BELGRADE, March 29 (Xinhua) -- Slovenia and other
four countries would sign a ministerial declaration on the construction of a
pan-European oil pipeline connecting Romania's Constanta and Italy's Trieste,
said reports reaching here from Slovenia on Thursday.
The Slovenian government
authorized
on Thursday its Economy Minister Andrej Vizjak to sign the declaration, which
would be signed in the Croatian capital Zagreb on April by ministers from
Slovenia, Croatia, Serbia, Romania and Italy and EU Energy Commissioner Andris
Piebalgs, the Slovenian national news agency STA reported.
The declaration will be the first document to enable
work on developing the pan-European oil pipeline construction project after
three years of negotiations between the governments of five countries.
The project of the pan-European oil pipeline is still
in its initial stage, with the involved countries deciding to express their
positive political will in order to attract investors, said the reports.
The pipeline, which is expected to be completed after
2011, is to enable direct transport of oil from the Black Sea and the Caspian
Basin to refineries in Italy's Trieste and Genoa.
The ministerial declaration was drafted by the
European Commission after the commission as well as Slovenia rejected in 2006
the signing of a legally binding memorandum on support for the project which ran
contrary to EU law.