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.
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The Ukraine is a geographic expression. The Bolshevik vermin drew a map and put places like Galicia, Transcarpathia, and the Hetmanat into the same box. Nikita added the Crimea to the mix one drunken night. The idea is that if you put ethnic groups that hate each other together they will turn to the central government for protection. Diversity is a tool of empire.
Khrushchev’s motives may have been as you describe but Ukraine is a sovereign country now, that speaks its own language (which is very different from Russian). Crimea was a part of the Ukraine when the USSR fell apart; whoever populates it now are Ukrainian citizens. Historically, Crimea is the land of Tatars; were it up to me, I would make it an independent country — but if we are to follow the law in the civilized world, Crimea belongs to Ukraine, like it or not.
No if we follow the law in the civilized world we’d allow groups that don’t want to be together to vote and leave peacefully like the Czechs and Slovaks did.
The Crimean people are NOT allowed to vote to determine their future? What a concept. Maybe you should try to apply that logic on the former Yugoslavian countries.
Not under the point of Russian guns, no.
Obviously the Crimea belongs to Italy since it was once part of the Republic of
Genoa. 🙂 The people there voted to return to Russia.
The Ukrainian language also has an interesting history. There are indications that Kiev is forcing it on the ethnic minorities.
[The Tatars used to sell Slavs as slaves to the Ottoman empire; that market is gone now.]
For a different point of view on the overall situation see: Solzhenitsyn & The Return of the False Dimitris
http://www.theimaginativeconservative.org/2014/09/sholzenitzyn-return-false-dimitris-ukraine.html
“Alexander Feht September 30, 2014 at 1:31 pm
Not under the point of Russian guns, no.”
So what percentage of people in Crimea voted? What percentage voted in favor? What did the observers say? What percentage of Crimea speaks Russian as their first language?
You said earlier that “Crimea belongs to Ukraine, like it or not”. No it doesn’t and except for the past 55 or so years it never has. The people of Crimea have chosen their path fairly and democratically, like it or not.
Interesting discussion! I mention the following remarks:
– NATO sees the Nato-Russia Founding Act of 1997, signed in Paris by Nato leaders and President Boris Yeltsin, and containing an explicit requirement to respect the sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity of all states, as a permit to annex all former republics of the Soviet Union. The way towards this goal is easy enough. EU and IMF are showering Ukraine and the other republics with money so that in elections, a majority of the voters agree with a membership of the EU and of the NATO. This is already what happened with the Baltic States. Ukraine is now a new testcase. If Ukraine will become a member of the EU, all other States around Russia will follow.
– This process has to be seen in the context of the words spoken by Herman Van Rompuy, president of the European Council: “I think that sooner or later we can make the whole Balkan member of the EU. In Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine the prospect of membership is not on the agenda, but we’re going to involve them closer to Europe. If the public opinion has a strong support for it, I do not know. Yet we do it. The whole of Europe outside Russia will be in some way involved in the EU, either as a member or through various agreements. I still find it an inspiring thought.”
– To counter this EU action, Putin set up the Customs Union with Russia, Kazakhstan and Belarus as an alternative to the EU Eastern Partnership.
– 85% of Ukraine’s GDP is in hands of the 50 richest oligarchs. They have intense links with the government. Some famous oligarchs are: President Petro Poroshenko, Vyacheslav Konstantinovsky, Ihor Kolomoyskyi. Kolomoyskyi is the lender of some volunteer battalions, including the Azov battalion, the Dnepr battalion, the Donbass battalion. Those are kind of private militias. The Azov battalion’s commander is Andriy Biletsky, the head of the neo-Nazi political groups Social-National Assembly and Patriots of Ukraine.
– Recently, Amnesty International accused Ukraine in the report: “Abuses and war crimes by the Aidar Volunteer Battalion in the north Luhansk region”.
– When asked whether he [former Chancellor Helmut Schmidt], as then, sees Europe at the abyss, he said: “The situation seems to me increasingly comparable. Europe, the Americans, and also the Russians behave exactly as the author Christopher Clark has described in his readable book about the beginning of the First World War: as “Sleepwalkers”.
– Henry Kissinger, who has a new book “World Order”, declared: “For Russia, Ukraine is part of the Russian patrimony. A Russian state was created around Kiev about 1,200 years ago. Ukraine itself has been part of Russia for 500 years, and I would say most Russians consider it part of Russian patrimony. The ideal solution would be to have a Ukraine like Finland or Austria that can be a bridge between these two rather than an outpost.”
I do not understand and don’t like at all the Western propaganda of Paul Driessen about Ukraine!
More information, with the links to the sources, can be found on my webpage http://users.skynet.be/fc298377/EN_EC_ext_rel.htm.
Rik, from what I can find, the official money promised for the UA (UKR) is only on offer. A loan at that. Te same trick they played on Ireland, Spain, Italy etc. The loans get recalled.
