OPAL pipeline explained

OPAL pipeline
Type:natural gas
Country:Germany
Direction:north-south
Start:Greifswald (Lubmin)
Finish:Olbernhau
Par:German eastern border
Partners:Wintershall Dea
Gazprom
Operator:OPAL Gastransport GmbH & Co KG
Est:2011
Length:470
Discharge: per year
Diameter Mm:1400

The OPAL (Ostsee-Pipeline-Anbindungsleitung) is a natural gas pipeline in Germany alongside the German eastern border. The OPAL pipeline is one of two projected pipelines connecting the Nord Stream 1 pipeline to the existing pipeline grid in Middle and Western Europe, the other one being the NEL pipeline.

Route

The 470km (290miles) long pipeline runs from Lubmin near Greifswald to Olbernhau near German-Czech border.[1] It connects the Nord Stream pipeline with the JAGAL (distributes gas from the Yamal-Europe pipeline), and the STEGAL (distributes gas from the Central-European Russian gas transit system (Transgas) via Czechia and Slovakia) pipelines in Germany. On the German-Czech border the pipeline is connected with the Gazela Pipeline, to connect gas export pipelines in Czechia.[2]

Technical features

The diameter of the pipeline is 1400mm and it has an operating pressure up to .[1] The capacity of the pipeline is 35e9m3 per year of natural gas. The compressor station in Radeland, Brandeburg, is built by Siemens.[3]

The pipeline cost around €1 billion. The construction was completed in 2011 and in August 2011 Nord Stream was connected with the OPAL pipeline.[4]

Project company

The pipeline was constructed by OPAL NEL TRANSPORT GmbH, a subsidiary of Wingas.[5] It is operated by OPAL Gastransport GmbH & Co KG, owned by WIGA Transport Beteiligungs-GmbH & Co. KG, a joint venture of Wintershall Dea and Gazprom.

Access by Gazprom

Polish state-run gas firm PGNiG and PGNiG Supply & Trading tried to restrict Gazprom's access to the pipeline. Oberlandesgericht Düsseldorf lifted the restrictions [6]

After the decision Gazprom increased the throughput to 72.5 million m3/d (26.462 billion/year).

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Lochner . Stefan . Bothe . David . From Russia with Gas An analysis of the Nord Stream pipeline's impact on the European Gas Transmission System with the Tiger-Model . EWI Working Paper . 7 . Institute of Energy Economics at the University of Cologne . 2 . September 2007 . 2008-03-05.
  2. News: The Prague Post. Markéta Hulpachová. RWE plans new pipeline. 2007-05-23. 2007-11-24. 2007-06-01. https://web.archive.org/web/20070601233357/http://www.praguepost.com/articles/2007/05/23/rwe-plans-new-pipeline.php. dead.
  3. News: PennWell Corporation. Offshore. Siemens wins Baltic pipeline compressor order. 2010-03-17. 2010-03-18. https://web.archive.org/web/20110103010302/http://www.offshore-mag.com/index/article-display/8751778052/articles/offshore/pipeline-transportation/caspian-sea/2010/03/siemens-wins_baltic.html. 2011-01-03. dead.
  4. News: John . Blau . . Nord Stream pipeline now connected to German link . 2011-08-26 . 2011-09-10.
  5. . OPAL NEL TRANSPORT GmbH applies for exemption from regulation. Project company plans Nord Stream pipeline links . 2008-07-25 . 2008-08-09 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110719114410/http://www.wingas.de/pi-ont-08-01.html?&L=1 . 2011-07-19 . dead.
  6. Web site: Gazprom gets access to OPAL pipeline. 2017-07-31.