Hungary opens way for SouthStream: Defying EU edicts aka US bullying

Following up on this post: Washington Bullies Hungary to prevent it from choosing it's own way...What will Washington do now? Hungary Opens the Way for South Sream as Orban Defies EU

Hungary’s parliament approved a law that would open the way for the construction of the Russian-backed South Stream natural gas pipeline, Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s latest show of defiance toward the European Union.

Lawmakers approved an amendment allowing a company to construct a gas pipeline even if it doesn’t have the licenses needed to operate it, according to parliament’s website. The legislature, where Orban wields a two-thirds majority, voted 132 to 35 in favor.

“This is meant to give a boost to South Stream and is to show Russia that Hungary is taking the project seriously,” Attila Holoda, an expert on energy regulation who served under Orban as assistant state secretary in 2012, said by phone.

South Stream is “extraordinarily important” for Hungary because it enhances the security of gas supplies to the country, Janos Lazar, the Minister in Charge of the Prime Minister’s Office, told reporters Oct. 22.

The proposed 2,446-kilometer (1,520 miles) pipeline would carry Russian gas under the Black Sea, offering an alternative route to Europe without diversifying the source. Designed to deliver 63 billion cubic meters of gas a year, South Stream would run across Bulgaria, Serbia, Hungary and Slovenia before entering Italy, according to its website. Four of those nations are EU members, while Serbia is seeking to join.

The project would end Gazprom’s dependence on Ukraine’s gas-transit system. The EU and the U.S. pressured Bulgaria to stop construction in June.

Clearly the EU and the US don't want Russia to be independent of Ukraine's gas transit system? For obvious reasons, keeping Russia dependent on Ukraine's transit system aides Ukraine and impedes Russia 

Orban’s backing of South Stream is the latest initiative to strain his nation’s EU and NATO ties. In January, Hungary handed a contract to expand the country’s only nuclear plant to Russia and took out a 10 billion-euro ($12.5 billion) loan from Moscow. In July, Orban, who was re-elected in April to a four-year term, said he’s seeking to establish an “illiberal state” within the EU, listing Putin among possible models to emulate.

Orban, who’s among the most vocal EU leaders to criticize sanctions against Russia, suspended gas deliveries to Ukraine for an “undetermined time,” the Hungarian gas transit company FGSZ Zrt. said Sept. 25, days after Orban met Gazprom Chief Executive Officer Alexey Miller. Simultaneously, Gazprom boosted supplies to Hungary by about 67 percent, according to data on FGSZ’s website.

“Orban is testing the EU’s limits with Russian backing” on South Stream, said Andras Deak, a Budapest-based analyst at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. “But the EU stopped Bulgaria and it’s going to stop us as well.