
Amy Myers Jaffe, Tufts University
The prospect of conflict between Russia and NATO countries over Ukraine has raised fears of an energy crisis in Europe. Russia provides nearly half of Europe’s natural gas, and some leaders worry that Moscow could tighten the flow if hostilities break out. To weaken Russia’s leverage, the Biden administration is working to secure additional gas shipments to Europe from other sources. Global energy policy expert Amy Myers Jaffe explains how much gas is available and what’s involved in rerouting it.
How dependent is Europe on natural gas, and who are its main suppliers?
Natural gas represents about one-fifth of all primary energy used across Europe. It accounts for about 20% of electric power generation and also is used for heating and industrial processes.
Russia is the largest supplier of natural gas to Europe, sending about 40% of the continent’s supplies shipped by pipeline. The next-largest suppliers via pipeline are Norway (22%), Algeria (18%) and Azerbaijan 9%. Europe also receives natural gas that is liquefied and delivered by ship.
In recent months, European imports of liquefied natural gas, or LNG, from the U.S. and elsewhere reached record levels at around 400 million cubic meters per day. To put that in perspective, a single LNG cargo ship can hold roughly 125,000-175,000 cubic meters of natural gas – enough energy to warm 17 million British homes for one winter day.
What are the biggest constraints for exporters on sending more gas to Europe?
LNG is made by cooling natural gas to minus 260 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 162 degrees Celsius), which reduces its volume by a factor of more than 600. Natural gas is piped to a port, processed in a liquefaction plant and then loaded into specialized insulated, temperature-controlled tankers for shipment by sea.
To receive LNG, an offloading port must have a regasification plant that converts the LNG back to a gaseous form so it can be sent by pipeline to end users. Both liquefaction plants and regasification plants cost billions of dollars and take multiple years to build.
Following a similar crisis in 2009, when a financial conflict with Ukraine prompted Russia to suspend gas shipments for 20 days, Europe substantially expanded its number of regasification facilities to 29. There is still currently space in European regasification receiving terminals to import more LNG, and plenty of storage space to hold imported supply virtually indefinitely. But many of the world’s top suppliers are maxed-out, with little capacity to produce and liquefy more natural gas than they are already moving.
The global LNG market has some flexibility. About two-thirds of all LNG is sold under firm, long-term contracts with fixed destinations. Some major contract holders like South Korea, Japan and China and their suppliers are willing to redirect cargoes to Europe if a further cutback in Russian exports creates a worsening supply crisis. https://www.youtube.com/embed/4jGrXsE6YqQ?wmode=transparent&start=0 A look at the U.S.‘s emergence as a major natural gas exporter, focusing on the company Freeport LNG.
Have suppliers rerouted shipments this way before?
The main example occurred in 2011 when a tsunami triggered a meltdown and radiation release at Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant. Japan shut down all of its nuclear plants to assess whether they were prepared for similar disasters. LNG suppliers diverted gas shipments to Japan to help it weather the immediate crisis.
Today, analysts say that producers or LNG importers may be able to redirect cargoes that could offset about 10%-15% of any shortfall. Still, such shifts would likely be at premium prices, leaving European consumers with an even steeper bill than they face now.
Will increased U.S. LNG shipments to Europe drive up prices for U.S. consumers?
Existing U.S. LNG export facilities have been running at full capacity for several months. About half of U.S. LNG shipments in December 2021 were destined for Europe, spurred by rising prices in European markets. Previously, a larger share of U.S. LNG exports were sailing to China, where drought-related constraints on hydroelectric power had created a surge in demand for natural gas.
In other words, U.S. sellers have been able to supply more gas to Europe by diverting export cargoes, rather than by selling gas that would otherwise have been used domestically. In my view, if U.S. natural gas prices rise in the coming weeks, winter weather is likely to be a bigger driver than LNG exports.
Wouldn’t Russia harm its own economy by cutting off gas exports to Europe and losing those revenues?
In recent years, Russia has structured its federal budget in a manner that has allowed it to stash away US$630 billion in foreign exchange reserves – cash held by the central bank in other currencies for discretionary use, much like individual savings accounts. Russian leaders can use these funds to weather any new sanctions or unexpected changes in the price of oil.
For example, last year, the Kremlin based its spending on a conservatively low break-even oil price estimate of $45 per barrel, giving itself some latitude. Ultimately, 2021 oil prices averaged $71 a barrel, providing a sizable budgetary windfall.
Through this fiscal strategy, Russian President Vladimir Putin has amassed a war chest to withstand any new round of sanctions, or even the complete loss of natural gas export revenues from Europe for a period of time.

Still, any Russian move to cut off gas exports to Europe might have longer-term consequences. Putin may have hoped that his saber-rattling about natural gas, and the high prices it has triggered, would convince Europeans that Russian gas is vital and can’t be easily replaced with renewable energy. But ironically, this tactic may already have created a lasting distaste that fast-tracks Europe’s pivot to offshore wind, Euro-North African hydrogen hubs and U.S. LNG.
