Fortuna continues to build the gas pipeline Nord Stream 2
In the Baltic Sea, the Russian laying vessel "Fortuna" continues to build the controversial German-Russian gas pipeline Nord Stream 2. "The 'Fortuna' is currently working in German waters in accordance with the permits and the announcements made by the authorities," said a spokesman for Nord Stream 2 AG of the German Press Agency. The Federal Maritime and Hydrographic Agency (BSH) in Hamburg had previously approved the continuation of the work.
Pipes should now be laid over a length of two kilometers. The background to this is a decision by the BSH, according to which there are currently no resting birds there that need to be protected. Therefore - as originally planned - there is no need to wait until the end of May to start work, it said.
The pipes may be placed on the seabed, the assembly should take place later, it said. The two kilometers are in the German Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ). According to information from Nord Stream 2, work with the Russian laying vessel "Akademik Tscherski" is also ongoing in Danish waters.
The Naturschutzbund Deutschland (Nabu) and Deutsche Umwelthilfe went to court against the BSH approval from January for further construction in the German EEZ, with reference to birds resting in the protected area. The office has now allowed the pipes to be placed on the seabed until construction continues, since the birds' resting time in this short section is over.
The Nord Stream 2 pipeline from Russia through the
Baltic Sea to Germany has largely been completed. According to the information, 13.9 kilometers of one line and 16.8 kilometers of the second line are missing in German waters. The USA and several European countries are against the pipeline because they fear that Europe is too dependent on Russian gas.
The US has issued sanctions to prevent prefabricated construction. But Washington recently refrained from harsher punitive measures out of consideration for the federal government in Berlin, which supports the pipeline for energy security in Europe.
Russia hopes to end the project in the next few months and to be able to pump the first gas through the 1,230-kilometer pipeline this year.