The ministry is considering expropriating part of the pipeline system located on German soil and cutting it off from the rest of the pipeline, Spiegel reports.
The German Ministry of Economy is considering converting parts of the gas pipeline Nord Stream 2 online for a terminal liquefied natural gas on the Baltic coast, the magazine reported today The game.
The ministry is considering expropriating part of the pipeline system located on German soil and cutting it off from the rest of the pipeline, Spiegel added.
Germany’s gas storage tanks are sufficient for 2.5 months
THE Germany will be able to meet its energy needs for a period two and a half months a normal winter, if its gas storage facilities are 100% full, as stated yesterday, Thursday, the Klaus Millerthe head of the network management service.
Miller added that Europe’s largest economy needs additional suppliers and must save on gas.
“If the storage facilities in Germany are 100% full … we can handle it without any Russian gas … for just 2.5 months and then the storage tanks will be empty,” said Miller speaking on the German public television show ZDF on Maybrit Illner.
He noted that the state of gas supply is tense, but remains stable.
Energy alarm status in Germany as well
The activation of the second level, that of alarm status for natural gas in Germany, announced yesterday Minister of Economy Robert Hubek. “We are in a gas crisis that has become a rare commodity. “Prices are already very high and we need to prepare for further increases.” Russia at the expense of Germany with the gradual closure of the Russian gas tap by 60% via the Nord Stream 1 pipeline and the Baltic Sea.
What exactly does it mean to activate the alarm mode? Following the first level of early warning, which is basically precautionary and in which Germany has been since March 30 until this morning, Germany is now entering a more critical “level of readiness”, which is activated, among other things, when there is a real outage gas, as has been the case for days in Germany.
However, it should be noted that at this level, the market itself and not the state still regulates the terms of gas supply and demand. State intervention for the priority protection of citizens-consumers, critical government structures and the end of business is provided only for the next, third stage of the state of emergency. This is the “worst case scenario”, from which Germany abstains as both Mr Habek and the Bonn-based regulator reassure that there is no risk of panic based on at least current stockpiles.
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