The U.S. imposed sanctions on a ship involved in completing the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline as the Biden administration looks to exert more pressure on Russia while not antagonizing German leaders who are determined to see the project through.
In a report sent to Congress on Monday, the administration designated Transadria Ltd., a Cyprus-based entity believed to be a Russian shell company, over pipeline work done by one of its ships, the Marlin, according to a statement from Secretary of State Antony Blinken.
Another vessel, known as Blue Ship, was cited for its work on the almost-complete pipeline but not sanctioned because it belongs to an entity affiliated with the German government, according to a U.S. official who asked not to be identified. The Danish Maritime Authority has allowed the Blue Ship to do rock placement along the Nord Stream 2 route, and the vessel was seen in Baltic waters on Nov. 11.
The two vessels were included in a report that the administration is required to send to Congress every 90 days as part of a law that was passed in 2020 and is meant to slow or halt completion of the pipeline.
The move is unlikely to mollify critics of the Biden administration in Congress. Lawmakers from both parties want the U.S. to take a tougher stand against a project they say undermines European security by giving Russia more leverage over the continent. Republican Senator Ted Cruz of Texas has held up most of President Joe Biden’s State Department nominees over the issue.
Administration officials have argued that the pipeline was 90% complete when they took office and that more punitive measures would only alienate Germany, a key NATO ally and backer of the project. The latest U.S. move comes with Europe confronting an energy crunch that has sent electricity prices soaring.
“Even as the Administration continues to oppose the Nord Stream 2 pipeline, including via our sanctions, we continue to work with Germany and other allies and partners to reduce the risks posed by the pipeline to Ukraine and frontline NATO and EU countries and to push back against harmful Russian activities, including in the energy sphere,” Blinken said in a statement.
With the first of two lines on the pipeline already filled, the main barrier to getting gas flowing appears to be bureaucratic: Last week, Germany’s energy regulator halted the pipeline’s certification process, sending European gas prices surging as much as 12%.
In a nod to heightening tensions between Russia and Europe, the U.S. official said that Russia is coming close to the line of using energy as a weapon. A formal determination that it’s done so will trigger a further response, which is likely to include new sanctions on the Russian energy sector, according to the official.
In July, the administration agreed to a deal with Germany that offered new help to Ukraine, which opposes Nord Stream 2, to strengthen and modernize its energy sector and ensure reverse flows of gas to the country if Russia—which has about 100,000 troops massing on the Ukraine border—tries to cut off supplies.
The U.S. official said the current projection is that Nord Stream 2 won’t become operational for several more months. The official said that could work in the U.S.’s favor, because it will give more time to modernize Ukraine’s energy sector and for leaders in Kyiv to negotiate a new gas-transit agreement with Russia on a separate pipeline.
In a previous Nord Stream 2 report in May, the State Department said that Nord Stream 2 AG and its chief executive Matthias Warnig are engaged in sanctionable activity under U.S. law, but that the administration would waive penalties for national security reasons. Those waivers remain in place.
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