(Bloomberg) -- Russia is poised to officially open its TurkStream natural gas pipeline on Wednesday, further diversifying export routes to Europe amid a backlash from the U.S.
President Vladimir Putin and his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan are meeting in Istanbul to inaugurate the pipeline in a ceremony celebrating the nations’ energy and political ties. TurkStream is set to carry Russian gas under the Black Sea to Turkey and supply several countries in southeast Europe once fully operational, just as U.S. sanctions stall another Gazprom (MCX:GAZP) PJSC export line.
TurkStream consists of two pipelines running together underwater, each with an annual capacity of 15.75 billion cubic meters. Gas via the link has been flowing to Turkey and Bulgaria since Jan. 1, according to utility Bulgargaz. A combination of existing and new pipelines will subsequently take supplies to Serbia and later on to Hungary.
The project allows Russian producer Gazprom (MCX:GAZP) to achieve two strategic aims. First, it may help the company increase its market share in Turkey, currently among the top three buyers of its gas. Second, Gazprom can reduce its dependence on Ukraine as a transit route, a key objective following years of strained political relations between the two neighbors.
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Construction of another major Russian pipeline project -- the Nord Stream 2 link under the Baltic Sea -- was halted last month because of American sanctions on the contractors building the line to Germany. The U.S., itself an emerging gas exporter to Europe, has claimed that Gazprom’s pipeline projects hurt the region’s security of supply.
Nevertheless, Putin has hailed the TurkStream link as “an important factor in ensuring pan-European energy security,” while Erdogan has said at least half of the gas supplied via the pipeline will be shipped to Europe.
For Russia, the inauguration marks a further success in adding export routes, despite Nord Stream 2’s setback. Gazprom (MCX:GAZP) last month opened the giant Power of Siberia gas pipeline, which runs from Russia’s enormous reserves in eastern Siberia to northern China.
Ukraine Reliance
Until now, Russian gas flows to Turkey have been split almost evenly between supplies via Ukraine and direct shipments via the Blue Stream link, completed 16 years ago.
With the start of the new pipeline, as much as 13 billion cubic meters of Russian gas can be immediately diverted from the Ukrainian transit route into the first line of TurkStream for Turkish consumption, the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies said in October.
Neighboring Bulgaria has prepared its gas grid to accommodate about 2.9 billion cubic meters of the fuel from TurkStream, while Serbia expects to receive an initial supply of more than 3 billion cubic meters a year, according to state-owned gas company Srbijagas. Serbia will also be able to transit as much as 6 billion cubic meters a year to Hungary via an interconnector that’s projected to come online in 2021.
Besides inaugurating TurkStream, Putin and Erdogan plan to discuss prospects for further cooperation and international issues, including the situation in Syria and Libya, according to a Kremlin statement.
(Updates with Kremlin statement in final paragraph. An earlier version of the story was corrected to amend the start date of the Serbia-Hungary interconnector.)