It is part of the WINGAS Group. The company plans to connect the OPAL to the WINGAS TRANSPORT gas pipeline network.

RU

Full version

Close
Яндекс.Метрика