The South Stream natural gas pipeline for Europe is making steady progress, Alexei Miller , chairman of Russian energy company Gazprom, said. Miller briefed members of the South Stream supervisory board in Zurich, Switzerland, to review the pipeline’s progress. “The South Stream project is steadily progressing,” he said in a statement Tuesday. “Contracts for laying the first string as well as for procuring pipes for the second string will be signed before the end of this March.” Gazprom said it plans to commission parts of South Stream before the end of 2015. The pipeline is designed to have an annual capacity of 2.2 trillion cubic feet. Gazprom envisions South Stream as a means to add diversity to an export market that depends on Soviet-era gas transit networks through Ukraine, where geopolitical tensions add a layer of risk to Russia’s export options. Ukraine descended into chaos when ousted President Viktor […]