Snam CEO welcomes EU clearance of Adriatic LNG deal
The chief executive of Snam welcomed on Tuesday the European Commission's green light for a deal for Italy's biggest liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal, Adriatic LNG.
Earlier this year, energy storage group VTTI agreed to buy a 70% stake in Adriatic LNG, with grid operator Snam increasing its stake to 30% as ExxonMobil and QatarEnergy sold the infrastructure.
The LNG terminal is about 9 mi (15 km) off the Veneto coastline and has a regasification capacity of 9 Bm3y of gas.
It is considered key infrastructure for Italy's energy security after the import of LNG increased significantly to replace the gas that used to flow via pipeline from Russia before Moscow's invasion of Ukraine.
The Commission said on Tuesday it had approved the acquisition of joint control by Snam and VTTI, saying the deal would not raise competition concerns.
Snam CEO Stefano Venier said in a statement that the closing of the transaction was expected at the beginning of December.
Related News
Related News

- Three killed, two injured in accident at LNG construction site in Texas (U.S.)
- Kent secures integral role in engineering and execution of Wormington compressor station project
- Update: How Germany is building up LNG import terminals
- IEEFA: Europe’s LNG imports decline 19% with gas demand at 11-yr low
- TotalEnergies and partners launch the 2nd phase of Northern Lights CCS project
Comments