Gazprom resumes gas supply to Russia's Kaliningrad
Russian gas producer Gazprom resumed natural gas supplies to the west Russian exclave of Kaliningrad, the gas transmission operator in neighbouring Lithuania said.
Gazprom has a transit agreement with the Lithuanian operator to pipe gas from the Belarus-Lithuania border to Kaliningrad, which is separated from the Russian mainland.
Supplies stopped at around noon GMT on Monday, without warning from Gazprom, said Amber Grid, which operates Lithuania's gas transmission system.
"Supply was resumed around midnight Tuesday, and now proceeds as usual," an Amber Grid spokeswoman told Reuters on Wednesday. "We still do not have any explanation by Gazprom".
Gazprom did not immediately reply to a Reuters request for comment.
Kaliningrad used gas from storage while supply was cut, Gazprom said earlier.
Home to the Russian Baltic Fleet and a deployment location for Russian nuclear-capable Iskander missiles, Kaliningrad is sandwiched between NATO members Lithuania and Poland.
Russian President Vladimir Putin launched an LNG FPSO vessel in Kaliningrad in January 2019, hailing it as energy security against gas pipeline disruptions.
The ship, the Marshal Vasilevskiy, has been leased out as a tanker and is currently en route to China with an LNG cargo loaded in Cameroon, Refinitiv Eikon data show. (Reporting by Andrius Sytas; editing by Jason Neely)
- Gasum powers Equinor's platform supply vessel with bio-LNG
- Oman plans third LNG train, boosting domestic production to more than 15 MMtpy
- ADNOC deploys pioneering AI-enabled process optimization technology
- Mexico Pacific announces long-term LNG SPA with POSCO International
- ONEOK to acquire Medallion and controlling interest in EnLink for $5.9 B
Comments