Gazprom, the Russian firm with the largest gas export footprint in Europe, might also find itself adrift in a sea of lawsuits and high penalty charges for breaking its contractual commitments in the wake of a cutoff. That in turn could affect the Russian people, who also rely on Gazprom’s solvency for their winter fuel for heating.
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Putin may be willing to bet that an energy pricing crisis in Europe will sow popular discontent, scotch the energy transition and help Russia win concessions on NATO’s positioning of troops and missiles. But there is little evidence that Europe will react that way. While Europe’s shift to renewables will take time, it will still be bad news in the long run for Russia, which has 1,688 trillion cubic feet of natural gas reserves left to be exploited for as much as 100 years of supply.
Amy Myers Jaffe, Research professor, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Quote:”Can the US find enough natural gas
Depends where they look – there’s enough gas just up the road from me to pay off the debt Boris ran up trashing the UK and all who shiver within her jurisdiction.
Just under one crappy little village.
Don’t need LNG or any much pipelines either
I do hope the ‘residents’ mentioned in this story are pleased with themselves now.
Welcome to The Planet Of Clowns
No residents were arrested during the demonstration and very few residents were opposed to it. The ones that were arrested had been ferried in from Sheffield and Durham, you can bet that others had been bussed in from further afield. The protests are being organised at a national level, petitions are filled in all over the country and brought in to make it look like there’s more protest and, if that fails, they bus in a ‘rent-a-mob’. Don’t blame local residents for a highly organised national programme of opposition.
I think that’s why Peta wrote residents in single quotes, but to be fair, sarcasm is best expressed in double quotes: “residents”
Oops – I see it now, missed it when I posted. On a positive note, it always helps to really spell it out for those who might not be aware!
The EU’s gas supply is not our problem, nor is the Ukraine.
Poland is not our problem, neither is France.
You have to draw the line somewhere.
Rational, prudent, moral, people draw a line based on principle and strategy, not by arbitrary “line drawing.”
You are attributing things to me which I did not say.
Prove it.
We wait till they’re at our borders?
No, no. They can have Delaware as long as the Biden Crime Family are confined there
Delaware
Right. Our problem is Washington D.C.
The Ukraine’s problem is Victoria Nuland – from guess where.
US meddling with a London script is a circus indeed. Talk about a ridiculous theater!
Bonbon forgot the students the Russians shotin cold blood.
Now was that GRU, or FSB,or Berkut….let me think?
According to bonbon ukraine shot down MH17 also….
Ye made that up from pig swill – cop on!
I don’t know for sure who shot down MH17 but, more importantly, neither did the official enquiry. I do wonder about the reason why the Ukraine apparently turned off every air search radar in the country, just for that 1 day though?
MH17 (flight 330) was flying in an area of Ukraine covered by the kind of aviation radar that registers transponders. Before being struck by a missile MH17 was directed by Dnipropetrous Ukrainian air traffic control to vary it’s original flight plan somewhat southernly.
Ukrainian radar however did not and could not record 2 other ghosting planes (military planes hiding in the radar shadow of other planes) in the same sector because those were apparently flying with their transponders off. One if those was heading toward MH17 and the other one coming from behind which passed MH17.
Russian based radar is not reliant solely on transponders for registering airplane(s) movement in real time. Although the specific Russian radar details about the 2 planes ghosting along among commercial flights (more than MH17 was aloft in that sector) the Dutch investigating commission would not have anything to do with that offered up information. [Possibly because Russia did not want to disclose technical military secrets the investigators insisted as necessary to authenticate the Russian tracking of transponder-less foreign military planes and so that detail’s refusal by the Dutch commission led to it being ignored in the Western legend of MH17.]
This is really scary!
WUWT really has Russian trolls posting crap.
I didn’t expect Anthony to permit that.
“F… the EU” Nuland got the Ukraine government change her USA team promoted in 2014. Here’s how that worked out for Ukrainians’ annual household per capita income in US$ equivalents.
The per capita income in 2013 was equivalent to US$2,145; in 2014 = $1,785; 2015 = $1,109; 2016 = $1,135; 2017 = $1,427; 2018 = $1,6993; 2019 = $2,180; 2020 = $2,145 ; 2021 data is not yet posted in this same source [ceicdata dot com]. Which means before USA president Obama’s promotion of “color” revolutions Ukrainian per capita income was better and, like most places, there is inflation in Ukraine.
Exactly!
When others are attacked you need to defend them. If they go under, you are next, and those others won’t be around to help you.
NATOstan Article 5 is the rule – that is why no country at war either internally or elsewhere can join – it would mean immediate mobilization.
Germany’s Basic Law forbids weapons to war zones. Both of these simple rules escape Kiev’s Nuland Brigades. They are barking up the wrong tree.
