Russia's Gazprom ships first LNG cargo from Portovaya to Spain
(Reuters) - Russia's Gazprom shipped a cargo of LNG from its small-scale Portovaya LNG plant on the Baltic Sea to Spain for the first time.
LNG, unlike some other Russian hydrocarbons, such as crude oil, has not been under the Western sanctions.
The tanker, the Cool Rover, which loaded LNG ship-to-ship from the floating storage and regasification unit (FSRU), the Marshal Vasilevskiy, discharged in the Spanish port of Huelva at the Enagas LNG terminal, the data showed.
Gazprom and Portovaya LNG did not respond to a Reuters request for comment.
State-controlled Gazprom has practically lost the European pipeline gas export market, once the main source of foreign currency revenues for Moscow.
Russia supplied a total of around 63.8 Bcm of gas to Europe by various routes via pipelines in 2022, according to Gazprom data and Reuters calculations. The volumes plummeted further, by 55.6%, to 28.3 bcm last year.
The Portovaya LNG plant with a capacity of 1.5 million metric tons per year was launched in September 2022.
Most LNG cargoes from the plant have been sent to Turkey or Greece, while three were shipped to China.
Related News
Related News
- Gasum selects Wärtsilä for another bio-LNG project in Sweden
- Vanguard Renewables breaks ground on its first organics-to-renewable gas facility
- Linde selected to supply carbon capture technology to ADNOC’S Hail and Ghasha project
- Tecnimont to build waste-to-biogas plant to fuel local kitchens in India
- Topsoe, Aramco sign JDA to advance low-carbon hydrogen solutions using eREACT™
Comments