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Gazprom annuls Saipem deal for Turkish Stream construction

10 July 2015
Oil&Gas
energynomics

The energy group Gazprom announced that it has canceled a contract with Italian contractor Saipem to build the first section of the pipeline under the Black Sea, which had been reached during negotiations to construct the South Stream pipeline in 2014, RIA Novosti reports.

“Today South Stream Transport B.V informed Saipem S.p.A. of the cancellation of the contract to build the first segment of the gas pipeline’s undersea section, an agreement reached during the realization of the ‘South Stream’ project in 2014”, South Stream Transport announced in a press release on Wednesday.

According to South Stream Transport, in which Gazprom gained 100 percent ownership in December 2014, after buying shares from minority shareholders (the Italian company Eni, Wintershall of Germany and EDF of France), the decision was reached due to a failure to come to an agreement on a range of working and commercial issues related to the project.

Saipem had been due to begin laying the first pipeline, beginning at the Russkaya Compressor Station near Anapa in Russia, at the beginning of June; construction of the line is planned to be finished in December 2016.

The contract with Italian energy engineering Saipem, in which Eni has a majority stake, to lay the first length of the gas pipeline was agreed upon in March 2014 as part of negotiations for the construction of the South Stream project, which came to an end in December 2014 after the failure of negotiations with Bulgaria to run the pipeline across its territory.

On December 1 2014 it was announced that Gazprom had signed a deal with the Turkish company Botas Petroleum Pipeline Corporation to construct the Turkish Stream pipeline, running across the Black Sea to Kiyikoy on the Turkish coast.

The pipeline will have an annual capacity of 63 billion cubic meters of gas, and will have a delivery point at Luleburgas in Turkey for Turkish customers, and an additional delivery point at the Ipsala border crossing between Turkey and Greece for European customers.

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