This new extension to the agreement between Moldovagaz and Gazprom will last until December 2022, but will not be signed until transportation arrangements are finalized.
"The contract stipulates the conditions for the supply of natural gas for consumers of Moldova through three alternative ways: at the border with Russia and Ukraine... at the border with Romania and Ukraine through the trans-Balkan corridor, [or] on the western [Ukrainian] border with EU countries," Moldovagaz said in a statement.
Moldovagaz is "ready to receive" 12.4 million cu m/d (4.526 billion cu m/year) after joint operations with Bulgaria, Romania, Ukraine and Moldova, the statement said, and that "the Romanian and Ukrainian side have already officially completed all of the works."
According to the European Network of Transmission System Operators for Gas (ENTSOG) transparency platform, a stretch of the trans-Balkan pipeline runs through Romania into Moldova, and can receive gas transported through Bulgaria and Turkey. The latter's supply line will soon be linked to the 15.5 Bcm/year TurkStream transit, which is set to supply Russian gas to the region from early 2020.
Author: Neil Hunter




