Last update:
2019-01-24

Midcat gas pipeline in Catalunya, Spain

The Midcat is a gas pipeline that would link Spain and France with the goal of allowing an Algerian gas flow into Europe. The first phase of the project was carried out in 2012 under local resistance, and it is planned to be resumed in 2019.



Description:

The Midcat is a projected gas pipeline that would link the Spanish and the French natural gas systems through the regions of Catalonia and Midi Pyrénées. The first 87 km stretch of the gas pipeline (from Martorell to Hostalric) was carried out in 2012, but the project was then set in stand-by due to a lack of interest from the French government. The construction of the first part of the Midcat pipeline was highly controversial back in 2012 due to severe environmental and social impacts in the areas involved. Moreover, the company Enagas was accused of a lack of rigor when planning, executing and managing the project. Nowadays, there are plans of resuming the project in 2019, although there is still uncertainty about the exact date. A new movement of resistance in the province of Girona is mobilizing to oppose the 2nd phase of the project.

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Basic Data
Name of conflict:Midcat gas pipeline in Catalunya, Spain
Country:Spain
State or province:Catalunya
Accuracy of locationMEDIUM (Regional level)
Source of Conflict
Type of conflict. 1st level:Fossil Fuels and Climate Justice/Energy
Type of conflict. 2nd level:Transport infrastructure networks (roads, railways, hydroways, canals and pipelines)
Specific commodities:Natural Gas
Project Details and Actors
Project details

The project consists on: 191 km of new pipeline on the Spanish side of which 87 km were already constructed in 2011-12, 148 km of new pipeline on the French side, 328 km of loops in existing pipelines on the Spanish side, two new compression stations with a total power of 46 MW, and the enlargement of two existing compression stations in 30 MW (European Commission, 2016). The project would dramatically rise the cross-border natural gas transmission capacity between Spain and France that is currently set in 170 GWh/d SP>FR and 165 GWh/d FR>SP to 400 GWh/d SP>FR and 245 GWh/d FR>SP. The Midcat was included in the Projects of Common Interest (PCI) list in 2015 as part of the priority corridor called “Bidirectional Flows between Portugal, Spain, France and Germany”, and its commissioning is planned for 2022.

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Level of Investment for the conflictive project3,600,000,000.00
Type of populationSemi-urban
Start of the conflict:01/11/2011
Company names or state enterprises:Enagas from Spain - Promoter, in charge of building the Spanish part
Total Infrastructure Gaz France (TIGF) from France - Promoter, in charge of partially building the French part
GRTgaz from France - Promoter, partially in charge of the French part
Relevant government actors:Spanish government
French government
Portuguese government
International and Finance InstitutionsEuropean Commission (EC)
Environmental justice organizations (and other supporters) and their websites, if available:ODG - www.odg.cat
ADENC - http://adenc.cat/
ANG - http://www.naturalistesgirona.org/
IAEDEN - http://iaeden.cat/
XSE - http://xse.cat/
Conflict & Mobilization
IntensityMEDIUM (street protests, visible mobilization)
Reaction stageIn REACTION to the implementation (during construction or operation)
Groups mobilizing:Local ejos
Local government/political parties
Neighbours/citizens/communities
Local scientists/professionals
Forms of mobilization:Development of a network/collective action
Development of alternative proposals
Involvement of national and international NGOs
Media based activism/alternative media
Objections to the EIA
Street protest/marches
Participation to Toxic tours (Volt), to show participants from many other parts of Catalunya and Spain the lands that would be crossed by the pipeline[1]
Impacts
Environmental ImpactsVisible: Floods (river, coastal, mudflow), Loss of landscape/aesthetic degradation, Deforestation and loss of vegetation cover, Reduced ecological / hydrological connectivity
Potential: Soil contamination, Surface water pollution / Decreasing water (physico-chemical, biological) quality, Groundwater pollution or depletion
Health ImpactsVisible: Exposure to unknown or uncertain complex risks (radiation, etc…)
Potential: Accidents
Socio-economical ImpactsVisible: Land dispossession, Loss of landscape/sense of place
Outcome
Project StatusStopped
Conflict outcome / response:Strengthening of participation
Application of existing regulations
Project cancelled
Withdrawal of company/investment
Proposal and development of alternatives:The opposition to the project during the first phase back in 2012 started as a reaction when the construction began. They focused, thus, in minimizing the impacts and supervising the construction process.
Currently, though, an opposition is being organized in the Girona province with the support of some of the organizations involved in the reaction to the 1st phase. The proposal is clear this time: the Midcat gas pipeline should not be built. Instead, they advocate for a change in the energetic model based on energy sovereignty:
http://www.odg.cat/sites/default/files/energy_sovereignty_0.pdf
Do you consider this an environmental justice success? Was environmental justice served?:Yes
Briefly explain:The first phase of the project was already carried out in 2012 causing local impacts. Thus, to a certain extent an environmental injustice has already occurred.
Nevertheless, if completion of the project could be avoided it would be a great success, given that we would avoid: local impacts in Northern Catalunya and Southern France, displaced local impacts in the extraction fields of Algeria, and global impacts related to the current energetic model (climate change, ...).
UPDATE JAN 2019: The Midcat pipeline and its French component have been blocked by French and Spanish energy regulators on grounds of lack of necessity and high cost. The decision marks the possible end of the entire ‘MidCat’ endeavour, leaving stranded other sections of the pipeline that are already built. [2-3]
Sources & Materials
References to published books, academic articles, movies or published documentaries

COLONIALISME ENERGÈTIC: L'ACAPARAMENT DEL GAS DE LA UE A ARGÈLIA
[click to view]

EL PARTENARIAT DE DEAUVILLE I LA DEPENDÈNCIA D'EUROPA DEL NORD D'ÀFRICA
[click to view]

[1] Volt II: una ruta crítica con los macroproyectos energéticos
[click to view]

[2] Naturalistes Girona.

23 de gener 2019

La Plataforma Resposta al Midcat celebra la victòria contra aquest innecessari i costós gasoducte
[click to view]

[3] FoEE - 22 JANUARY 2019

Red card to EU-backed ‘MidCat’ is major victory for campaigners
[click to view]

Blog created by people involved in the struggle of the 1st phase of the project with valuable information about the construction process, pictures, and local media reactions.
[click to view]

La Vanguardia - Ecologistas alertan del impacto del gasoducto MidCat
[click to view]

La Fissura - Arriba el MidCat

Les entitats ecologistes alerten de l’impacte que pot tenir el gasoducte a les comarques gironines

PAU SUBIRÓS16 DE FEBRER DE 2016
[click to view]

Related media links to videos, campaigns, social network

Video shot by the organizations involved in the struggle of the 1st phase. Images of the construction site.
[click to view]

Meta information
Contributor:Sergio Ruiz Cayuela and Kevin Buckland with support of the ODG (www.odg.cat). [email protected]
Last update24/01/2019
Conflict ID:2558
Comments
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