Turkmenistan opened a natural gas compression station Monday, enabling the energy-rich Central Asian nation to significantly boost the volume of its deliveries to energy-parched China. Speaking at the inauguration ceremony, Turkmen President Gurbanguli Berdymukhamedov said the station would be able to pump up to 60 million cubic meters (2.1 billion cubic feet) of gas daily. China is set to become the largest buyer of gas from Turkmenistan over the coming years as a pipeline linking the two countries, through Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan, reaches full capacity. Deliveries began earlier this year and are expected to hit 40 billion cubic meters in 2015, according to a report of the Associated Press. The opening came as China and Russia signed a raft of energy deals, including on increasing natural gas exports to Beijing. Gazprom, Russia's state-controlled gas producer, said it expects to be able to supply China with 30 billion cubic meters of gas annually starting in late 2015, but a final agreement has not yet been signed. «In addition to supplying Russia, China and Iran, we are also taking concrete measures to accelerate progress in the construction of the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan and India pipeline in concert with the member countries of this large-scale project,» Berdymukhamedov said at the ceremony in the town of Bagtyyarlyk, near the border with Uzbekistan According to data recently released by the state-controlled China National Petroleum Corporation, China will import around 17 billion cubic meters of gas from Central Asia next year.