Arctic gas project backs political strategy as Russia turns east

* Putin sees Yamal LNG project as a priority

* Moscow wants to diversify away from Europe

* Russia looks to Asia as Western sanctions hit

* In Yamal, workers confident project is secure

By Denis Pinchuk

SABETTA, Russia, April 11 (Reuters) - On the Arctic tundra far to the north of Moscow, Russia is charting a course away from the West and towards Asia.

In Yamal - which in the local Nenets language means "the end of the earth" - a $27 billion liquefied natural gas (LNG) scheme is assuming major political as well as economic significance.

The project fits well with a more aggressive eastward push by Moscow since the United States and European Union imposed sanctions over its annexation of Crimea from Ukraine last month.

Instead of sending gas by pipeline to long-standing EU customers, Russia aims to ship LNG from the remote Yamal peninsula by sea largely to Asian buyers such as China, which has avoided confronting Moscow since Russian troops took control of Crimea.

Yamal will eventually involve the drilling of more than 200 wells through the permafrost and building facilities to liquefy the gas. Construction at the port of Sabetta, more than 2,000 km (1,200 miles) north of Moscow, is well under way.

For those working in Yamal, the Western sanctions seem a remote threat even though one of the U.S. targets is Gennady Timchenko, a co-owner of gas producer Novatek which holds a 60 percent stake in the project. What matters is support from Russian President Vladimir Putin and foreign investors.

"We are confident. The port and the plant are under the protection of the president and government," said Vladimir Voronkin, deputy head of Yamal LNG, standing on what has become a vast construction site in the frozen tundra.

Voronkin noted that French energy group Total and China National Petroleum Corp each have 20 percent stakes in Yamal LNG. "Foreign investors put up money here - why would they want to lose it?" he asked.

Russia's reserves of Arctic gas are estimated at more than 30 trillion cubic metres and it hopes to convert a quarter of this into LNG, under a long-term plan to diversify away from the European market.

With the EU and Ukraine discussing ways to cut their reliance on Russian gas, Moscow has courted its Asian partners more aggressively, hoping to capitalise on record prices for LNG in Japan, China and South Korea.

Putin has hailed the Yamal LNG project and wants no expense spared. Russia now has just one LNG plant, controlled by state-run top gas producer Gazprom, on the Pacific island of Sakhalin with an annual capacity of 10 million tonnes.