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    Full Cost of the South Stream Project to Exceed €50 Billion

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Summary

Total cost of South Stream project including feeding pipelines and financing expenses is to exceed €50 Billion. Out of the total, about €40 Billion will be paid by Gapzrom and the reast by its foreign partners.

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Natural Gas & LNG News, News By Country, Russia, Pipelines, South Stream Pipeline

Full Cost of the South Stream Project to Exceed €50 Billion

Gazprom plans to spend Rub 510 Billion (€12.5 Bn, $17.0 Bn) on its Southern Corridor project designed to supply gas to the South Stream pipeline. The Southern Corridor will be fed via the Bovanenkovo-Ukhta-Pochinki pipeline route, a part of the Yamal Megaproject. The Pochinki compressor station is the end point of the Ukhta-Pochinki pipeline and the start point of the Southern Corridor.

Based on the officially published project costs, the cost of the Bovanenkovo-Pochinki link can be estimated at Rub 750 Billion (€18.5 Bn, $25.0 Bn) at the lowest. Gazprom prefers to consider this investment as a part of the overall system expense. This way about two-thirds of the capital expenses can be allocated to the cost of supply of Russian consumers, which would make it easier to lobby for higher price of gas in Russia. However, without the South Stream pipeline, both the Southern Corridor and the Bovanenkovo-Ukhta-Pochinki projects are not needed. Note that having the South Stream project, Gazprom could deliver the required volumes of gas to Pochinki via a short link from Bovanenkovo to Yamburg and the existing pipelines of West Siberia.

Therefore, the total cost of the South Stream project with its feeding pipelines and the financing expenses is to exceed €50 Billion or $65 Billion. Out of the total, about €40 Billion ($52 Bn) will be paid by Gazprom and the rest by its foreign partners. Notably, this investment will increase the gas transmission costs and reduce profits of the shareholders of Gazprom.

Same as with other Russian pipelines built after 2005, cost estimates for 1 km of Southern Corridor are 2-2.5 times higher than for similar pipelines in the European Union. The table below compares construction costs (including compressor stations) for selected 56-in pipelines.

High cost of the Southern Corridor pipelines can not be explained by climatic, geographic or terrain conditions of Southern European Russia.

Mikhail Korchemkin

Dr. Mikhail Korchemkin is the founder of East European Gas Analysis (EEGA), an independent consulting firm based in Malvern, Pennsylvania, USA. EEGA specializes in cost-benefit and financial analysis of natural gas projects in the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe