The top executives of the Trans
Adriatic Pipeline (TAP) company, and the company itself, have
been sent to trial for alleged environmental crimes committed in
the construction of its Italian terminal in the Lecce area.
The trial will start May 8.
Lecce prosecutors have called to trial 18 people and TAP.
Puglia Governor Michele Emiliano, of the ruling centre-left
Democratic Party (PD) said his administration would stand as
civil plaintiffs.
He said they would ask for a "billion euro compensation".
Emiliano has backed anti-TAP protests over the years, some of
which have turned violent.
TAP's Italian landfall is being constructed in the Melendugno
area of the Salento promontory in Puglia.
Among the other injured parties, as well as the Puglia
government, are eight towns represented by their mayors; the
environment ministry; the head of the No TAP Salento group,
Alfredo Fasiello; and the consumer and heritage associations Vas
Onlus, Codacons and Italia Nostra.
The TAP is a pipeline project to transport Azeri natural gas,
starting from Greece via Albania and the Adriatic Sea to Italy
and further to Western Europe.
The pipeline would be supplied by natural gas from the second
stage of the Shah Deniz (Azerbaijan) gas field development in
the Azerbaijani section of Caspian Sea through the South
Caucasus Pipeline and the Trans Anatolian Pipeline (TANAP).
Since it will enhance energy security and diversify gas
supplies for several European markets, the TAP project is
supported by the European institutions and seen as a "Project of
Common Interest" and a part of the Southern Gas Corridor.
Protests at Melendugno have focused on the uprooting of olive
trees, which are set to be replaced where they originally stood
after the project is completed.
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