Russia may stop oil exports through Baltic states by 2015
Russia may completely stop by 2015 using ports in the Baltic states to transport energy supplies abroad via sea routes, the transportation minister said on Saturday according to RIA Novosti reports.
Russia currently exports about 80% of its oil products through ports in the Baltic states.
"By 2015 we will have sufficient energy supplies transit capacity at our domestic ports," Igor Levitin told a government meeting in St. Petersburg.
Russia is building a sea merchant port at Ust-Luga in the Gulf of Finland outside St. Petersburg to ensure steady transit of oil and gas from both Russia's oil-rich regions and Kazakhstan to Europe via the Baltic Pipeline System-2 (BPS-2), stretching from western Russia's Bryansk Region to the Leningrad Region.
The Ust-Luga port is expected to reach an annual transit capacity of 100-130 million tons of oil and oil derivatives by 2015.
BPS-2 is the second stage of the Baltic Pipeline System (BPS), which was commissioned in 2001 and has a current capacity of 75 mln tons. The cost of the construction of the pipeline stretch to Ust-Luga is estimated at 78 billion rubles ($3.3 billion).