Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria and Slovakia will sign an agreement to
interconnect their natural gas networks whih to allow also the reverse
transit, announced on Thursday night the Hungarian minister of Foreign
Affairs and Trade Peter Szijjarto on the Hungarian public television
station M1, MTI reports, according to Mediafax.
The agreement
aims to increase the security of energy supply of all the four
countries, stressed Szijjarto. The partners can access both European
funds and money from national budgets to finance the necessary
investments, he added.
In the context of cancellation of the
Nabucco and South Stream projects, it is necessary for countries in the
region to seek new opportunities and solutions for the diversification
of natural gas supply, the minister said.
"As long as gas
networks in the region are not connected and as long as no investment is
made in a strategic pipeline, we cannot talk about energy security in
Central Europe,” said Szijjarto.
The agreement was to be signed at the Eastern Partnership summit in Riga, he announced.
The
commercial exploitation of an interconnection between networks in
Hungary and Slovakia will become operational this summer, and Hungary
and Romania are working to establish a reverse flow between their gas
networks.
Business Review EU/balkans.com