Finland moves ahead with floating LNG terminal to bolster energy security
(Reuters) - Fortum and Finnish gas system operator Gasgrid announced a deal to place Finland's first floating LNG import terminal at the Baltic Sea port of Inkoo, aiming to have it ready to operate next winter.
The planned floating storage and regasification (FSRU) terminal, which was first announced in April, is crucial to secure Finland energy supplies after Russia halted gas exports last month.
"The LNG terminal will make it possible for us to break free from Russian gas," Finland's Finance Minister Annika Saarikko said in a statement.
The vessel, in which liquefied natural gas is re-vaporised and fed into the gas transmission network, will be able to cover the gas needs of both Finland and Estonia.
LNG will be delivered to the terminal by tankers from the global market two to three times a month, Gasgrid said.
The FSRU will be leased from U.S. based Excelerate Energy for a duration of ten years, Finland, which does not produce gas domestically, announced last month.
Gasgrid and the Estonian electricity and gas transmission system operator Elering are also developing a potential site for the FSRU in Estonia, to ensure that an alternative exists in case of delay.
(Reporting by Stine Jacobsen, editing by Terje Solsvik, Kirsten Donovan)
- ADNOC Gas awards $2.1 B in contracts to enhance LNG supply infrastructure
- U.S. Department of the Treasury releases final rules for clean hydrogen production tax credit
- Tecnimont to build waste-to-biogas plant to fuel local kitchens in India
- Indonesia regulator confirms disruption at bp's Tangguh LNG project
- Topsoe, Aramco sign JDA to advance low-carbon hydrogen solutions using eREACT™
Comments