World fuelNATOPolandTop News Poland to push for NATO pipeline extension to eastern flank Warsaw Night Poland Architecture Buildings F2cccd 1024 Relevant News European shares fall as Middle East tensions unsettle investors 8 July 2026 Larnaca man, 65, robbed and abducted by acquaintances, police say 8 July 2026 Russia launches third air attack on Kyiv in a week, officials say 8 July 2026 newsroom 8 July 2026 FacebookXWhatsAppEmailPrintViber Poland’s president said on Wednesday he will push for NATO’s fuel pipeline network to be extended to the alliance’s eastern flank, addressing what military officials see as one of the biggest challenges in the event of a conflict with Russia. If implemented, the pipeline extension might become one of Europe’s biggest infrastructure projects. “The dual-use nature of pipelines … provides the opportunity to build security for NATO’s entire eastern flank, so this is also an opportunity for me and all of central Europe to raise this issue once again,” President Karol Nawrocki said as he arrived at the NATO summit in Ankara. Senior NATO military officials have called for an extension of the alliance’s Cold War-era fuel pipeline network hundreds of kilometres eastward towards Poland and the three Baltic states, with further extensions towards Finland in the north and Romania in the southeast. However, such a project faces significant hurdles, with an estimated cost of 21 billion euros and taking 20 to 25 years to complete, according to Der Spiegel magazine. The 10,000-kilometre (6,215-mile) pipeline, buried 80 centimetres (31 inches) underground, currently spans 12 countries but ends in western Germany, where it serves military bases such as the U.S. Ramstein Air Base, but also major civilian hubs such as Germany’s biggest airport in Frankfurt. It was originally built to serve primarily Western air forces in a conflict with the then-Soviet Union. In wartime, air forces are expected to account for as much as 85% of total military fuel consumption, according to a study by the Polish Centre for Eastern Studies think tank. The jet fuel running through the NATO pipelines can also be used by ground vehicles, as mixing it with additives makes it suitable for trucks and tanks that normally run on diesel. Extending the network would also help address shortfalls in storage capacity, as the fuel inside the pipeline is additional to fuel held in storage tanks. Senior military officials describe fuel and ammunition as the two supply items most critical to running an operation, citing NATO estimates that a full-scale conflict would require hundreds of thousands of cubic metres of fuel per day. According to the Polish think tank study, NATO’s fuel consumption in the event of a conflict would likely exceed the capacity of the existing infrastructure even before full-scale hostilities, due to the movement of land forces, airlift operations and fighter jet sorties. (Reuters) Subscribe to our Newsletter Latest News European shares fall as Middle East tensions unsettle investors Larnaca man, 65, robbed and abducted by acquaintances, police say Russia launches third air attack on Kyiv in a week, officials say Limassol food delivery driver pulled from car, beaten and robbed of €1,800 China lifts fuel export curbs for July, sources say Boat mooring facility delays trace back to 1994, audit finds Egypt coach blasts refereeing and turns his back on World Cup Follow en.philenews on Google News and be the first to know all the news about Cyprus and the world.
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