Europe cannot afford to have its foreign and domestic policies dictated by Putin’s blackmail
European Union nations want to impose tougher economic sanctions on Russia for invading Ukraine and providing the missiles that shot down Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17. However, they are worried about biting the hand that feeds them – with the natural gas that fuels much of its economy.
Russia is the world’s second-biggest natural gas producer and third-biggest oil producer, so it can inflict tremendous pressure and damage on its neighbors without firing a shot. The 28 EU nations as a whole depend on Russia for one-third of their oil and gas. However, Estonia, Finland, Latvia and Lithuania get 100% of their natural gas from Russian President Vladimir Putin. Six other European countries get more than half of their gas from the powerful Russian Bear: Czech Republic (57%), Poland (59%), Ukraine (60%), Hungary (80%), Slovakia (84%) and Bulgaria (89%).
That makes the Europeans highly vulnerable to cuts in the fuel supplies they need to power their cars, keep their businesses, factories and economies running smoothly – and heat homes, to literally keep people alive during brutal winters like those they’ve experienced recently. A simple “nyet” from Mr. Putin could reduce or cut off energy exports, leaving the continent hostage to Russia and creating a potential disaster. European officials know this but so far are frozen by their own fears and policies.
Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) calls Russia “a gas station masquerading as a country,” because 60% of its exports are oil and natural gas. Cutting these exports to pressure Europe politically might hurt Russia’s economy. However, it has already done so, is currently squeezing Ukraine over winter gas supplies – supposedly over late payments for past deliveries – and is making export arrangements with China and other countries, to reduce any economic harm it might suffer from engaging in renewed energy blackmail.
Moreover, during one week this September, Russia supplied up to 45% less gas than Poland requested, the Poles’ largest oil and gas company reported. Over the past decade, “Russia has halted the flow of gas through Ukraine three times, directly affecting eastern and southern European countries most reliant on Gazprom, the giant Russian energy monopoly,” the Christian Science Monitor has observed.
Indeed, 16% of Russian natural gas exports flow through Ukraine. In yet another pressure tactic, Russia began tightening the export spigot in June. Russian gas supplies through Ukraine to Slovakia have been cut by 25%, says Ukrainian Energy Minister Yuriy Prodan.
There’s no question that the EU and USA must punish Russia for seizing Crimea, infiltrating troops and military equipment into eastern Ukraine to support secessionists, aiding terrorism, and killing hundreds of innocent jetliner passengers. Since no one wants a shooting war with Russia, economic sanctions are all that’s left. Failure to do even that would give Putin a green light to move more forcefully against Ukraine – or even try to occupy other former Soviet Union nations.
Putin has called the breakup of the Soviet Union “the greatest tragedy of the 20th century.” Before invading Ukraine, Russia invaded the former Soviet territory of Georgia in 2008 to support separatists who had declared independence for the Georgian provinces of South Ossetia and Abkhazia. It’s not at all hard to imagine Putin moving against Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, other former Soviet possessions or even Finland, to bring them into Mother Russia’s suffocating embrace. But how can the EU end the blackmail, enjoy some foreign policy independence and improve its faltering economy with less reliance on Russia?
If European countries faced food shortages due to import restrictions, they would offer their farmers incentives to grow more. EU members need to act the same way on the energy front. Otherwise, they give Russia tremendous sway over their future. European nations certainly have the ability to take action.
For one thing, they could import more natural gas from the United States and other countries besides Russia, until it can produce more domestic energy. Europe is blessed with enormous quantities of oil and natural gas – including enough gas to supply all its needs for at least 28 years, during which it could develop viable alternatives to gas and the dozens of coal-fired generators it is now building. US Energy Information Administration data reveal that Sweden has enough gas to meet its needs for 250 years. Denmark, Poland, Bulgaria, France and Spain also have extensive potential, as do Great Britain and other countries. Unfortunately, those deposits aren’t economically recoverable using traditional drilling.
However, they can be captured using hydraulic fracturing (fracking) – which has been used safely and with great economic and employment benefit more than a million times in the United States since 1947. It has made the United States the world’s largest natural gas producer.
