Obskaya–Bovanenkovo Line

The Obskaya–Bovanenkovo Line is a 525-kilometre long (326 mi) railway line in northern Russia, built and owned and operated by Gazprom. It was opened for traffic in 2010 and was built for the gas fields around Bovanenkovo on the Yamal Peninsula, the Yamal project. In February 2011, it was extended to the Karskaya station, making it 572 km long. The railway contains a 3.9-kilometre long (2.4 mi) bridge, the Yuribey Bridge. It starts at Obskaya, branching off the Salekhard–Igarka Railway. The rail distance between Moscow and Bovanenkovo is 2,906 kilometres (1,806 mi). There are plans to extend the railway to making the railway 678 kilometres (421 mi) long. Another plan is to extend the railway to the Yamal LNG installations at Sabetta.

Obskaya–Bovanenkovo Line

The Obskaya–Bovanenkovo Line is a 525-kilometre long (326 mi) railway line in northern Russia, built and owned and operated by Gazprom. It was opened for traffic in 2010 and was built for the gas fields around Bovanenkovo on the Yamal Peninsula, the Yamal project. In February 2011, it was extended to the Karskaya station, making it 572 km long. The railway contains a 3.9-kilometre long (2.4 mi) bridge, the Yuribey Bridge. It starts at Obskaya, branching off the Salekhard–Igarka Railway. The rail distance between Moscow and Bovanenkovo is 2,906 kilometres (1,806 mi). There are plans to extend the railway to making the railway 678 kilometres (421 mi) long. Another plan is to extend the railway to the Yamal LNG installations at Sabetta.