The approximately 800-kilometre (500-mile) long East-West pipeline could connect the isolated state possessing the world's fourth largest gas reserves with markets in the West via an ambitious link that would traverse the Caspian.
"With the completion of the East-West pipeline, cooperation with our European partners acquires a new quality," said Turkmenistan's President Gurbanguly Berdymukhamedov at the opening ceremony at the Belek compressor station, some 500 km northwest of the capital, Ashgabat.
The Trans-Caspian pipeline is expected to cost around USD 5 billion and could carry as much as 30 billion cubic metres of natural gas annually in the direction of the EU.
The pipeline would provide Europe with an opportunity to lessen its dependence on Russia-sourced gas.
Berdymukhamedov said the East-West link had been built "by us on our own thanks to the strength of our national companies" despite previous foreign interest in building the vital link.
Turkmenistan's lack of infrastructure has left it dependent on pipelines connecting it to Russia and China for the bulk of its exports in the past.
Brussels' energy chief Maros Sefcovic said during a May visit to Ashgabat that the Trans-Caspian pipeline might come online by the end of 2019, although it is unclear who will build a link that faces opposition from littoral states Russia and Iran.
Other efforts to involve Turkmenistan in the EU's energy system including via the long-planned Nabucco pipeline have come to nothing in the past.
The country's once-booming energy relationship with former master Russia has virtually collapsed since energy giant Gazprom confirmed its intention to wind down imports of Central Asian gas, with Turkmenistan blasting the company as an "unreliable partner" earlier this year.
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