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Denmark grants an operations permit for the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline

The Danish Energy Agency has granted an operations permit to Nord Stream 2 for laying the 55 bcm/year Nord Stream 2 pipeline on the Danish continental shelf on a number of conditions to ensure a safe operation of the project. The gas pipeline starts in Russia, passes through Finnish, Swedish, Danish and German marine areas; regulatory authorities in Russia, Finland, Sweden, Germany, and Denmark have all granted permits for the project.

A consortium associating Gazprom (50%), Uniper, Shell, OMV, Wintershall, and Engie (10% each) is building the 1,230 km-long Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline. The project, which will double the throughput of the current Nord Stream pipeline, is causing controversy as Germany would increase its dependence on Russian gas while bypassing Ukraine. In January 2020, Russia postponed the commissioning of Nord Stream 2 from mid-2020 to the end of 2020 or early 2021, due to US sanctions against the gas pipeline that could delay the projects by several months.

 

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