Novosibirsk-Barnaul Gas Pipeline
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Novosibirsk-Barnaul Gas Pipeline (Russian: Газопровод Новосибирск-Барнаул) is an operating gas pipeline in Russia.
The pipeline currently includes five segments: Novosibirsk-Barnaul (operating), Barnaul-Shakhi (Russian: Барнаул-Шахи, operating), Shakhi-Rebrikha (Russian: Шахи-Ребриха, operating), Rebrikha-Rubtsovsk (Russian: Ребриха-Рубцовск, proposed), and Rebrikha-Slavgorod (Russian: Ребриха-Славгород, proposed).
In Barnaul, the pipeline also connects to the Barnaul-Biysk-Gorno-Altaysk Gas Pipeline.
Novosibirsk-Barnaul
Location
The Novosibirsk-Barnaul pipeline (Russian: Газопровод Новосибирск-Барнаул) starts near Novosibirsk, Novosibirsk region, Russia and runs to Barnaul, Pervomaysky district, Altai territory, Russia.[1]
Project Details
- Operator:
- Owner: Gazprom[2]
- Parent company: Gazprom
- Capacity: 1.70 bcm/year[2]
- Length: 292 km[3]
- Diameter: 16 inches[4]
- Status: Operating[2]
- Start year: 1996[3]
- Cost:
- Financing:
- Associated infrastructure: Barnaul-Biysk-Gorno-Altaysk Gas Pipeline; Nadym and Urengoy fields, Kovyktinskoye field from 2022
Barnaul-Shakhi (Barnaul-Pavlovsk)
Location
The Barnaul-Shakhi pipeline (Russian: Барнаул-Шахи), also known as Barnaul-Pavlovsk pipeline (Russian: Барнаул-Павловск), runs from Barnaul to Shakhi near Pavlovsk, Pervomaysky district, Altai territory, Russia.
Project Details
- Operator:
- Owner: Gazprom
- Parent company: Gazprom
- Capacity:
- Length: 50 km (estimate)
- Diameter: 16 inches[4]
- Status: Operating
- Start year: 2017[5]
- Cost:
- Financing:
- Associated infrastructure: Barnaul-Biysk-Gorno-Altaysk Gas Pipeline; gas source: Nadym and Urengoy fields, Kovyktinskoye field from 2022
Shakhi-Rebrikha (Pavlovsk-Rebrikha)
Location
The Shakhi-Rebrikha pipeline (Russian: Шахи-Ребриха), also known as Pavlovsk-Rebrikha pipeline (Russian: Павловск-Ребриха), starts in village Shakhi near Pavlovsk, Pavlovsky district, and runs to Rebrikha, Rebrikhinsky district, Altai territory, Russia.[6]
Project Details
- Operator:
- Owner: Gazprom[7]
- Parent company: Gazprom
- Capacity: 1.2 million cubic meters/day[8]
- Length: 76 km,[9] 77 km[8]
- Diameter:
- Status: Operating[8]
- Construction year: 2016[10], 2020[7]
- Start year: 2021[8]
- Cost: RUB 2 billion[8]
- Financing:
- Associated infrastructure: Barnaul-Biysk-Gorno-Altaysk Gas Pipeline; gas source: Nadym and Urengoy fields, Kovyktinskoye field from 2022
Background
The Novosibirsk-Barnaul Gas Pipeline is a distribution pipeline.[11]
This segment of the pipeline is currently under construction.[7] Construction started in 2016 when 27 km of pipeline was completed[7], but was halted in 2018 due to issues with the contractor. In July 2020, it was resumed with a new contractor, Tomskgazstroy.[10][7] Construction is planned to be completed by the end of 2021.[12]
According to a Gazprom press release, Gazprom will invest about 60 billion rubles into the development of gas supply systems in the Altai Territory in 2021-2025. In December 2020, the CEO of Gazprom Alex Miller has signed a program for the development of gas supply in region for a new five-year period, 2021–2025. According to the document, the company is planning to build 600 km of branch pipelines with three main gas distribution stations located in Rebrikha, Rubtsovsk and Slavgorod.[13] This plan requires completing the pipeline from Pavlovsk (Shakhi) to Rebrikha that is currently under construction, to supply gas to Rebrikha, via the Novosibirsk-Barnaul-Pavlovsk pipeline. 55 billion rubles will be invested into the Shakhi-Rebrikha, Rebrikha-Rubtsovsk and Rebrikha-Slavgorod pipelines, and remaining 5 billion into small regional branch pipelines.[10] Gazprom is investing 1.1 billion rubles into the Shakhi-Rebrikha segment.[7]