Not surprisingly, environmental extremists strenuously oppose fracking – further crippling Europe’s ability to meet its energy needs and chart its economic destiny and foreign policy. Also not surprising, Russia is secretly funding the European anti-fracking movement “to maintain European dependence on imported Russian gas,” NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen recently revealed.
But if there’s a silver lining to unfolding Middle East events and Russia’s naked aggression, it’s that more sensible Europeans are finally looking more critically at their self-destructive energy and environmental policies. The European Union announced in September that it will combine previously separate energy and climate ministries into one office. The decision infuriates radical greens, but it reflects growing business, worker, consumer and family concerns about reliable, affordable electricity and motor fuels.
Next, Europe needs to allow fracking. Right now, virtually every EU nation except Poland and Britain bans fracking. Besides making Europe more energy independent, fracking would reduce carbon dioxide emissions by enabling European nations to rely more on natural gas and less on coal. Fracking would also reduce EU natural gas, electricity and even oil prices, as it has in the USA. It would also create or save millions of jobs that are endangered (or gone) because of Europe’s outrageously high energy costs. In fact, many EU companies and families pay three to eight times more than Americans do for electricity.
Another problem in Europe is that people living above the shale deposits have no ownership or economic interests in developing them. They are inconvenienced, but the state and drilling companies get all the money. The EU needs to devise incentives that give landowners and residents a positive stake in development – such as a royalty or percentage of every Euro of oil and gas produced and sold.
On this side of the pond, US petroleum production must be further increased. The huge gains in American oil and gas output since 2009 were all on private and state lands, while the Obama administration has presided over a nearly 40% decline in production from onshore and offshore federal lands. The President and congressional Democrats need to stop being energy obstructionists, and let American companies tap these energy treasure troves. That would create jobs, generate billions in government revenues, make more gas available for European purchase, and strengthen our economy and balance of trade. Congress should also consider prohibiting state and local fracking bans as unconstitutional constraints on trade.
Congress and the President should also fast-track US natural gas exports to Europe, by speeding permits for liquefied natural gas (LNG) facilities. These actions would encourage further drilling, technology improvements and job creation. As Europeans adapt and improve America’s rapidly advancing fracking technologies and develop their own gas, these exports will be less vital. But they are essential now.
The world is not going find safe, efficient, affordable, environment-friendly alternatives to oil, natural gas and coal in the next decade or so. (Right now, Europe gets just 1.3% of its energy from wind and solar, but 75% from fossil fuels – and both wind and solar exact significant environmental costs.) In the meantime, we need to rely more on realistic opportunities and initiatives, and on our oil supplier friends in Canada and Mexico. If we don’t, we’ll have to continue importing from increasingly unstable and unfriendly parts of the world – and being constantly at their tender mercies, just like the Europeans.
Paul Driessen is senior policy analyst for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org) and Congress of Racial Equality, and author or Eco-Imperialism: Green power – Black death.

Lots of assertions about Russia in this propaganda piece. Woefully short of evidence. Could just as well be reading some evidence-light garbage from an AGW zealot.
Did this parachute into the wrong website?
Over the years a lot of European politicians have been good friends of the Russian energy sector – such as former German chancellor Gerhard Schröder, who accepted a lucrative post with Gazprom shortly after stepping down from politics. No doubt it was to ensure smooth continuity of supply.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerhard_Schröder
Dear Mr. Watts, I suggest closing this thread for comments. There is way too much ranting already (also by me), and WUWT is a much too serious website to have these political hobbyhorses trampling all over the place.
Please do not close comments. That would be unproductive by proving you can be motivated to close free discourse. I’m guessing you can afford the comment space here.
This post seems to be an unrealistic wish list.
The post is a neocon wish list. I don´t understand why Driessen would put his head in a bathtub full of piranhas over an issue like this. Hell, if they are going to go into non climate issues I want to get a guest pòst about Venezuela´s government and the way it abuses human rights.
