Ionian Adriatic Pipeline

Ionian Adriatic Pipeline
Location
Country Albania
Montenegro
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Croatia
From Fier, Albania
Passes through Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina
To Split, Croatia
General information
Type Natural gas
Technical information
Length 516 km (321 mi)
Maximum discharge 5×10^9 m3 (180×10^9 cu ft) per year

The Ionian Adriatic Pipeline (IAP) is a proposed natural gas pipeline in Southeast Europe. It would run from Fier in Albania through Montenegro, and Bosnia and Herzegovina, to Split in Croatia.

In Fier, IAP would be connected with the planned Trans Adriatic Pipeline. Trans Adriatic Pipeline AG has signed memorandums of understanding with developers of the IAP project, including Plinacro (Croatia), BH-Gas (Bosnia and Herzegovina), and governments of Montenegro and Albania.[1][2][3]

In Split, the pipeline would be connected with the existing gas transmission system of Croatia. In addition, it may be connected with other new gas infrastructure, including the proposed Adria LNG terminal in Krk.[1][2]

The length of pipeline would be 516 kilometres (321 mi). The pipeline would be bi-directional and its capacity would be 5 billion cubic metres (180 billion cubic feet) of natural gas per year.[1][2]

The ministerial declaration on the IAP project was signed on 25 September 2007 in the framework of the Energy Community.[4]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Badalova, A. (2011-07-25). "TAP, Albania Consider Linking Pipelines". Downstream Today. Trend News Agency. Retrieved 2011-12-31.
  2. 1 2 3 "MOUC signed for TAP-IAP interconnection". Pipelines International. 2011-08-02. Retrieved 2011-12-31.
  3. "TAP pipeline, Bosnia's BH-Gas ink cooperation agreement". PennEnergy. PennWell Corporation. 2011-04-07. Retrieved 2011-12-31.
  4. "Ministerial declaration on the Ionian Adriatic Pipeline project" (PDF). Energy Community. Retrieved 2011-12-31.
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