U.S., Germany Make Progress On Nord Stream 2 Issue

U.S., Germany Make Progress On Nord Stream 2 Issue

WASHINGTON, Jul 21 (NNN-AGENCIES) – The U.S. State Department said yesterday that, Washington and Berlin had made progress on the contentious issue of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline project.

The 1,230-km gas pipeline, expected to be completed next month, would bring natural gas from Russia to Germany, through the Baltic Sea.

“The Germans have put forward useful proposals and we have been able to make progress on steps to achieve that shared goal … to ensure that Russia cannot weaponise energy flows,” State Department spokesperson, Ned Price, said.

“We don’t have any final details to announce yet, but I expect we will be able, in a position, to say more soon,” he added.

State Department counsellor, Derek Chollet, is on his trip to Ukraine and Poland this week. Price said, Chollet will discuss the Nord Stream 2 and energy security with the two eastern European nations, both against the pipeline project.

The United States has long claimed that the project was a geopolitical manoeuvre by Russia, that will undermine Ukraine’s role in transiting energy to Europe. Germany and Russia pointed out that the project is purely commercial.

During his meeting with German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, last week, President Joe Biden reiterated his concerns over the Nord Stream 2 project, warning, “Russia must not be allowed to use energy as a weapon to coerce or threaten its neighbours.”

Citing the importance of relations with Germany, and the difficulty to stop the nearly completed pipeline, the Biden administration, in May, waived sanctions against a company behind the pipeline project and its German CEO, which led to opposition from bipartisan lawmakers.– NNN-AGENCIES

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