Reliance on Russian natural gas reminds me of the days of Arab oil embargoes when they put everybody up to ransom to increase prices; it worked. France made the decision to increase its nuclear capacity, and now it keeps its green neighbours supplied rather than reduce output overnight, but current politics seems not to favour new facilities. In the interests of their national security many countries will have develop new energy policies so they are not reliant on others, and it will have to be something other than green power which does not provide baseload capacity for industries and isn’t very reliable.
Mr. Watts:
I suggest more than just closing the thread for comments, though that would be a start.
A straight international power-politics post like this doesn’t seem to belong here at all.
Let’s not see WUWT morph into a different kind of DailyKos.
I agree with Old Crusader. This is going off in all directions, including the ‘Jewish conspiracy to take over the world’ hints. Even if I agree with Paul concerning the energy situation.
you are the only one to mention jews. something in this discussion obviously frightens you.
small minds like yours, enviro Mental
you appear to be the only racist here, are you saying racists have large minds?
Hear hear! I’ve found that a blog is only effective as long as it stays focused. I’d truly hate to see this blog become ineffective. Stay focused on climate. If you want to link to an article then put in the link and the energy/climate related parts. Ignore all the political wrappings.
Again, closing this thread only proves WUWT can be forced to silence discussion. That does nothing to address the flaws in the essay posted here, repeatedly addressed throughout these comments you propose to close. If there are specific comments that ought be censored, it would be better to name those and the reason for censure.
Right, but are we not straying very far from the climate issue here? What has 30 mm fighter jet guns to do with global climate?
In truth, Anthony Watts himself has wide interests both within and outside the sciences. It only ‘seems’ that WUWT is dedicated to climate issues.
“Watts Up With That” was overtly intended by Mr. Watts to allude to a broadly inquisitive, investigative & exploratory disposition.
I both approve & enjoy the ‘mix’.
Not may folk were shot trying to get into East Berlin from the West. Why was that? What has really changed in the government of the West since then? Not a lot. What has really changed in the government of Russia since then? Not a lot. And when can the Tartars have Crimea back following their mass deportation in 1944?
The fact is that it is the EU (Germany?) which has been aggressively expansionist in Eastern Europe, ludicrously provocative towards Russia. The pro Russian government in Ukraine was overthrown in a pro EU coup. Hardly surprising that the ethnically Russian people of Eastern Ukraine and Crimea (which is historically part of Russia) want nothing to do with the Kiev regime. As regards who shot down the jet like everyone else here I don’t know who was responsible, but it does not change the fact that we have a dubious regime in Kiev supported by the highly dubious imperialistic EU.
What, like when Russian tanks rolled into Prague in spring 1968 to stop Dubcek being seduced by the west? Or Hungary in 1956 when the Russian tanks rolled in there? At least now the iron fist of Russia can pride itself in jailing young women for singing rude songs in a christian cathedral.
Yes, and Hungary now seems to be yearning to go back from its neocon dabbling. Equally interesting to see how the various US government funded NGOs have played a huge role is so-called “democracy” uprisings – the Ukrainian coup-to-power government being actually the 2nd incarnation “democracy” movement.
Sad that democracy is only acceptable when the government voted in is a US puppet.
WOW wasn’t expecting to see NATO propaganda posted here.
Makes your stance to GW invalid.
I thought you people use the brain (skeptic).
I see – because you disagree with views expressed here about Russia, then we are wrong about global warming? Seriously?
Another drive-by attack by the truly Ignorant. He won’t be back and he doesn’t care- he’s ‘made his point’ and feels better about not doing his part to ‘WE’RE SAVING THE WORLD!’
I guess this is a diversion from the main topic, the same way your side likes to peddle communism when you protest advocating the draconian control of CO2 emissions? Or what exactly do you guys protest for? Could be you are mostly a bunch of watermelons using climate science as an excuse to do what you can´t do by winning elections?
(This thread sure is getting political, isn´t it?)
