Gazprom Suspends Deliveries to Italy’s Eni Due to “Problem” in Austria

Gazprom has suspended its gas deliveries to Eni, citing the impossibility of transporting the gas through Austria.

Share:

Gain full professional access to energynews.pro from 4.90$/month.
Designed for decision-makers, with no long-term commitment.

Over 30,000 articles published since 2021.
150 new market analyses every week to decode global energy trends.

Monthly Digital PRO PASS

Immediate Access
4.90$/month*

No commitment – cancel anytime, activation in 2 minutes.

*Special launch offer: 1st month at the indicated price, then 14.90 $/month, no long-term commitment.

Annual Digital PRO Pass

Full Annual Access
99$/year*

To access all of energynews.pro without any limits

*Introductory annual price for year one, automatically renewed at 149.00 $/year from the second year.

Gazprom has completely suspended its gas deliveries for the day Saturday to Eni citing the impossibility of transporting gas through Austria, announced the Italian giant of the in a statement.

“Gazprom has informed us that it cannot confirm the delivery of the requested volumes for today (Saturday), citing the impossibility of transporting the gas through Austria,” Eni said.

This Saturday, “therefore, the flow of Russian gas to Eni through the Tarvisio entry point will be zero,” he added.

Most of the Russian gas delivered to Italy comes through Ukraine, via the TAG pipeline which arrives at Tarvisio in the north of the country, on the border with Austria.

According to a spokesman for Eni quoted by the Italian news agency AGI, “Gazprom claims not to be able to comply with the rules necessary to obtain the service of distribution of gas in Austria where it should deliver it, while it results us that Austria continues to receive gas at the point of delivery at the Slovak-Austrian border”.

“We are working to verify with Gazprom if it is possible to reactivate the flows to Italy,” he said.

Later in the day, Gazprom issued a statement explaining that “the transport of Russian gas (…) through Austria has been suspended due to the refusal of the Austrian operator to confirm the transport permits”. A decision linked to “regulatory changes”.

“Gazprom is working to resolve the problem with its buyers
Italians,” he said. In Vienna, the sector regulator E-Control said that these new rules, which came into force on October 1, were “known to all market players for months”. He expects “all to comply and take the necessary steps to fulfill their obligations.

The problems relate to “contractual details” in the account loaded
of transit to Italy, E-Control wrote on Twitter. Russian gas exports to Europe have been steadily declining since the start of sanctions against Russia.

In the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Eni announced in early March that it was selling its 50% stake in the Blue Stream gas pipeline, which it controls on an equal footing with the Russian giant Gazprom.

NextDecade has signed a liquefied natural gas supply agreement with EQT for 1.5 million tonnes annually from Rio Grande LNG Train 5, pending a final investment decision.
Sawgrass LNG & Power has renewed its liquefied natural gas supply agreement with state-owned BNECL, consolidating a commercial cooperation that began in 2016.
Gazprom and China National Petroleum Corporation have signed a binding memorandum to build the Power of Siberia 2 pipeline, set to deliver 50 bcm of Russian gas per year to China via Mongolia.
Permex Petroleum signed a $3 million purchase option on oil and gas assets in Texas to support a strategy combining energy production and Bitcoin mining.
Enbridge announces the implementation of two major natural gas transmission projects aimed at strengthening regional supply and supporting the LNG market.
Commonwealth LNG’s Louisiana liquefied natural gas project clears a decisive regulatory step with final approval from the U.S. Department of Energy for exports to non-free trade agreement countries.
The Indonesian government confirmed the delivery of nine to ten liquefied natural gas cargoes for domestic demand in September, without affecting long-term export commitments.
The Egyptian government signs four exploration agreements for ten gas wells, allocating $343mn to limit the impact of the rapid decline in national production.
Hungary has imported over 5 billion cubic metres of Russian natural gas since January via TurkStream, under its long-term agreements with Gazprom, thereby supporting its national energy infrastructure.
U.S. regulators have approved two major milestones for Rio Grande LNG and Commonwealth LNG, clarifying their investment decision timelines and reinforcing the country’s role in expanding global liquefaction capacity.
Hokkaido Gas is adjusting its liquefied natural gas procurement strategy with a multi-year tender and a long-term agreement, leveraging Ishikari’s capacity and price references used in the Asian market. —
Korea Gas Corporation commits to 3.3 mtpa of US LNG from 2028 for ten years, complementing new contracts to cover expired volumes and diversify supply sources and price indexation.
Petrobangla plans to sign a memorandum with Saudi Aramco to secure liquefied natural gas deliveries under a formal agreement, following a similar deal recently concluded with the Sultanate of Oman.
CTCI strengthens its position in Taiwan with a new EPC contract for a regasification unit at the Kaohsiung LNG terminal, with a capacity of 1,600 tonnes per hour.
Exxon Mobil forecasts sustained growth in global natural gas demand by 2050, driven by industrial use and rising energy needs in developing economies.
Capstone Green Energy received a 5.8-megawatt order for its natural gas microturbines, to be deployed across multiple food production facilities in Mexico through regional distributor DTC Machinery.
Private firm Harvest Midstream has signed a $1 billion acquisition deal with MPLX for gas processing and transport infrastructure across three western US states.
Sempra Infrastructure and EQT Corporation have signed a 20-year liquefied natural gas purchase agreement, consolidating Phase 2 of the Port Arthur LNG project in Texas and strengthening the United States’ position in the global LNG market.
Subsea7 was selected to lead phase 3 of the Sakarya gas field, a strategic contract for Türkiye’s energy supply valued between $750mn and $1.25bn.
Tokyo protests against Chinese installations deemed unilateral in a disputed maritime zone, despite a bilateral agreement stalled since 2010.

Log in to read this article

You'll also have access to a selection of our best content.