The EU seeks a mandate from its members to negotiate with Russia over plans for a gas pipeline under the Baltic Sea to Germany, an EU document showed, as some EU states worry the project will make Europe too reliant on Russian energy.
The Nord Stream 2 Pipeline would pass through Danish and Swedish waters and bypass Ukraine, a nation suffering from conflict and the main transit route for Russian gas heading to the EU.
Eastern European and Baltic Sea states fear a new pipeline will make the EU even more dependent on gas from Russia, whose state-owned Gazprom already supplies one-third of EU gas needs. Germany and other beneficiaries in Northern Europe support the plan.
The European Commission and German regulators are at odds over whether EU law should apply to the pipeline.
In a March 28 letter addressed to Denmark and Sweden, the commission said it was inviting all EU states to voice their concerns and would seek a mandate from EU energy ministers to negotiate an agreement with Moscow on behalf of the bloc.
Discussions would focus on how EU rules aimed at ensuring competitiveness and transparency in the gas market could be applied to the offshore pipeline, the Commission said.
"It is our view that a specific legal regime would need to be established for the offshore section, and that such specific legal regime should include some fundamental principles stemming from EU energy law," the commission wrote. "It cannot be built or operated ... in a legal void."
EU diplomats said the commission might struggle to secure enough support from member states, given that the project has the backing of Germany, the bloc's biggest economy that will host the end-point for the 55 billion cubic meter-per year pipeline.
Under EU rules, two-thirds of the 28 EU member states representing two-thirds of the bloc's population would need to back the offer for the EU to open talks with Russia, European Commission spokeswoman Anna-Kaisa Itkonen said.
The commission has negotiated a legally-binding treaty with third countries on a pipeline on behalf of EU members in the past, when it held talks with Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan overthe Trans-Caspian Pipeline.
EU diplomats said Russian President Vladimir Putin would have to take any decision to abandon or modify plans by Gazprom, which has a gas export monopoly.
The March 28 letter responded to a request made this year by Denmark and Sweden for the European Commission to intervene on Nord Stream 2 before the two states decide on permits. EU diplomats said there was little scope for either nation to block the plan.
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