I would just like to leave a link so as to put the Putin/Ukraine happenings into a different perspective via a Gentleman who knows a thing or two.
http://freenations.net/
I think the Author of this post should read some ‘Russian News’ just to get some idea of how complicated things are.
The Gas dispute–
http://en.itar-tass.com/economy/751985
An interesting post. Even more interesting comments. It has certainly struck a nerve.
Holy Smokes! two articles here in the last day and all I can do is shake my head. If you realized who was behind the Trans Caspian Pipeline years ago, and followed what happened thereafter as I have, you will find that it is the same people who got all that stimulus money to put up numerous wind turbines and solar plants.
I also see critics of the occupy protests and will say this, it did start out with the blame being rightly focused on those who committed criminal activities and still got away with it. it started out on the right foot until Bill Mckibben et. al.. went in and tried too co-opt it with ill informed paid protesters. The same financial institutions the original movement protested about, financed the renewable entities that everyone here knows about and that included significant conflicts of interest and the cronyism. Also, the financial institutions protested against were involved in laundering money for the drug trade (HSBC et.al.), terrorism financing, human trafficking, fraud (BOA/Wells et.al.) and on and on. What about MF Global and how Corzine skated on that even after he lied under oath to congress?
How about the institutions that finance certain renewable companies involved in drugs, arms smuggling and organized crime: UPC/IVPC/Evergreen et. al.?
I am an older individual and am disappointed at the attitudes shown at times here by some who hide behind women, wrapped in a flag holding a bible. Most of the original protesters, (a mix of intelligent young and older conservative AND liberal persons) and knew that AGW was bullshit and that the banks and others were all too willing to profit from it. They alway finance both sides of a war for profit .
The protest was eventually ruined by a calculated ‘poisoning of the well’ and well placed propaganda. Sadly, I see the media had also been poisoned as have the minds of other intelligent people.
Like a really bad magic trick, I see fingers pointing somewhere else as to distract from what the magician is really up to.
It was the EU’s attempt to annex the Ukraine which led to the confrontation with Russia. They were trying to steal Russia’s access to the Black Sea by deposing an elected government and imposing their own apparatchiks. The whole thing, including many of the “Pro” protesters has been directly funded by the EU’s taxpayers and Russia’s response was entirely predictable.
If the EU can’t cope with the consequences of its actions that’s its problem.
L.O.L.
Seems that it is OK for USA to exercise economic might but not democratic Russia. Also that Germany having banned both nuclear and fracking, is in a pickle of its own making.
That aside, like Coi2 and warming, evidence of Russian complicity in MH17 is non existent.
What tangled webs we weave.
Vaclav Klaus – renowned CAGW sceptic:
27 Sept: Spectator: Vaclav Klaus: the West’s lies about Russia are monstrous
An interview with the former Czech president, possibly the West’s last truly
outspoken leader
He doesn’t agree with the western elite’s current hostility towards Russia,
which he believes is based on a false and outdated view of the country
I spent most of my life in a communist
Czechoslovakia under Soviet domination. But I differentiate between the
Soviet Union and Russia. Those who are not able to understand the difference
are simply not looking with open eyes. I always argue with my American and
British friends that although the political system in Russia is different
from the system in our countries and we wouldn’t be happy to live in such a
system, to compare the current Russia with Leonid Brezhnev’s Soviet Union is
stupid.’
He says, with finality: ‘The US/EU propaganda against Russia is really
ridiculous and I can’t accept it.’…
Vaclav Klaus is different, a throwback to the days when our leaders did
stand for something and weren’t afraid to speak their minds. Let’s hope he
does not turn out to be Europe’s last conviction politician.
http://www.spectator.co.uk/features/9322652/europe-needs-systemic-change/
Well, I take the war mongering, imperialist, infiltrating, anti-environmental, US-EU anyday over a medieval, backwards, aggressive, poor country like Russia. It is a simple matter of choice and by the way, we KNOW that the Putinbots are activated all over the internet. No exception for this blog either.
Anytime someone starts throwing around the term “neocon”, the credibility of their words drops to near zero, with me.
