Fortuna, a Russian vessel is potentially able to complete the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline, has departed from the German port of Mukran in the Baltic Sea, days after Denmark gave the project the green light.

Nord Stream 2 had suspended construction after U.S. President Donald Trump imposed sanctions in on the pipeline in December. 

Russian gas giant Gazprom, which leads the project, and Nord Stream 2’s operational company declined to comment.

The Danish Energy Agency said it would allow the Gazprom-led project to use pipe-laying vessels with anchors instead of the more advanced vessels using self-positioning technology, which are affected by U.S. sanctions.

The ship left Mukran (where pipes for the Nord Stream 2 are stored) last week, and is now moving in Danish waters. Fortuna is a pipe-lay crane vessel that was built in 2010 and is sailing under the Russian flag.

Another Russian vessel, Akademik Cherskiy, which also able to lay pipes, is moored near Mukran.

Swiss-Dutch company Allseas, which was laying the pipeline using two vessels – Pioneering Spirit and Solitaire – had halted work to avoid U.S. sanctions.

Construction of the 1,230-kilometer pipeline is nearly finished but it needs to complete a final stretch of roughly 120-kilometres in Danish waters.

For more information visit www.gazprom.com

13th July 2020