Russia energy min sees South Stream cost at $20 bln

Energy Trade

Russia’s Energy Ministry has put the preliminary cost of the planned South Stream gas pipeline, a major new route to southern Europe, at $20 billion, a ministry spokeswoman said on Wednesday.

The route, which will be jointly built by Russian gas export monopoly Gazprom and Italy’s Eni, is expected to take 30 billion cubic meters (bcm) of gas per year and rival the US and EU-backed Nabucco pipeline to southern Europe. The ministry spokeswoman quoted Energy Minister Sergei Shmatko as saying the project could cost $20 billion at his meeting with Italy’s minister for economic development, Claudio Scajola, earlier this week in Moscow.

Eni’s CEO Paolo Scaroni said last year South Stream may cost at least €10 billion ($15.73 billion). „This (the $20 billion figure) is one of the preliminary estimates we have, based on a preliminary feasibility study. The cost is likely to be changed in future,” said the spokeswoman. Gazprom’s spokesman declined to comment and said it would issue a final estimate of South Stream’s cost after its feasibility study is concluded by the end of next year. The pipeline, which is expected to be commissioned in 2013, is to travel 900 kilometers under the Black Sea to Bulgaria and then split into two onshore routes -- to Italy and central Europe.

Russia has agreed to route the pipeline through Bulgaria, Serbia, Hungary and Greece, marking major victories in a ‘pipeline war’ with the European Union. Gazprom is currently in talks with Slovenia to join South Stream as well.

Analysts see the South Stream project posing a major challenge to the planned Nabucco pipeline scheme, under which gas would come from ex-Soviet Azerbaijan to south Europe via Turkey in an EU effort to diversify energy sources away from reliance on Russia. (Reuters)

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