The term “neocon” was coined and applied themselves by a group of American intellectuals. The term has been in use now for decades. It says a lot about you that a political term in wide use is now not to be used. I guess you would toss out “progressive” also. Any others we should never write here? (besides the S-word of course)
Now it is true that many people toss about all sorts of good and descriptive terms and labels without really knowing what those words mean — but it is a fact of life that ignorance is an human trait. (see “Dr.” Mann for example) A term is not devalued simply because an ignorant man uses the term.
.So what if the term has been in use for decade, it’s almost always misused, as either a propaganda term, or by grossly misinformed people. Feel free to go upthread and show one example of some harangue where “neocon” was used in a realistic context.
It says a lot more about you that you made an untrue claim about what I said and used it for a personal attack. Way to go.
Goodness – a totally misguided diatribe if I ever saw one.
The reason those countries are dependent on Russian energy is because their energy infrastructure was largely built when they were part of the Soviet Union, and many of those nations received lower than market priced energy for years after the USSR changeover in 1991.
To blame Russia for its customers failing to diversify is neocon economics of the highest order.
WUWT really should stay out of areas which have nothing whatsoever to do with climate – and this area doesn’t even have anything to do with energy except that it is the excuse used in the latest East vs. West struggle.
Hey, c1ue– There you go with that “neocon” thing, which tells me you are either a know- nothing or a propagandist (both?), then you make an argument for the suppression of (our) free speech. You are welcome to take your own advice and STHU. How about that?
Neocon is a very correct term given the fact that the primary source of all this anti-Russia talk (and action) ranges from the wife of Robert Kagan (Vic Nuland), to John McCain, to Brzezenski, and on and on.
Equally, your inability to intelligently converse seems to indicate your own predilection to that ideology.
That’s quite a spectrum of politicians you’ve included as neocons. It becomes apparent that according to you, politicians fit the mold of neocon if they aren’t leftist enough.and in this instance, if they aren’t supporters of the current Russian adventurism. Your suggestion about what WUWT should and should not be concerned with falls flat, but it’s the sort of talk one would expect from the Politburo and from those who have suddenly appeared in these threads in support of Putin.
One of the better articles this year. The EU should frack and nuke. Frack for the current generation and then develop nuke (thorium would be my choice to divert windmill funds into development) for the future. Nuke power can drive synfuels. The Germans did synfuels in WWII which is a much better alternative than whatever they have blowing in the wind.
Except the essay doesn’t advocate nuclear decay fueled steam turbines, it very clearly omits nuclear and favors fracking for natural gas. Why the omission?
Russia : A land where you have none of the rights and all of the freedoms.
The USA : A land where you all of the rights and none of the freedoms.
The first casualty of war is the truth. As this “romance blogger” noted.
http://www.luckylovers.net/blog/uplode_file/43203_1411646811.jpg
Note, Lugansk and Donetsk flags are being waved. Another lie biting the dust.
The UA army were sent in to stop any referendum being carried out. They bombed homes, businesses and infrastructure also shot people up. So they ran. Apart those who wanted to fight, the old and the poor. A war crime!
Now Tartarstan has free health care. No UA debts, lower taxes. big tax income from the sea port lease..
They are now thriving!
Don’t forget Britain, France and Turkey fought for control of this port and we got our hides kicked.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crimean_War
Nothing changes.
Putin simply sat there while the west destabilises for strategic advantages. The west certainly don’t want the people, their unelected nazi politicians. Or to take on their debts. The west wants that strategic deep sea water port. Control of the gas supply. also their land has to be made open for Mons(ters)anto. Russia banned GM crops due to the Indian cotton debacle. Once the market is cornered. Put the price up.
p.s. Taking about Chechen. Many of these guys are fighting in East UA. Plenty of videos of them being very effective!
MH17 (another outfitted spy plane diverted with civvies on board) was taken out in an attempt to put the blame on Putin. The UA has the same weaponry as Russia. People have seen this launcher being flaunted in a town before use. No spy drones, satellites, spies (reporters) saw anything come and go via the Russian borders.
