• A pipeline bringing gas from Russia to China will break ground in 2024, the Financial Times said.
  • The Power of Siberia 2 pipeline will allow gas to flow through to China via territory in Mongolia.
  • Meanwhile, the European Union signed a new gas deal with Azerbaijan on Monday.

A Russia-China gas pipeline will break ground within the next two years, the Financial Times said Monday, as the two allies deepen their economic and energy ties.

Mongolia's prime minister Oyun-Erdene Luvsannamsrai told the FT that construction should begin in 2024, despite Russia's invasion of Ukraine constraining some of the plans for the Power of Siberia 2 pipeline. 

The pipeline will run 2,600 kilometers and is expected to begin service in 2030. Mongolia will also benefit from transit fees and taxes to help an ailing economy hit hard from the coronavirus pandemic. 

Russia's gas exports to China have been ramping up since 2019, but strengthened flows are pivotal to Moscow as Europe moves further away from a reliance on its supplies.

The earlier Power of Siberia pipeline was previously a pivotal source of flows to Europe, but the Siberian fields will now re-direct gas to China. 

The news comes as the European Union signed a new gas deal with Azerbaijan Monday to double imports of natural gas by 2027 to at least 20 billion cubic meters.

"Today, with this new Memorandum of Understanding, we are opening a new chapter in our energy cooperation with Azerbaijan, a key partner in our efforts to move away from Russian fossil fuels," said European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

Read the original article on Business Insider