Official Name: | Ust-Luga |
Native Name: | Усть-Луга |
Settlement Type: | Village |
Pushpin Map: | Russia Leningrad Oblast#Russia |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | Russia |
Subdivision Name1: | Leningrad Oblast |
Subdivision Name3: | Kingiseppsky District |
Subdivision Type4: | Municipality |
Utc Offset1: | +3:00 |
Coordinates: | 59.6603°N 28.2769°W |
Ust-Luga (Russian: Усть-Луга, Votic: Laugasuu, both meaning 'mouth of the Luga', Finnish: Laukaansuu, Laukaansuu) is a settlement and railway station in Kingiseppsky District of Leningrad Oblast, Russia, near the Estonian border, situated on the Luga River near its entry into the Luga Bay of the Gulf of Finland, about 110km (70miles) west of St. Petersburg.
Ust-Luga is the site of an important coal and fertiliser terminal, constructed at a cost of $2.1 billion. Construction work started in 1997, in part to avoid dry cargo shipments through the Baltic states,[1] and was accelerated at the urging of President Vladimir Putin, who inaugurated the new port facilities in 2001. The 3,700-metre approach canal is deep and capable of accommodating ships with a capacity of 150,000 tonnes and more. In May 2008, Putin confirmed[2] that Ust-Luga will be the final point of the projected Second Baltic Pipeline,[3] an oil transportation route bypassing Belarus.
The Ust-Luga container terminal was launched in December 2011. It is operated by the National Container Company.[4]
The port adjoins the Ust-Luga Multimodal Complex, which allows for immediate freight handling on site.
In 2018, the port handled 98.7 million tonnes of cargo.[5]
In October 2021, Gazprom and RusGazDobycha announced they would build a plant to process ethane-containing natural gas and a large-scale liquefied natural gas (LNG) production plant, Baltic LNG, with a capacity of 13 million tons of LNG per year.[6] [7] High-ethane gas from the Tambeyskoye gas field and the Achimov and Valanginian deposits of the Nadym-Pur-Taz region will supply the plant.[8] [9]
An Ust-Luga oil terminal operated by Novatek was attacked by a Ukrainian aerial drone on the night of 21 January 2024 during the Russian invasion of Ukraine hostilities, causing a fire that forced the suspension of some operations.[10]
As of 2005, the population of Ust-Luga did not exceed 2,000, but the port administration expected it to grow to 34,000 by 2025.[11]