Another war crime belonging to the UA army
Speaking of that. Not noticed one of the “recent” Russian “army movements” all over the news had guns lined up on a harvested field? Yes, you can see it was harvested. Remember the date it was announced.
More lies. Only people who are soft in the head can believe.
When the investigators came to the aircraft. The UA army denied safe passage. They came to collect the boxes. The UA started mortaring in the vicinity of the aircraft at the time. The UA will not hand over radar records. Russia did. A definite false flag from the US advised UA.
Another war crime.
The UA refused the Russian funded UN aid convoy. They checked everything, twice while refusing entry. The told UNESCO point blank they would receive no aid from the army whatsoever.
This is a war crime!
What reason for Russians to bomb and kill Russians in the East UA states? Only an idiot could possibly disagree. The UA army sent in to control a civilian people is enacting a war crime!
Most shell came from the airport area and the controlled checkpoints. Yes, we know its a war crime.
The UA army got slammed because the locals were supplying intel for remote aiming.
Now mass burials have been found where the UA soldiers held land. Their heads are decapitated, shot and some are naked. All local villagers.
You have it. Another war crime.
The UA army wanted expulsion or ethnocide at any cost. Well, they do have far right wing monsters in power aided and abetted by US wormtongues in Kiev. As usual the money is dangled like a carrot.
Sorry, what was that about Putin lawfully selling gas and oil?
I know a Canadian top cheese who has everything set poised to invade. Starting with a huge software hit. Not telling you more but if he does and he does not avoid me. He will never collect his pension.
Why all this? The CO2 lie is all about hiding the fact these are energy wars. The power mongers are getting scared of running short. Not wondered why O’Bomber has taken out ONLY Syrian fuel dumps and refinery’s? ISIL controls far outside of Syrian oil interests. Nobody has bombed the taken Kurdistani sources.
You have not fallen for the AGW lie. Don’t fall for its sister lie.
it is a terrible crime what is happening to the people of Lugansk and Donetsk. it is another crime that western media will not even report on these crimes.
the youtube channel anti-maidan-youtube shows the side we are not hearing from corporate news. it is clear these are honest humble people being terrorized by the ukrainian government.
Strange that this article didn’t say a word about nuclear energy being the safest, most efficient, and cleanest solution of the Putin problem.
People who say that holes in the pilot’s cabin of the Malayan airliner are bullet holes have never seen bullet holes.
Listening to the Russian propaganda (ITAR-TASS, RTV, etc.) to “get another point of view” is a grave error that will result in much grief and death. Unfortunately, Putin’s propaganda has already found the way to penetrate even this blog.
The take away here is that the EU only needs to increase its use of renewable energy by a factor of 57 times to solve its dependency on fossil fuels.
I couldn’t read past the first few sentences. There is no evidence Russia shot down MH17. The first western experts on the scene said there was evidence of machine gun fire to the cockpit (the pictures of the wreckage show this), there was no evidence of a missile plume (which the BUK missile would leave), the ATC control recordings at Kiev were seized immediately after the event and have not been released (why not?), the US refused to release any of its own satellite imagery of the event.
Ask yourself you benefited from the shoot down.
Honestly, it’s frightening how easily some people can be whipped up into a righteous frenzy by government propaganda spewed by the always complicit and sickeningly sycophantic mainstream media.
DON’T BELIEVE IT!
Do your own research, check facts (whatever the subject matter).
You can see the damage is not from 30mm cannon, let alone 20mm cannon.
The rebels shot down the plane with a Russian-made, Russian-supplied SAM. No machine guns, no cannon, either shot down that airliner.
Who benefits? It was an accident in that the plane was misidentified. You’re looking for a conspiracy where none exists.
One thing I have noticed over the last year or so.
Whenever there is a post that is in any way critical of Russia or Putin, and you get flooded with waves of trolls who spout the latest Kremlin line, even if it contradicts what they were told to say yesterday.
Naturally, FSB has a whole department working on it 24/7, and WUWT is on their list of popular Western sites.