In August 2021, construction of the pipeline was almost complete.[14] In December 2021, the pipeline was commissioned.[8]
Rebrikha-Rubtsovsk
Location
The Rebrikha-Rubtsovsk pipeline (Russian: Ребриха-Рубцовск) is planned to start in Rebrikha and run to Rubtsovsk, Altai territory, Russia.[15]
Project Details
- Operator:
- Owner: Gazprom
- Parent company: Gazprom
- Capacity: 0.962 bcm/year[16]
- Length: 246 km[12]
- Diameter: 40 inches[4]
- Status: Proposed
- Construction year: 2023 (proposed)[7]
- Start year: 2021-2025[13]
- Cost: 54 billion rubles (split between Rebrikha-Rubtsovsk and Rebrikha-Slavgorod)
- Financing:
- Associated infrastructure: Barnaul-Biysk-Gorno-Altaysk Gas Pipeline; gas source: Nadym and Urengoy fields, Kovyktinskoye field from 2022
Background
According to a Gazprom press release, Gazprom will invest about 60 billion rubles into the development of gas supply systems in the Altai Territory in 2021-2025. In December 2020, the CEO of Gazprom Alex Miller has signed a program for the development of gas supply in region for a new five-year period, 2021–2025. According to the document, the company is planning to build 600 km of branch pipelines with three main gas distribution stations located in Rebrikha, Rubtsovsk and Slavgorod.[13] This plan requires completing the Rebrikha-Rubtsovsk segment, to supply gas to via the Novosibirsk-Barnaul-Pavlovsk pipeline. 54 billion rubles will be invested into the Rebrikha-Rubtsovsk and Rebrikha-Slavgorod pipelines, and remaining 5 billion into small regional branch pipelines.[10]
In July 2020 it was reported that design and survey work for this segment was ongoing and is planned to be finished by the end of 2021.[12] Construction was expected to start after 2022.[12] In February 2021, this pipeline was mentioned as proposed in the news.[17] The updated Gazprom's gas supply development program for 2021-2025 and the interactive map still include the project as planned.[15] The pipeline was also included in the list of "Planned Transmission Gas Pipelines" issued by the Ministry of Energy of Russia in May 2015 and revised in May 2023.[16]
In 2024, the project was removed from the list of "Planned Transmission Gas Pipelines" released by the Ministry of Energy of Russia in May 2015 and revised in March 2024.[18] The project is still included as an "inter-settlement high-pressure gas pipeline" (planned) in the Gazprom's gas supply development program for 2021-2025[15]. Thus, the type of the pipeline type has been changed from "transmission" to "distribution".
Rebrikha-Slavgorod
Location
The Rebrikha-Slavgorod pipeline (Russian: Ребриха-Славгород) is planned to start in Rebrikha and run to Slavgorod, Russia.
Project Details
- Operator:
- Owner: Gazprom
- Parent company: Gazprom
- Capacity: 0.857 bcm/year[16]
- Length: 277 km[12]
- Diameter: 40 inches[4]
- Status: Proposed
- Construction year: 2023 (proposed)[7]
- Start year: 2021-2025[13]
- Cost: 54 billion rubles (split between Rebrikha-Rubtsovsk and Rebrikha-Slavgorod)
- Financing:
- Associated infrastructure: Barnaul-Biysk-Gorno-Altaysk Gas Pipeline; gas source: Nadym and Urengoy fields, Kovyktinskoye field from 2022
Background
According to a Gazprom press release, Gazprom will invest about 60 billion rubles into the development of gas supply systems in the Altai Territory in 2021-2025. In December 2020, the CEO of Gazprom Alex Miller has signed a program for the development of gas supply in region for a new five-year period, 2021–2025. According to the document, the company is planning to build 600 km of branch pipelines with three main gas distribution stations located in Rebrikha, Rubtsovsk and Slavgorod.[13] This plan requires completing the Rebrikha-Slavgorod segment, to supply gas to via the Novosibirsk-Barnaul-Pavlovsk pipeline.