I can back most of what you say but sadly many people have been taken in like climate zombies.
Good link.
Is the author 100% sure he’s correct or 97%?
Anthony, you are turning away many non-American readers with this propaganda piece.
To us non-Americans it’s like paying to watch/listen Mann live.
And where are the facts that prove this author to be right?
Or can anyone who happens to know A.Watt write anything they want?
[Site policy: Chose ONE screen id and stick to it. .mod]
WUWT accepts article-submissions from a wide range of people.
I doubt that ‘special pull’ is needed to get an article/essay posted here, but I’d be surprised if WUWT welcomed sour-puss complaints about themselves & their mission, too. Of course, WUWT does have critic-sites who might value such a critique.
Personally, I think post-author Paul Driessen (of CFACT, which is relevant (and I broadly support them)) makes a mistake by justifying expanded hydrocarbon production, ‘Because Russia/Putin is awful’.
The problem IMO with Driessen’ production-suggestion, is that with significant supply-increases, would come price-reductions. In an ideal world, the desirability of lower energy prices might be a given, but in the world available to us, that’s a big complication that we don’t want – not right now.
Russia is Russia, has been for a long time, and probably will persist as such. Nothing going on in the Ukraine, or with the trans-Caucasus gas market is especially notable, historically or geopolitically. Mr. Driessen is just assembling the pieces on the board, to present a ‘play’ or ‘move’ that makes sense to him. I agree with him, that hydrocarbons are good, but not that ‘branding’ Russia is a useful part of promoting this form of energy.
“Nothing going on in the Ukraine, or with the trans-Caucasus gas market is especially notable, historically or geopolitically.”
People are dying by thousands, Putin makes war in Ukraine. Are you out of your mind?
Current events in the Ukraine, Mr. Feht, are not “especially notable, historically or geopolitically”.
Human tragedies, yes, and social stresses (there), to be sure. But “notable” on the stage of history or geopolitics? Not especially.
It would not be especially notable, if a few thousand died of a disease in West Africa – in fact, that in itself isn’t at all historic or weighty – but for the possibility that other international & economic spheres might find themselves affected.
Events in the Ukraine are a provincial, Eastern European affair. With a little luck, most stakeholders there will be proud of the outcome, even as they mourn those who were lost.
The standard of WUWT moderation has slipped. It’s a shame but really this whole post has nothing to do with climate, climate change, meteorology, climatology. Not WUWT finest hours, and revealing of some guys’ paranoiac universe that is not worth responding to. This whole Driessen post and its thread should be removed, done! Let’s refocus, please!
I think it is a triumph for WUWT moderation in that it doesn’t cow to self righteous censors. if you don’t like it go to another thread. CFACT is a big player on the skeptic side of the debate, that it publishes obvious propaganda (imo) doesn’t bode well for it’s otherwise respectable image. all this article does is reinforce the warmist collective view that skeptics are driven by oil companies, since the demonising of russia is seen as a tactic of “big oil” in order to control oil markets and pricing. deleting the thread isn’t going to help the situation since CFACT already published it. I would rather debate issues in an adult way than be part of a dogmatic cult.
It was upsetting to read all the political propaganda part of this post in one of my favorite websites (which I thought tried to avoid political and religious issues). But, having read most of the comments, I am delighted and surprised to see that so many people in the West realize that most of the MSM is treating us like idiots with regards to the Ukrainian tragic, largely West-provoked civil war.
I guess Paul Driessen doesn’t know better about this issue than what he’s heard in the MSM and thus ignores, for example, that the Ukrainian government has spent months mercilessly bombarding its own civilian population with our support, so perhaps his rhetoric is understandable. However, I think that a pattern emerges in the comments where many of the same people that don’t buy the AGW propaganda have also been unable to digest the Russophobic agit-prop of the last months.
points to ponder:
Why has the US released no surveillance images of the shoot-down, images it unquestionably has?
Where in international law can we find authorization for spending $5 billion US to overthrow a democratically elected government?
Why did Anthony step in this bear trap?
Wow, this site was always top of my list for climate news, but to publish such a scurrilous, vindictive, and insidious piece of lying propaganda just sent it to the bottom of the list. You usually critique the MSM over its biased climate coverage but not when it’s about Russia, why not? Perhaps it’s because the main culprit in fomenting the putsch in Ukraine, as in many other political and human tragedies these past decades, is your country, the USA? Whatever the reason, you have demeaned your reputation for honesty. What a pity.
moonofalabama.org has far more informative reports about MH17 than Putin-bad-he-killer, and wrote them over two months ago.
No Evidence – Administration’s MH17 Case Against Russia Falls Apart
Ukraine: Reuters Interviews Benedict Arnold: “Rebels Had BUK, Downed MH17”
Ukraine: No “Western” Interest In Investigating MH17