For the first time since the Wilhelmshaven terminal opened, a tanker with a full load of liquefied natural gas (LNG) arrived there on Tuesday. This was announced by the operator Uniper in the morning. The tanker “Maria Energy” was escorted to the terminal by police ships the last few meters.

According to Uniper, the “Maria Energy” is loaded with around 170,000 cubic meters of liquefied natural gas. That is “enough to supply around 50,000 German households with energy for a year”.

After almost ten months of planning and construction, the first German terminal for the import of liquefied natural gas (LNG) was opened in Wilhelmshaven in mid-December. Test operations began a few days later. The floating terminal off the North Sea coast of Lower Saxony is intended to help close the gap in Germany’s gas supply caused by the lack of deliveries from Russia. According to Uniper, the special ship can bring around five billion cubic meters of natural gas to Germany every year.

Protests announced by environmentalists

The heart of the terminal is the almost 300 meter long special ship “Höegh Esperanza”, which is to convert the liquefied natural gas delivered by tankers into the gaseous state and feed it into the German gas network. When it arrived in December, the special ship already had a load of LNG on board and fed it into the German grid. According to Uniper, the ship that arrived in Wilhelmshaven on Tuesday is the first pure tanker.

The injection of liquefied natural gas in Wilhelmshaven is officially still in test operation until around mid-February. A Uniper spokesman explained that more attention is being paid to whether everything is working as intended. This has no effect on the general workflow. The next tanker is expected in Wilhelmshaven in about a week.

Fracking gas from the USA

In addition to Wilhelmshaven, LNG terminals are to be opened in Stade, Lubmin (Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania) and Brunsbüttel (Schleswig-Holstein) in the coming months.

Environmentalists wanted to protest the arrival of the LNG tanker in the evening. They fear damage to the Wadden Sea from terminal operations. They also criticize the fact that the gas on board the ship, which originated in the USA, was obtained using the controversial fracking method. “The fact that Germany is buying fracking gas directly from the USA for the first time today is no reason to be happy, but a historic blow for climate protection and nature conservation,” said the German Environmental Aid on Tuesday.

Fracking uses pressure and fluids to extract gas or oil from rock strata, which can pose environmental hazards. That is forbidden in Germany.