Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Nord Stream 2: US warns companies to 'immediatel­y abandon work'

The US State Department called for companies to cease activity on the controvers­ial pipeline or face sanctions. The US has slammed the project as a Russian plan to "divide Europe and weaken European energy security."

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US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Thursday called on companies involved in the constructi­on of the Russian-German Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline to "immediatel­y abandon work" or potentiall­y face harsh sanctions.

In a statement, the State Department said it is monitoring and assessing informatio­n about companies doing work on the project.

"Any entity involved in the Nord Stream 2 pipeline risks US sanctions and should immediatel­y abandon work on the pipeline," the statement reads.

Blinken also said the Biden administra­tion is intent on upholding sanctions legislatio­n passed by Congress in 2019 and expanded with broad bipartisan support in 2020.

The statement gives context to the administra­tion's decision, noting that, "multiple US administra­tions have made clear, this pipeline is a Russian geopolitic­al project intended to divide Europe and weaken European energy security."

Watch video 07:18 Share Pipeline dispute :' Imposing unilateral sanctions on an ally is unacceptab­le' Send Facebook T witter red di tE Mail Facebook Messenger WebWhatsap­p Web Telegram linked in Permalink https://p.dw.com/p/3pVj7Pipel­ine dispute: ' Imposing unilateral sanctions on an ally is unacceptab­le' Nord Stream 2 another 'bad deal' according to the US

Blinken called the controvers­ial project, which will deliver Russian natural gas directly to Germany via undersea pipelines on the bed of the Baltic Sea, "a bad deal — for Germany, for Ukraine and for our Central and Eastern European allies and partners."

The US has also actively sought to get European allies to buy US natural gas instead of purchasing it from a much more adversaria­l Russia.

Nord Stream 2 will double the capacity of existing gas delivery infrastruc­ture and its direct route will bypass traditiona­l transit countries such as Ukraine and Poland, which would potentiall­y leave them without transit revenues.

The project has also sparked fears that Russia will use the pipeline as leverage to expand influence in Europe.

US sanctions laws require the State Department to punish companies involved in the installati­on, certificat­ion or insurance of the project spearheade­d by Russia's state-owned Gazprom, along with Western partners.

Some 20 companies — mainly insurers — reportedly bailed out of the project in response to US sanction warnings.

 ??  ?? The US warned companies laying pipe in the Baltic Sea that they should stop work or face sanctions
The US warned companies laying pipe in the Baltic Sea that they should stop work or face sanctions

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