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Austria Pipes Up for South Stream

The South Stream pipeline would bring Russian gas to Europe without crossing Ukraine.

Austria remains committed to Russia's controversial South Stream gas pipeline project despite a deepening crisis in Ukraine, its foreign minister and the head of its top energy company said on the eve of a visit by President Vladimir Putin.

"We need not only more suppliers, but also more variety in the routes that energy can flow to us," Foreign Minister Sebastian Kurz told reporters in Luxembourg on Monday, noting that five European Union countries firmly backed the project.

The South Stream pipeline would bring Russian gas to Europe without crossing Ukraine, which has been locked in a violent standoff with Russia after the ousting of Ukraine's pro-Moscow President Viktor Yanukovych touched off a separatist uprising.

The European Commission has said the project can get approved but has stressed it must conform to strict EU competition and environmental laws.

The head of Austrian energy group OMV called for accelerated negotiations to approve the South Stream pipeline, telling a newspaper it was unrealistic to think Europe could entirely wean itself off of Russian energy supplies.

Gerhard Roiss was speaking before Putin visits Vienna on Tuesday, during which OMV and Russian partner Gazprom are to sign a contract on bringing the South Stream gas pipeline to Austria, as agreed in April.

"A third of our gas comes from Russia, in some regions even 100 percent," and in return Europe sends cars and machinery to Russia, Roiss told the WirtschaftsBlatt newspaper.

"One should not make this economic integration into a political football, because our economy and prosperity are based on it," he said in remarks published Monday.

"If we can get large quantities of gas from a certain region then we have to give investors the chance to build gas highways. Negotiations for South Stream should thus be accelerated and not put on ice," Roiss said, while acknowledging that the project would have to conform to European law.

Against the backdrop of conflict in Ukraine, the pipeline plan has become a focus of tension between Russia and the European Union.

See also:

Russian Energy Minister Accuses EU of Pressuring South Stream Partners

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