List of natural gas pipelines

This is a list of pipelines used to transport natural gas.

Africa

Asia

Europe

Source[1]

InterEuropean

Planned pipelines for intereuropean gas transport:

Supply to Europe

From Africa

Mediterranee and Saharan gas pipelines to Europe.

All African routes run from Hassi R'Mel the Algerian hub for natural gas, it supplies gas form the Hassi R'Mel gas field. (The planned Trans-Saharan gas pipeline will connect Nigeria to Hassi_R’Mel). Pipelines from Hassi_R’Mel:

Planned pipeline for gas transport from Africa:

From Azerbaijan and Middle East

Baku pipelines

Pipelines connect mainly from the Shah Deniz gas field in Azerbaijan. Connections to the Middle East are possible:

Planned pipelines for transport from Azerbaijan and Middle East:

A lecture was held at The Institute of World Politics to consider the economic and geopolitics of the rival pipelines and what's at stake for the concerned parties, namely TANAP and South Stream's replacement Turkish Stream.[3]

From the North Sea gasfields

From Russia

Russian gas pipelines to Europe (2007)

Planned pipelines for gas transport form Russia:

North America

Interstate pipelines are regulated by the National Energy Board in Canada[4] and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC)[5] in the US. Intrastate pipelines are regulated by state, provincial or local jurisdictions.

Canada

Mexico

Puerto Rico

United States interstate pipelines

FERC requires most interstate pipelines to maintain an interactive web site with standardized information regarding their operations under a heading of "Informational Postings."[6] The exact legal name of each company appears below. Many of these companies are wholly owned subsidiaries of larger publicly traded companies.

Major interstate pipelines

U.S. natural gas pipelines

Minor interstate pipelines

Predominantly offshore pipelines

LNG import/export terminals

Main article: List of LNG terminals
Current US LNG Terminals under FERC jurisdiction

Hinshaw pipelines

Although these pipelines flow gas in interstate commerce, they are subject to state regulation.[8]

South America

Oceania

See also

References

  1. http://www.entsog.eu, Transmission Capacity map 2014. http://www.entsog.eu/public/uploads/files/maps/transmissioncapacity/2014/ENTSOG_140612_CAP_JUNE2014.pdf, retrieved feb 2015.
  2. http://www.eastring.eu http://www.eastring.eu/page.php?page=downloads. retrieved feb 2015
  3. Reiff, Harrison. "Vilen Khlgatyan discusses the rival gas pipeline projects in Europe". The Institute of World Politics. The Institute of World Politics. Retrieved 7 July 2015.
  4. http://www.neb-one.gc.ca/index_e.htm
  5. Ferc: Gas - Fastr
  6. 18 C.F.R. 284.12
  7. http://www.emkeygathering.com
  8. 15 U.S.C. § 717(c)
  9. FERC Docket CP06-438
  10. FERC Docket CP80-340
  11. FERC Docket CP06-393

External links

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