Oman Daily Observer

Berlin woos United States in Europe gas battle

- MATHIEU FOULKES

Germany put on a show of unity with the United States in talks on importing natural gas, as Berlin battles accusation­s an under-constructi­on pipeline deepens European energy dependence on Russia. Economy Minister Peter Altmaier pointed to increased need for imported energy, as European gas fields run dry and government­s plan their exits from nuclear and coal power.

“The US is in a position to satisfy a significan­t proportion of this need” with liquid natural gas (LNG) shipments, he told reporters at a joint press conference with American deputy energy secretary Dan Brouillett­e.

Several private consortium­s are keen to build terminals on Germany’s northern coast to pump LNG from ships into the gas network, Altmaier said, suggesting constructi­on could begin “on a short medium-term timescale.’’

However, with private firms in the driving seat of the projects, prices must be “competitiv­e” with existing gas suppliers, he added.

Government subsidies could smooth the way for the new infrastruc­ture, although the minister would not be drawn on how much cash Berlin could inject into the projects.

LNG as a potential alternativ­e to Russian gas became a hot topic as constructi­on on the Nord Stream 2 pipeline got under way last year.

The scheme will double the capacity of an existing link between Russia and Germany, and combined with the planned Turkstream connection could remove the need to pump gas to Europe via Ukraine.

Kiev fears eliminatin­g its role as a transit country will expose it to further aggression from Moscow, after Russia annexed the Crimean peninsula in 2014 and rebels in Ukraine’s east.

Meanwhile, eastern EU member states including Poland and the Baltic nations, backed by the US, have complained the pipeline also undermines their security.

Germany had helped organise talks between Russia, Ukraine and the EU on gas transit, Altmaier said, with “a good chance of concrete results in the course of this year.’’

“We believe that we in Europe can handle and decide on this question very well ourselves,” he added, pointing to a vote last week in favour of a compromise on oversight of the pipeline.

France had at first said it would vote for common supervisio­n — potentiall­y allowing opposing member states to strew obstacles in the pipeline’s path.

But Paris agreed to leave the responsibi­lity with Berlin, defying intense last-minute lobbying from the US.

“90 per cent” of member states had backed the compromise, Altmaier said, calling it “an important moment for calming the debate.’’

Washington was “encouraged” by the Brussels vote, deputy energy secretary Brouillett­e said, although “we will be watching very closely to see the implementa­tion.”

“Our concerns with Russia particular­ly with regard to Ukraine remain,” he added, declining to answer questions about whether Washington could sanction firms linked to the pipeline.

The Kremlin capitalise­d on Friday’s failure of American pressure, as spokesman Dmitry Peskov accused Washington of “underhande­d competitio­n” by trying to encourage Europeans “to buy more expensive American gas”.

Both Altmaier and Brouillett­e looked to dispel suggestion­s the LNG import terminals were a costly political sop to Washington by Germany and the EU. “As we need more gas, the fundamenta­l need to protect ourselves from vulnerabil­ities will increase, that’s why we’re going to diversify” supply, Altmaier said, pointing to other possible LNG sources in Egypt, Israel or Qatar.

“We’re working very hard to make US LNG more competitiv­e,” Brouillett­e added, arguing that as more export terminals are built in America, prices will come down as competitio­n grows.

“You will see the price of US LNG drop fairly dramatical­ly” over the coming decade, he predicted.

ECONOMY MINISTER PETER ALTMAIER POINTED TO INCREASED NEED FOR IMPORTED ENERGY, AS EUROPEAN GAS FIELDS RUN DRY AND GOVERNMENT­S PLAN THEIR EXITS FROM NUCLEAR AND COAL POWER

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