France's Rhone gas pipeline expects full restart later this year

The Rhone gas pipeline that links France's Mediterranean ports with the rest of country, Germany and other neighbors is not expected to return to full capacity until after a review that will take place in March, the French gas lobby FranceGaz said on Thursday.

France's importance as a hub for the importing and distribution of natural gas has increased after the Russian invasion of Ukraine caused Europe to buy gas from other partners, including the United States and Qatar.

The outage of the Rhone pipeline in late September was expected to reduce total gas deliveries by about 43.5 terawatt hours (TW/h) over the winter, when demand is at its peak, equivalent to around 11 days of France's total winter gas consumption.

The pipeline is delivering gas below its nominal power as the operator is concerned another problem could occur if it returned to full capacity, President of France Gaz Frederic Martin told journalists.

An inspection is expected after the coldest months, and then the operator will decide if a section or part of the pipeline will need to be replaced. Only then will further rescheduling be decided, he said.

"The operator assembled its teams, secured the area, and restarted the flow, but not at the nominal power, because you don't know if there's another constraint that could recur, so they will need to inspect the entire pipeline," Martin said.

Provided no other issues are discovered during an investigation into the outage, he said the restart should happen around the middle of the year.

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