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    Home » EU, operators agree tariffs to make gas corridor more competitive

    EU, operators agree tariffs to make gas corridor more competitive

    March 28, 2026
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    *European Union flags flutter outside the EU Commission headquarters, in Brussels, Belgium, February 1, 2023 REUTERS/Yves Herman

    Athens — Bulgarian, Greek, Romanian, Moldovan and Ukrainian natural gas grid operators agreed with the European Commission on ​Friday to tariffs along the corridor carrying gas ‌from Greece to Ukraine, in an effort to make it more competitive and diversify supplies.

    Greek gas grid operator DESFA said in ​a statement that the operators and the EU ​executive had agreed on tariffs that will be implemented ⁠as of October and are aligned with EU ​rules.
    Greece, Bulgaria, Romania and Hungary agreed in 2016 to develop ​the necessary infrastructure for the realisation of the so-called Vertical Gas Corridor which would allow the bidirectional transmission of gas between the ​countries.
    Ukraine and Moldova joined in 2024.
    “The agreed trade approach ​introduces new tariffs that make the Vertical Corridor a highly competitive ‌and ⁠strategic energy artery for Southeastern and Central Europe at a particularly critical time for the continent’s energy security,” it said.
    The five natural gas operators will, for the first ​time, offer daily, ​monthly, quarterly ⁠and annual capacity products starting with the 2026–2027 gas year (October 2026), DESFA said.
    “For the ​transitional period until the full implementation of ​the new ⁠products, the operators shall submit a request to the relevant national regulatory authorities to extend the availability of existing ⁠products ​until October 2026 in order to ​support Ukraine’s security of supply during the transition period,” the statement said.

    Reporting ​by Angeliki Koutantou and Ivana Sekularac; Editing by Alexander Smith – Reuters

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