GasAndes Pipeline explained

GasAndes pipeline
Type:natural gas
Country:Argentina, Chile
Partners:NOVA Corporation, Gasco, Gener, Compañía General de Combustibles, Techint Compañía Ténica Internacional
Discharge:3.3 billion cubic meter per year
Direction:east-west
Start:La Mora, Mendoza Province
Finish:San Bernardo on the outskirts of Santiago.
Est:1997

The GasAndes Pipeline is a 463km (288miles) long natural gas pipeline from La Mora, Mendoza in Argentina to San Bernardo on the outskirts of Santiago, Chile.

History

In 1991, Argentina and Chile concluded the Gas Interconnection Protocol. For the implementation of this protocol several pipeline projects were proposed. The GasAndes Pipeline project was proposed by the consortium of NOVA Corporation of Canada, Chilean companies Gasco and Gener, and Argentine companies Compañía General de Combustibles and Techint Compañía Ténica Internacional. The feasibility study of the pipeline was concluded in 1994. The pipeline was commissioned in 1997.[1]

Technical features

The diameter of the pipeline is 610mm and the annual capacity is 3.3 billion cubic meter. It is supplied mainly from the Neuquén gas fields. Total investments of the project was US$1.46 billion.[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: CESP . David R. Mares . Natural Gas Pipelines in The Southern Cone . May 2004 . 2007-05-12 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070709185213/http://www.rice.edu/energy/publications/docs/GAS_LNGPipelines_SouthernCone.pdf . 2007-07-09 . dead .