According to Nemunas Biknius, CEO of Amber Grid, the amount of the gas transmitted to Latvia has increased 10-fold over the several recent years. The result achieved in 2019 is the highest ever recorded level of gas transportation to Latvia.
As far as the competitiveness of LNG in the market is concerned, the gas transportation via Klaipeda LNG terminal also reached its record level. Last year, gas imports via the LNG terminal accounted for 65% (19.6 TWh) of the total amount of gas transported to the EU via Lithuania. In 2018, this indicator accounted for only 35%.
Lithuania’s gas consumption increased by 1.2 TWh or 5% over 2019, and the total amount of gas consumed in Lithuania amounted to 23.5 TWh. Last year, a total of 30 TWh of gas was transported to Lithuania, except for gas transportation to Kaliningrad. This figure is 20% higher to compared to 2018 levels, when a total of 25 TWh of gas was transported to Lithuania.
In 2019, gas transportation to Kaliningrad via Lithuania amounted to 26 TWh, i.e. 6.6% less than in 2018, when the amount of gas transported to Kaliningrad via Lithuania reached 27.8 TWh. The decrease was due to a warmer-than-usual winter and the testing of Kaliningrad LNG terminal performed at the beginning of the year.
“Lithuania’s well-developed gas infrastructure, i.e. Klaipeda LNG Terminal and a developed and properly maintained gas transmission system, has proved to be effective. Timely investments allowed Lithuanian market participants as well as participants of other states of the Baltic market to make use of very favourable gas prices. The interaction between the low prices and the well-used infrastructure evidences that the market operates and that Lithuania has become a crossroad of the regional gas market,” says Biknius.




