September 2022, Vol. 249, No. 9

Features

P&GJ's Europe 500 Report of Top Pipelines

(P&GJ) — Following is a listing of some of the longest transportation routes on the continent of Europe as of July 2022. This second such report will be broken down into two sections, gas and liquids (oil and products), which will be updated in each of our September issues going forward.

“We’ve significantly increased the amount of data we have concerning the estimated capacity of gas pipelines this year,” P&GJ Editor-in-Chief Mike Reed said. “Going forward, we hope to expand the categories as well.”

Listings are compiled using Gulf Energy Information’s Global Energy Information (GEI) data, which delivers real-time market data, analysis and coverage of midstream infrastructure and downstream projects.

This still being a new endeavor for P&GJ (unlike what will be our 42nd North America 500 Report, which will be published in November), there is only one prior listing to use for the sake of comparison.

The top five gas pipelines, in length, are the 2,800-mile (4,506-km) Urengoy-Pomary-Uzhhorod, the 1,655-mile (2,663-km) SOYUZ, the 1,462-mile (2,352-km) Power of Siberia and the 1,150-mile (1,815-km) TANAP.

The longest gas pipeline originating in Europe are all operated by Gassco: the 725-mile (1,167-km) Langeled, from Norway to the United Kingdom; the 520-mile (837-km) Franpipe, from Norway to France; and the 506-mile (814-km) Zeepipe I, from Norway to Belgium.

The top five longest liquids pipelines are the 3,013-mile (4,849-km) ESPO, the 1,332-mile (2,144-km) NKK, the 1,200-mile  (1,931-km)  Tyumazy-Omsk-Novosibirsk, the 1,148-mile (1,848-km) South European Pipeline and the 1,100-mile (1,770-km) Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC).

To see the full list, click here.

Related Articles

Comments

{{ error }}
{{ comment.comment.Name }} • {{ comment.timeAgo }}
{{ comment.comment.Text }}