Baltic Pipe Project Passes DNV Certification
Bringing New Gas Supply Options to Denmark and Poland
DNV, the independent energy expert and assurance provider, has announced the issuance of a Certificates of Conformity (CoC) for the Baltic Pipe project to Energinet, the Danish national transmission system operator for electricity and natural gas. The Baltic Pipe project is a £2bn gas pipeline that will have an annual capacity of 10 billion cubic meters and allow for the transport of gas from Norway to Denmark and Poland. DNV was contracted at the start of the project to provide technical assurance services and support the Authority with the necessary permitting to bring the infrastructure into use. This included independent verification, complex independent modelling, and submarine pipeline certification to the DNV certification regime DNV-SE-0475. The project is currently in the engineering, procurement, construction, installation, hook-up, and commissioning phases.
The Baltic Pipe achieved final investment decision in 2018 and was partly funded by the EU. By providing Poland with a new energy supply, enabling the country to move away from coal fired powerplants and reduce its overall CO2 emissions, the project aligns with the objective of the subsequent REPowerEU plan. This scheme sets out a series of measures to fast forward the green transition while increasing the resilience of the EU-wide energy system, in order to accelerate the move away from Russian fossil fuels.
DNV’s 2022 Energy Transition Outlook launched recently in Copenhagen forecasts that natural gas will peak in 2036, then slowly taper off to end some 10% below today’s levels by 2050. Gas has staying power owing to its diversity of uses, half of the demand for gas is as final energy in manufacturing, transport and buildings, and the other half through transformation for other final uses such as electricity, petrochemicals, and hydrogen production.
“The Baltic Pipe project is extremely complex with many stakeholders. DNV is proud to work on projects that support energy security, reduce CO2 emissions, and align with EU’s energy transition. We are pleased that Energinet selected DNV as an important partner in our role to provide assurance services to avoid risks for this capital infrastructure project,” Mick Cramer Jakobsen, Project Director, Energy Systems at DNV, said.
Energinet’s part of the large-scale project consists of 105 km pipeline in the North Sea, approximately 210 km pipeline underground across Denmark, an expansion of the receiving Nybro gas terminal, and a new compressor station at Everdrup in Southern Zealand. DNV also assisted with professional services to Energinet on the onshore pipelines, compressor station and gas terminal.
The pipeline was opened on 27 September 2022 by the Danish Prime Minister (PM) Mette Frederiksen, Polish PM Mateusz Morawiecki and the Norwegian PM Jonas Gahr Støre.
“This project has become strategically important as Europe’s energy supply challenges came to the forefront of the agenda in recent months. The project represents a crucial step in Poland’s desire to free itself from its reliance on Russian gas and to decarbonize its economy in line with its commitment to the Paris agreement. We are pleased to have been involved with this project and I am proud of our teams which worked tirelessly to provide assurance and technical expertise to Energinet, in line with our purpose of safeguarding life, property and environment,” Prajeev Rasiah, Executive Vice President for Energy Systems, Northern Europe at DNV, added.
“We are happy to receive the DNV certificates to permit conditions from the Danish Energy Authority. The start-up and export of natural gas to Poland on time was key for Energinet and we acknowledge the professionalism, engagement, access to pipeline experts and valuable service provided by DNV to the Baltic Pipe project,” Peter Hodal, CEO Energinet Gastransmission, noted.