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Building of Germany's very first land-based LNG terminal starts

The construction of Germany's very first landbased liquefied nationwide gas (LNG) terminal at the inland port of Stade began on Friday with the goal of beginning operation in 2027, stated the task firm Hanseatic Energy Center (HEH).

The project on the river Elbe is part of Germany's wider efforts to diversify its energy sources after a sudden drop of Russian gas imports following Moscow's intrusion of Ukraine.

The terminal will consist of 2 LNG tanks with capability of 240,000 cubic metres each and will be ammonia-ready as Germany and its neighbours intend to change gas with green hydrogen and its derivatives in the future to cut carbon-dioxide emissions.

After 6 years of preparation and permitting, the building and construction stage now begins, HEH Chief Executive Jan Themlitz said in a declaration.

Czech utility CEZ, Germany's utility EnBW and importer SEFE have actually committed themselves as buyers of 90% Stade's annual volume capacity of 13.3 billion cubic metres.

HEH said all customers have the alternative to change their contracts to hydrogen-based energy sources, such as ammonia, in the future.

Spanish gas grid operator Enagas will assume the terminal's operational obligation, HEH added.

A first drifting regasification vessel

(source: Reuters)