TurkStream will be operational by end of 2019: Gazprom

TurkStream will be operational by end of 2019: Gazprom

ANAPA, Russia - Anadolu Agency
TurkStream will be operational by end of 2019: Gazprom

The TurkStream natural gas pipeline project which will carry Russian gas to Turkey and Europe will be completed by the end of 2019 as planned, according to Aslı Esen, the project’s spokeswoman.

During a visit to the TurkStream facility located in the Russian coastal city of Anapa on Nov. 6, Esen said the offshore section would be 95 percent complete by the end of October.

The Russkaya compressor station was a main focus of the visit, being the first of the facilities built for the TurkStream project. The station is an important part of Gazprom’s giant network consisting of 172,000 kilometers of natural gas pipeline and 254 compressor stations.

A station official, Anatoly Koltakov, said the station’s main function is to provide pressure to allow natural gas to travel 930 kilometers along the Black Sea, ensuring a capacity of 31.5 billion cubic meters is carried to Turkey.

Only 3.5 kilometers from the Russkaya station, Anapa is where a landfall facility was built — the last destination before the pipeline’s sub-sea section begins its journey to Turkey.

“Following the completion of the Russkaya compressor station, the construction of the TurkStream landfall facility was completed and the construction of TurkStream on the Russian coast was completed. The robots that will provide the annual inspection and maintenance of TurkStream’s submarine will also enter the pipeline through this special arrangement here,” said facility official Anton Barishev.

Natural gas transmission will take around 52 hours from Russia’s Anapa to the destination in Turkey, at Kıyıköy located in the Kırklareli province in northwestern Turkey, according to the officials.

The control room where natural gas transmission will be monitored will be located at the headquarters of the TurkStream project company in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.

According to information provided by the TurkStream authorities, the project was designed to operate for at least 50 years.

The project consists of two lines, each with a distance of 930 kilometers and totaling 31.5 billion cubic meters of capacity.