Laying of the Nord Steam natural gas pipeline is now underway in the waters of all five countries through which it will pass. This milestone was passed on October 19, when the section of pipeline being laid by the Castoro Sei pipelay vessel reached Danish waters, approximately 50 kilometres south of Bornholm. Castoro Sei had picked up the pipeline in German waters where the flat-bottomed Castoro Dieci had completed ahead of schedule the difficult shallow-water section at and near the German landfall.
In the meantime at the other end of the 1,224 kilometre pipeline route the world’s largest pipelay vessel, the 300 metre long Solitaire, has just reached the Finnish Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) having completed a key section in Russian waters. It had picked up the pipeline where Castoro Sei had completed the section at the Russian landfall.
Castoro Sei had started laying the Nord Stream Pipeline in April 2010 in the Swedish EEZ off Gotland, laying pipe in an easterly direction into Finnish waters before laying down the pipeline and moving on to Russia.
The 7.4 billion euros Nord Stream Pipeline, which is privately financed, is the most advanced of the major new gas infrastructure projects which the European Union will need to meet its energy and climate protection needs over the coming decades.