54 billion rubles will be invested into the Rebrikha-Rubtsovsk and Rebrikha-Slavgorod pipelines, and remaining 5 billion into small regional branch pipelines.[10] Gazprom is investing 1.1 billion rubles into the Pavlovsk-Rebrikha segment.[7]
In July 2020 it was reported that design and survey work for this segment was ongoing and is planned to be finished by the end of 2021.[12] Construction is expected to start after 2022.[12] In February 2021, this pipeline was mentioned as proposed in the news.[17] The updated Gazprom's gas supply development program for 2021-2025 and the interactive map still include the project as planned.[15] The pipeline was also included in the list of "Planned Transmission Gas Pipelines" issued by the Ministry of Energy of Russia in May 2015 and revised in May 2023.[16]
In 2024, the project was removed from the list of "Planned Transmission Gas Pipelines" released by the Ministry of Energy of Russia in May 2015 and revised in March 2024.[18] The project is still included as an "inter-settlement high-pressure gas pipeline" (planned) in the Gazprom's gas supply development program for the Altai territory for 2021-2025[15]. Thus, the type of the pipeline type has been changed from "transmission" to "distribution".
Articles and resources
References
- ↑ "Внимание: магистральный газопровод!". Barnaul.org. Retrieved Sep 15, 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 "Газопровод Барнаул - Новосибирск". Energybase.ru. Retrieved Sep 15, 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ↑ 3.0 3.1 "223 млн рублей будет направлено в 1998 году на реализацию программы газификации Алтайского края". Bankfax.ru. Mar 17, 1998. Retrieved Sep 15, 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 "Interactive World LNG Dashboard". ExxonMobil. Retrieved July 24, 2023.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ↑ "В селе Павловск Алтайского края прокладывают новый газопровод". Doc22.ru. Aug 20, 2016. Retrieved Sep 15, 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ↑ "Строительство газопровода Шахи-Ребриха завершат к 2020 году". barnaulgorgaz.ru. Feb 17, 2019. Retrieved Jul 14, 2022.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 7.7 7.8 "Газопровод до Ребрихи снова стали строить после нескольких лет простоя". Politsib.ru. July 30, 2020. Retrieved Sep 15, 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 "В селе Ребриха Алтайского края завершено строительство магистрального газопровода". ap22.ru. Dec 23, 2021. Retrieved Jul 14, 2022.
- ↑ "Газопровод-отвод и газораспределительная станция с.Ребриха Алтайского края". ПАО Томскгазстрой. Retrieved 2023-07-24.
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 "Попали в сети. Что тормозит газификацию Алтайского края". Rossiyskaya Gazeta. Apr 8, 2021. Retrieved Sep 15, 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ↑ "Постановление Правительства Новосибирской области от 30.03.2022 N 144-п "Об утверждении Региональной программы газификации жилищно-коммунального хозяйства, промышленных и иных организаций на территории Новосибирской области"". novosibirsk-pravo.ru. March 3, 2022. Retrieved July 25, 2023.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ↑ 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 12.4 12.5 12.6 "На Алтае проектирование двух газопроводов, граничащих с Казахстаном, завершится через два года". Federal Press. July 30, 2020. Retrieved Sep 15, 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ↑ 13.0 13.1 13.2 13.3 13.4 "«Газпром» вложит около 60 млрд руб. в развитие газоснабжения и газификации Алтайского края в 2021–2025 годах". Gazprom.ru. Dec 1, 2020. Retrieved Sep 15, 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ↑ "Последние штрихи: в алтайском селе Ребриха строительство газовых сетей почти закончено". ap22.ru. Aug 13, 2021. Retrieved Jul 14, 2022.
- ↑ 15.0 15.1 15.2 15.3 15.4 "Программа газификации 2021–2025 в Алтайском крае". gazprommap.ru.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ↑ 16.0 16.1 16.2 16.3 "Перечень магистральных газопроводов, планируемых для размещения". May 27, 2023. Retrieved July 24, 2023.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ↑ 17.0 17.1 "«Газпром» расчертил план «пятилетки» масштабной газификации Алтайского края". bankfax.ru. Feb 18, 2021. Retrieved Jul 15, 2022.
- ↑ 18.0 18.1 "ПЕРЕЧЕНЬ МАГИСТРАЛЬНЫХ ГАЗОПРОВОДОВ, ПЛАНИРУЕМЫХ ДЛЯ РАЗМЕЩЕНИЯ". КонсультантПлюс. March 12, 2024. Retrieved June 24, 2024.
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