German-Russia gas pipeline ‘unacceptable’, threat to entire Europe: Ukraine
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has denounced as “unacceptable” a Russian pipeline project set to send gas to Germany, saying the plan poses a threat to the entire Europe.
Zelensky made the comments against the Russian Nord Stream 2 project after a meeting with his Polish counterpart, Andrzej Duda, in Warsaw on Saturday.
"We hold the same position as Poland; Nord Stream 2 is unacceptable and it threatens Europe as a whole," Zelensky told reporters. "We want the diversification of sources of energy delivery within the US, Poland and Ukraine triangle."
Reports said the US, Poland and Ukraine had agreed later in the day in Warsaw to enhance trilateral cooperation aimed at securing energy supplies in the Baltic region and, in particular, gear Ukraine's gas infrastructure to deliveries from the West.
Russian Gazprom's Nord Stream 2 project plans to connect Russia and Germany via the Baltic Sea, bypassing Poland, Ukraine and the Baltic states.
Gazprom is jointly implementing the Nord Stream with Western partners Uniper, Wintershall, Engie, OMV and Shell. The pipeline will be 1,220 kilometers long and should be completed before the end of 2019.
The 12-billion-dollar project envisages the construction and operation of two gas pipeline branches with a total throughput capacity of 55 billion cubic meters of natural gas per year from the coast of Russia through the Baltic Sea to Germany.
Kiev, Warsaw and Washington oppose the pipeline, claiming it will increase Europe's reliance on Russian energy supplies and that Moscow could later use the project for exerting political pressure.
Germany currently imports around a third of its gas from Russia through Ukraine.
SS