* Germany is yet to certify Nord Stream 2 pipeline
* Russia wants to start gas supplies via NS2 this year
* U.S., Ukraine oppose the NS2 project
(Adds Nord Stream 2 comments)
By Vladimir Soldatkin
MOSCOW, Sept 10 (Reuters) - Gazprom said on Friday
it had finished construction of the Nord Stream 2 subsea
pipeline to Germany, allowing Russia to potentially double
lucrative gas exports to Europe via the Baltic Sea while
bypassing and cutting off a source of income for political foe
Ukraine.
Although gas flows have yet to be cleared by German
regulators, the completion of the construction stage means
Russia has successfully boosted its energy exporting
capabilities towards Europe both from the north in the Baltic
Sea and from the south in the Black Sea, where it operates the
TurkStream pipeline.
"The head of the management board, Alexei Miller, told the
morning meeting at Gazprom that the construction of Nord Stream
2 was fully completed today in the morning at 0845 Moscow time,"
Gazprom said.
Gazprom started construction of the 1,200-km long Nord
Stream 2 pipeline from Russia to Germany five years ago.
Progress of the $11 billion project stalled at the end of 2019
when then U.S. president Donald Trump imposed sanctions on it.
The construction restarted around a year later with the
engagement of Russia's own vessels.
The route, jointly with the existing Nord Stream pipeline,
will double the annual export capacity to 110 billion cubic
metres, around half of Russia's total gas exports to Europe a
year.
The project has drawn criticism from the United States and
Ukraine among others. Washington says it will increase Europe's
reliance on Russian energy supplies, while it is seeking to
boost its own sales of sea-borne liquefied natural gas to
Europe.
The United States has called its super-chilled gas exports
to Europe a way to spread "molecules of freedom" across the
Atlantic.
Gazprom is Europe's largest supplier of natural gas,
accounting for more than a third of the region's gas market.
Russia said on Thursday pumping commercial gas supplies via
Nord Stream 2 would not start until a German regulator gives the
green light.
The Swiss-based Nord Stream 2 AG consortium said in a
statement that it has completed welding of the pipeline with the
help of Russian vessel Fortuna.
"The required pre-commissioning activities will be carried
out with the goal to put the pipeline into operation before the
end of this year," it said.
NO CLEARANCE YET
Gazprom's announcement on the construction completion was
met with scepticism in Kyiv, which risks losing billions of
dollars in gas transit fees if Moscow halts gas supplies via
Ukraine.
Russia's current five-year gas transit deal with Ukraine
expires after 2024. Russian President Vladimir Putin has said
Ukraine must show good will if it wants Russian gas transit to
Europe to continue.
"Constructed doesn't mean to put it on stream. And this
won't happen until the pipeline is certified," Olha Belkova, a
manager at Ukraine's gas pipelines operator, said in emailed
comments to Reuters.
Carlos Torres Diaz, head of Power and Gas Markets at
analysis firm Rystad Energy, also said it takes time for gas to
flow via the pipes of Nord Stream 2.
"There hasn't really been a reaction from the market so far
so I guess this just also confirms expectations that no
commercial deliveries are expected in the short term," he said.
The Kremlin said "everyone" was interested in Nord Stream 2
obtaining the necessary clearance for gas supplies.
Germany's energy regulator has to award an operating licence
to Nord Stream 2, which must comply with European unbundling
rules that require the owners of pipelines to be different from
the suppliers of the gas that flows in them to ensure fair
competition.
Gazprom's Western partners in the project are Germany's
Uniper, BASF's Wintershall Dea,
Anglo-Dutch oil major Shell, Austria's OMV
and French energy company Engie.
(Reporting by Vladimir Soldatkin, Oksana Kobzeva in Moscow,
Pavel Polityuk in Kyiv, Vera Eckert in Frankfurt and Nora Buli
in Oslo; editing by Jason Neely, David Evans, Elaine Hardcastle)