Sunday, June 30, 2019
Gas Lite, If You Dane to Go There
There are so many variables at work
in mainstream Europe’s growing disdain for all things Trump. They are deeply
disturbed by the events precipitated by Trump’s withdrawal from the Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action (the six-party nuclear containment accord over
Iran), the fact that Trump only pulled away from a “cocked and loaded” (Trump’s
own description) June 21st out-and-out attack on Iranian military
facilities ten minutes before launch (the beginning of a war?), and that he has
and continues to escalate sanctions – even against European allies and
companies that still honor that treaty – for anyone trading with Iran.
They find his climate change
policies, particularly his encouragement to reestablish coal as a major power
generating fuel, bizarre if not simply dangerous. His bully tactics, his blind
support for Israel’s Netanyahu that seems to be further destabilizing the
Middle East and his blatant support for local populists put him on the wrong
side of history to most Western European nations. And his trade war with China
has negative economic ripples even in Europe.
The most interesting changes in
European politics place Germany as the new leader of the free world. Recent
massive shifts in the left-of-center environmentalist Greens Party (which now
seems to have the most voting constituents of any German party) have signaled
that taking American considerations into mainstream EU policymaking is hardly
determinative anymore. Europe, to put it mildly, is choosing to go it alone, no
longer counting on America’s commitments to NATO and making economic policies
in direct contravention to American wishes. Germany is at the forefront of
opposing coal-fired and nuclear power plants, willing to accept a transitional
reliance on natural gas as it ramps up its renewable energy infrastructure.
America wants to be that supplier of
natural gas, if they cannot sell abundant American coal that no one seems to
want. Germany would rather take that gas from America’s natural enemy, Russia,
than play in Trump’s economic backyard. Germans seem to fear Americans’ using
trade deals and sanctions against them – particularly in light of escalating
U.S. sanctions against nations and companies doing business with Tehran – more
than they fear the manipulative machinations of Putin’s Russia. The result:
Russia’s near-completion of Gazprom’s $11 billion 735-mile undersea Nord Stream
2 pipeline from Russia, under the Baltic, landing in northern Germany.
The fly in the ointment isn’t the
United States and its requests, oddly enough. That issue has long-since been
decided against U.S. interests. Instead, the rough spot comes from
environmentally sensitive Denmark as the pipeline is scheduled to pass through
their territorial waters around rocky Bornholm Island. Notwithstanding mounting
pressure from the EU’s new leader, Germany, the Danes have so far refused to
backdown and grant the necessary construction permits. “By doing so, Denmark
has created another crack in the rift between those European Union and North
Atlantic Treaty Organization members already divided by the pipeline’s
association with Russia.
“The United States, which critics
point out wants to sell energy to Western Europe itself, and many of its allies
in Europe and NATO, including Poland, the Baltic states and Ukraine, oppose the
pipeline, saying the $11-billion project would increase Moscow’s ability to use
gas supplies as a diplomatic weapon… Eastern European leaders in particular
fear it will increase Moscow’s influence in the region.
“But Germany, Europe’s biggest
economy, remains firm as Nord Stream 2’s strongest proponent, saying the
pipeline will ensure the continent’s energy security… Project officials say
more than two-thirds of the pipeline is already completed, with permission
secured to construct through the maritime territories of Russia, Finland,
Sweden and Germany. Only Denmark stands in its way…
“Gazprom has partnered with major
European energy companies — including Germany’s Uniper and BASF’s Wintershall
unit, Anglo-Dutch firm Shell, Austria’s OMV and France’s Engie — for 50% of the
construction funding… Europeans, particularly Germany, worry about energy
security. European gas production is set to fall by 50% over the next 20 years,
even as European demand is forecast to continue at the current pace.
“The European Union already gets 50%
of its gas supplies from Russia, some of it flowing through the nearly parallel
Nord Stream pipeline, which was completed in 2012. Other gas comes via
Soviet-era gas pipelines traveling across Ukraine… More than any other opponent
of the pipeline, Ukraine fears it will be the biggest loser once Nord Stream 2
is completed.
“The proposed completion date
coincides with a renewal date for Gazprom’s supply and transit deal with
Ukraine. That has Ukrainians, who are at war with Russia-backed separatist
militias in its eastern regions, worried.” LA Times, June 25th.
Indeed, sanction-happy Trump has even gone so far as to bully Germany and the
EU: “The United States has placed sanctions on Moscow for its incursions into
eastern Ukraine and annexation of Crimea and agrees that European reliance on
Russian gas creates a risk… Trump has threatened sanctions on Western companies
associated with the project.
“The U.S. has its own interest in
overtaking Russia’s share of the European gas market via American sales of
liquefied natural gas, or LNG. In recent years, America has become a global
leader in LNG exports, with many of those shipments going to Europe.” LA Times.
Bottom line: if it has to, Germany
will simply support a rerouting of the pipeline to avoid Danish waters. That
Trump is screaming and threatening has not moved Germany one whit. An
increasingly globally isolated United States has less and less influence with
every passing day. Trump and his base do not seem to care. Trump’s rich
corporate cronies, while not yet breaking ranks, are beginning to be concerned.
Trump’s efforts are slamming them in the wallet, even as he slams the rest of
the world in the environment.
I’m
Peter Dekom, and America’s escalating political and economic isolation from the
rest of the world most definitely does not serve the American people’s best
interests.
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