VILNIUS, Lithuania (AP) — Later 
this year, a ship the size of an aircraft carrier will arrive at 
Lithuania's port of Klaipeda on the Baltic Sea. The 300-meter (984-foot)
 vessel is not a warship, but a floating natural gas import terminal — 
aptly named "Independence" — that will be key to the Baltic region's 
plan to reduce its reliance on Russia's energy supplies.
|  | 
| Hoegh LNG | 
The countries 
in this northeastern corner of the European Union are among the most 
dependent on Russia to keep their homes warm and industries running. The
 three Baltic nations of Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania get all their gas
 from Russia and lack connections to the wider European pipeline system 
that would allow them to import from elsewhere. Poland meets 70 percent 
of its energy needs with Russian supplies.
Moscow's
 use of gas supplies as a means of putting pressure on Ukraine — like 
the Baltics, once part of the Soviet Union — has driven new urgency into
 projects to diversify energy supplies in the region, even as the full 
28-member EU has struggled to come up with a united approach.
Historical
 factors help make Poland and the Baltic states particularly skeptical 
about Moscow's intentions. Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania were forcibly 
incorporated into the Soviet Union during World War II, and thousands 
were deported to labor camps. During the Cold War, Poland was ruled by 
communists installed and backed by Moscow.
The
 choice of a floating gas terminal is a sign of the urgency felt in the 
region. It was two years faster to build than on land, and at $330 
million, was some 50 percent cheaper. It will be able to handle 4 
billion cubic meters (141 billion cubic feet) of gas a year — well above
 Lithuania's annual needs for 3 billion cubic meters — when it becomes 
operational in January. The ship, owned by Norway's Hoegh LNG and leased
 to Lithuania's SC Klaipedos Nafta terminal operator, has already 
undergone sea trials after being built at a shipyard in Korea.
Meanwhile,
 neighboring Poland is working on a new liquid natural gas terminal on 
its Baltic Coast that is slated to come on line early next year. The 
terminal at Swinoujscie will enable Poland to buy some of its gas from 
Qatar.And Estonia and Finland are talking about building two new gas terminals at their end of the Baltic, as well as an undersea pipeline that would connect the two countries.
Other
 EU countries have been slower about establishing new projects. Germany 
has stalled on a proposal to set up a liquid natural gas terminal at 
Wilhelmshaven, on the North Sea.
Although
 the Baltics are leading Europe in the effort to diversify their energy 
sources, the solutions are not easy. Seaborne liquid gas — called liquid
 natural gas, or LNG — can be expensive, costing as much as 50 percent 
more in energy-hungry Asian markets. That's because it needs to be 
cooled to minus 165 degrees Celsius (minus 265 Fahrenheit) to make it 
liquid and shrink it to one-six hundredth of the original volume. 
Insulated tankers can then take it overseas.
As
 a result of such costs, analysts say, the Baltic states and Poland will
 likely not become completely independent of Russian imports. Rather, 
the new import capacity will serve as partial insurance against any 
cut-off threats. More to the point, it will also give the countries 
leverage in negotiating prices with Gazprom, Russia's state gas 
monopoly. Russia raised the price of gas for Ukraine to $485 per 
thousand cubic meters from $268.50, and President Vladimir Putin has 
said Russia may start demanding payment in advance — heavy burdens for a
 country whose finances are near collapse.
Building
 the new gas terminals "now means you have alternatives," said 
Aleksandra Gawlikowska-Fyk, head of the energy project at the Polish 
Institute of International Affairs. "Diversity always increases security
 of supply."
Other ways to diversify energy supplies are in the works, often supported by EU funds.
These
 solutions include changing pipelines so they can run west-east and not 
only east-west. German energy company RWE began such "reverse-flow" 
supplies on April 1 and says it will sell Ukraine 1 billion cubic meters
 a year — a symbolic amount, but a start.
The
 three Baltic countries are working on a new nuclear power plant in 
Lithuania to replace power lost after the EU forced Lithuania to shut 
down its Soviet-designed reactor over safety concerns. That project has 
been slowed by lack of cooperation from Latvia and Estonia, which missed
 out on hosting the reactor and the jobs that go with it.
Analyst
 Gawlikowksa-Fyk says the Ukraine crisis and concern from the EU's 
executive commission, may raise the pressure to change that.
"The external situation, as well as the commission, may incentivize those countries to cooperate," she said.
 
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