Houston Chronicle

Port Arthur LNG lands Poland deal

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

WARSAW, Poland — Poland has signed a long-term deal with a U.S. company for supplies of liquefied natural gas as part of an effort to reduce its dependence on Russian energy, the two sides announced on Wednesday.

Port Arthur LNG, a subsidiary of San Diego-based Sempra Energy, and Poland’s state gas company PGNiG jointly announced the agreement for the sale of 2.7 billion cubic meters per year of gas to Poland over a 20-year period.

Their statement said that is enough to meet about 15 percent of Poland’s daily gas needs.

“This agreement marks an important step toward Poland’s energy independen­ce and security,” Secretary of Energy Rick Perry said.

Sempra Energy’s CEO Jeffrey Martin said the deal helps his company “advance our vision to become North America’s premier energy infrastruc­ture company.”

No financial details were disclosed, in line with the secretive nature of gas deals, which are sensitive politicall­y given Russia’s dominance of Europe’s energy market.

In recent weeks Poland also signed long-term deals for gas with American suppliers Cheniere and Venture Global Calcasieu Pass and Venture Global Plaquemine­s LNG.

These deals have been sealed as both Poland and the United States have been trying to stop Nord Stream 2, a pipeline under constructi­on that, when finished, would transport gas from Russia to energy-hungry Germany.

Poland, along with several other European countries, see Nord Stream 2, which bypasses Ukraine, as a political project meant to weaken that country and gain leverage over Europe by making it more dependent on Russian gas.

Officials for the Nord Stream 2 dispute that view, saying it is merely a commercial project and would not cut off Ukraine, pointing to diversific­ation of Europe’s gas market.

Also Wednesday, Deputy Secretary of State John Sullivan met with Polish Foreign Minister Jacek Czaputowic­z in Warsaw, the last stop in a visit to several countries in the region.

Ahead of his visit the State Department said Sullivan would meet with Polish leaders to discuss shared concerns over Nord Stream 2, among other such issues.

Czaputowic­z told reporters in Warsaw that Nord Stream 2 is “harmful to the security of all of the European Union.”

He called Germany’s support for the project “anti-European” and also faulted Austria for using its six-month EU presidency, which ends this month, to keep the issue off Europe’s agenda.

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