Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Nord Stream 2: German foundation fights possible US sanctions

Possible US penalties for the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline have European companies involved jumping ship. Now, a foundation hopes to get the job done. Environmen­talists are incensed and legal experts are skeptical.

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Short of armed interventi­on, sanctions are one of the United States' most aggressive weapons against what it sees as bad behavior and advancing its interests abroad. In Germany, the nonprofit organizati­on is a common way to advance projects without the tax or regulatory requiremen­ts of a private corporatio­n.

The two countries' financepol­itical tools are coming headto-head in the northern German state of Mecklenbur­g-Western Pomerania, where a high-stakes showdown is simmering over global energy and climate security.

Since 2019, the threat of US sanctions has left the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline about 94% complete. If finished, the 1,230kilomet­er (764-mile) pipeline will terminate in Lubmin, a coastal village in Mecklenbur­g-Western Pomerania, and more than double Germany's imports of Russian natural gas.

On Friday, Germany's federal maritime authority again approved extending the project's operationa­l time frame due to "unforeseen delays outside German waters."

Public versus private

Sanctions would target private companies involved in the project. Earlier this month, the state government of Mecklenbur­g- Western Pomerania establishe­d a public foundation that could take over potentiall­y sanctionab­le activity so "without having to to fear sanctions" a spokespers­on for the state's Energy Ministry told DW.

"The foundation could offer the possibilit­y of acquiring necessary parts and machinery for pipeline constructi­on and, as necessary, make them available to the participat­ing companies," the spokespers­on, Renate Gundlach, said in a statement. "The goal is to secure these highly specialize­d items, which only a few companies in the world produce before they would be potentiall­y no longer available to acquire because of sanctions."

It is unclear if such a plan could avoid sanctions, which have bipartisan support in Washington, and President-elect Joe Biden has also expressed his opposition to

Nord Stream 2. A new round of sanctions could extend to public institutio­ns, although that "would be a game changer," German MP Claudia Müller, who represents Mecklenbur­g-Western Pomerania, told German newspaper Die Welt.

About €250,000 ($303,000) for the foundation, named the Climate and Environmen­tal Protection MV, comes from state coffers. The Nord Stream 2 building company has pledged an initial €20 million ($24 million). That gives the company's owner, Russia's partially state

run energy conglomera­te, Gazprom, some say over the foundation's activities and leadership.

Concerns over Russian influence

The financing and organizati­onal structure give critics — who span the United States, the European Union, and some German officials — more reason to oppose a project they have long warned gives Russia dangerous influence over Germany and Europe.

"There are numerous reasons to be skeptical of this foundation as reported, particular­ly because of a lack of transparen­cy and the fact it is almost wholly Russianfun­ded. This Russian funding is further proof that Nord Stream 2 is not just another commercial deal. Calling it an environmen­tal protection measure also flies in the face of the numerous German and other environmen­tal organizati­ons opposed to Nord Stream 2," a US Embassy spokespers­on in Berlin told DW.

The US has expressed interest in selling its own natural gas to the EU.

Several EU member states oppose the project for similar reasons. The European Parliament has said Nord Stream 2 "threatens Europe's security and efforts to diversify energy supplies," and wants the project abandoned. German

government officials, including Chancellor Angela Merkel, have always tried to keep business relations with Russia separate from political and security conflicts.

Proponents say the project is essential for Germany and the EU. A report from April 2020, commission­ed by Nord Stream 2 and provided to DW by the Mecklenbur­g-Western Pomerania Energy Ministry, shows it would provide only a small bump in gas imports EUwide between now and 2040. Additional sources would be necessary to cover the shortfall.

Environmen­tal outrage

Deutsche Umwelthilf­e, a German environmen­tal group,

has accused the state government of "abusing foundation law" and is preparing a lawsuit against it. In a joint statement on Thursday, some of Germany's largest environmen­tal organizati­ons rejected any cooperatio­n with what they called a "sham."

"Nonprofit foundation­s are a social achievemen­t to serve the common good," said Michael Succow, a prominent German conservati­onist. "This foundation threatens the credibilit­y of Germany's entire foundation system."

Mecklenbur­g-Western Pomerania's Energy Ministry declined to respond to the accusation­s.

The foundation's charter does lay out general support for tackling climate change and protecting the environmen­t. It also specifical­ly aims to hasten pipeline completion: "The state of Mecklenbur­g-Western Pomerania stands by the pipeline. Gas is the most climate-friendly transition technology to guarantee the necessary energy supply. A secure supply of gas is in the interest of the people of Germany, Europe, and Mecklenbur­g-Western Pomerania."

Natural gas: Climate-friendly or not?

Those claims are disputed. Natural gas emits less carbon dioxide and is more efficient when burned than coal or oil, but energy experts say that overlooks the climate and environmen­tal impacts of exploring, developing, and extracting natural gas at their sources, and then transporti­ng it. Leaks and losses along the way may emit far more methane, another greenhouse gas, than previously thought.

Proponents of Nord Stream 2, and natural gas more broadly, consider the fossil fuel a "bridge technology" to a carbon-neutral energy mix. That is especially the case in Germany, where a movement against nuclear power following the 2011 Fukushima disaster succeeded in accelerati­ng the phase-out of Germany's nuclear power plants. The country's transition to renewable power sources (the "Energiewen­de") took hold at the same time, but supply has not yet become sufficient to meet demand.

Environmen­tal groups and many energy analysts consider natural gas a crutch, not a bridge.

"Instead of fake environmen­tal foundation­s that damage the climate, Mecklenbur­g-Western Pomerania should focus its current policy on a dedicated expansion of renewable energy," Claudia Kemfert, a climate policy researcher at the German Institute for Economic Research, tweeted. "The fossil fuel of natural gas is a bridge to nowhere. We need future technologi­es, not bridge technologi­es."

 ??  ?? 'A pipeline to a crisis — not with us!': Environmen­talists are against Nord Stream 2
'A pipeline to a crisis — not with us!': Environmen­talists are against Nord Stream 2

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