* U.S. law imposes sanctions on firms laying pipeline
* Washington says Europe too reliant on Russian gas
* Most Russian gas to Europe now passes through Ukraine
* Russia, Ukraine reach new, five-year gas transit deal
(Adds German reaction in paragraph 8)
By Maria Grabar, Vladimir Soldatkin and Andrey Kuzmin
MOSCOW, Dec 21 (Reuters) - The group behind Nord Stream 2
said on Saturday it aimed to complete a pipeline to boost
Russian gas supplies to Europe as soon as possible, after U.S.
sanctions prompted a major contractor to suspend pipe-laying
activities.
U.S. President Donald Trump signed a bill on Friday that
included legislation imposing sanctions on firms laying pipe for
Nord Stream 2, which seeks to double gas capacity along the
northern Nord Stream pipeline route to Germany.
Washington, which has been seeking to sell more of its own
liquefied natural gas (LNG) to European states, has said Nord
Stream 2 will make Europe too reliant on Russian supplies.
Gazprom, Russia's state-controlled gas giant and a major
backer of Nord Stream 2, already supplies more than a third of
Europe's gas needs. The company declined to comment.
Nord Stream 2 will help Russia bypass Ukraine, the main
route for Russian gas. Moscow and Kiev, which have been at
loggerheads over Russia's annexation of Crimea in 2014, agreed a
new transit deal this week after long-running talks.
The Nord Stream 2 pipeline, which will run along the Baltic
Sea floor, was expected to start up in the first half of 2020.
"Completing the project is essential for European supply
security. We together with the companies supporting the project
will work on finishing the pipeline as soon as possible," Nord
Stream 2 said on Saturday. It did not provide details.
German Finance Minister Olaf Scholz said Berlin "firmly
rejects" U.S. sanctions but would not retaliate.
Nord Stream 2 contractor, Swiss-Dutch company Allseas,
announced on Friday it had suspended pipe-laying activities.
The company said it would "proceed, consistent with the
legislation's wind down provision" and said it expected guidance
on the regulatory, technical and environmental issues from the
U.S. authority.
UKRAINE ROUTE
Russia's Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Saturday
that Moscow "will continue to implement its economic projects
regardless of anyone's sanctions."
A senior Russian senator also said the Nord Stream 2 must
stick to its schedule.
Russia and Ukraine, embroiled in a political row and legal
disputes, agreed their new gas transit deal shortly before the
existing pact expires at the end of this year.
Moscow had initially insisted on a short-term agreement to
run until Nord Stream 2 came on stream. Ukraine, which earns
hefty revenues from gas transit fees, wanted a long-term deal.
Moscow and Kiev said on Saturday the new deal would last at
least five years and could be extended for a further 10. They
said it would include increased gas transport fees and set out
gas volumes to be booked for transit through Ukraine.
Nord Stream 2, which aims to double the Nord Stream route's
existing capacity of 55 billion cubic metres (bcm) of gas a
year, is owned by Gazprom, which is financing half of the
project worth about 9.5 billion euros ($10.5 billion).
Other partners in Nord Stream 2 are Austria's OMV,
the German firms Uniper and Wintershall,
Anglo-Dutch energy major Royal Dutch Shell and France's
Engie.
($1 = 0.9027 euros)
(Reporting by Maria Grabar, Vladimir Soldatkin in Moscow and
Timothy Gardner in Washington, and by Paul Carrel in Berlin;
Writing by Andrey Kuzmin/Katya Golubkova; Editing by Edmund
Blair)