Bosnia signs up to Trump-linked pipeline to reduce Russian gas dependence
Bosnia and Herzegovina has signed an agreement with Croatia to construct a gas pipeline, aiming to reduce its dependence on Russian gas supply. The project, known as the Southern Interconnection Agreement, is backed by investors linked to former US President Donald Trump and would connect Bosnia to Croatia's LNG terminal, potentially allowing US gas to reach the country.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedBosnia and Herzegovina has signed an agreement with Croatia to construct a gas pipeline, aiming to reduce its dependence on Russian gas supply. The project, known as the Southern Interconnection Agreement, is backed by investors linked to former US President Donald Trump and would connect Bosnia to Croatia's LNG terminal, potentially allowing US gas to reach the country. Bosnian Prime Minister Borjana Kristo hailed the deal as a significant step for energy security and diversification. However, the European Union has cautioned that the agreement, signed on April 28, 2026, could jeopardize Bosnia's EU membership bid and over $1 billion in aid due to a lack of transparency. This development comes as the EU prepares for an energy purchase ban from Moscow.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe pipeline would connect Bosnia to Croatia’s LNG terminal on the island of Krk.
Bosnia and Herzegovina signed a deal with Croatia to construct a gas pipeline backed by Trump-linked investors.
The agreement aims to reduce Bosnia's reliance on Russian gas ahead of a European Union ban on energy purchases from Moscow.
The deal is a major step forward that strengthens energy security and diversifies supply.
The Southern Interconnection Agreement could jeopardize Bosnia's EU accession bid and put over $1bn in aid at risk.