Is this question posed as a joke?
The problem in Europe is that they will not use hydraulic fracturing to develop their own resources. The UK has large reserves and absurd policies meant to make it impractical to develop. They have large storage facilities they’ve could use as a hedge that they’ve shut down. European gas shortages are a self-inflicted wound from the environmental lobby. The LNG the US and Qatar can deliver by ship is extraordinarily wasteful of energy. This is a manageable problem if the Europeans choose to fix it themselves.
Freezing all the money Putin and his buds have stashed in londongrad might slow him down
Yes, but if you can read the story today in the WSJ on eastern Ukraine you will see Putin’s long game.
Why is this the US’ problem? Why are the Europeans so green-washed that they think their own gas reserves have the green-cooties but it’s awesome to buy gas from Russia, the country they have sanctions against and has much less environmental protection. If they REALLY cared about the environment they would develop what resources they need from local sources (definitely not importing wood chips from across the ocean) which would be under their environmental protection laws. At least then they would be consistent and have some integrity. Germany, for example, list all integrity when it decided to close it’s perfectly good reactors and EXPAND its coal power plants. Anything it now says regarding the environment is political spin. Actions speak louder than words.
The article says Russia supplies about 40% of Europe’s gas. This masks the true situation for many of the countries in Europe and their dependence on Russia.
In 2020 Russia provided the following amounts of gas to Europe. (Countries marked with an * are members of the EU.)
Bosnia + Herzegovina 100%, N. Macedonia 100%, Moldova 100%, *Finland 94%, *Latvia 93%, Serbia 89%, *Estonia 79%, *Bulgaria 77%, *Slovakia 70%, Croatia 68%, *Czechia (Czech Republic) 66%, *Austria 64%, *Greece 51%, *Germany 49%, *Italy 46%, *Lithuania 41%, *Poland 40%, *Slovenia 40%, *France 24%, *Netherlands 11%, *Romania 10%, Georgia 6%.
https://www.statista.com/statistics/russian-gas-dependence-in-europe-by-country
Now they should settle in Euro’s not Dollars, and watch the sparks fly – oops, not good…
Euros, it was announced, are what the newly agreed upon Russian gas sales to China will be paid for. I am not certain if that applies only to the compact for their new pipeline and annual long term gas volume they just formalized.
Well, the London/US axis-of-trust-$us threaten a SWIFT sanction. Just imagine the blowback!
*Estonia 79% is just ridiculous.
The EU have forbidden Est from using oil shale for generating electricity in the near future, forcing subsidies of wind (which often doesn’t blow,orblow too hard) and non existent solar.
The Estonian drive to unreliables is the perfect example of self harm, pushed along by some bully 1000s of kms away in Brussels.
Estonia can buy gas from Russia, as Hungary is doing . Estonia as a London 5th column simply does not pay – see the Ukraine GDP.
Estonia as a London 5th column?
Doesn’t pay?
WTF??
You are really patheticin your trolling!
Esti Gas is owned by Gazprom!
Weapons for Ukraine, blocked by Germany. Keep up to date!
Estexit then?
Russia and China sign major energy dealThe 30-year agreement will boost gas supplies by 10 billion cubic meters and will be settled in euros
https://www.rt.com/business/548304-russia-china-major-energy-deal/
And :
Orban of EU, NATO member Hungary thanks Putin for gas deal
Putin went on to say that Russia and Hungary had signed long-term contracts that would allow the EU nation to purchase discounted gas from Russia until 2036. He also reported that Hungary currently buys gas five times cheaper than the European market rate.
Now suck it up guys! Some are simply ordering, paying for and getting gas delivery, while others say trust $us!
D.C. is really looking like Rumpelstiltskin!
And Bonbon looks like the true Pro-Russia Shill he is.
When does his propaganda on here stop?
Go ahead – censor.
It is a piggish thing to do, but quite fashionable!
Trust $us.
Who’s censoring? You’re still being allowed to post.
Germany took down the RTD Satellite channel which is clearly censoring. Russia just pulled the plug on DW in Moscow in response.
Meanwhile Youtube et al are busy. Trump was sent to FaceBook jail, and Twitter oblivion.
Is anyone supposed to know what you are writing about? Are you saying the reports referenced are know to be untrue or are you just acting like most climate alarmist who refuse to deal in anything except name calling?
EXCERPT from:
THE UKRAINE PLOT IS THICKENING WITH GERMANY AND FRANCE NO LONGER IN LOCKSTEP WITH US/UK-LED NATO
https://www.windtaskforce.org/profiles/blogs/the-plot-is-thickening-with-germany-and-france-no-longer-in
I wrote this article, because Russia-hating, extreme rightists in the US State Department and US Senate are leading the US into a shooting war with Russia, on European soil
I was living in the Netherlands during NAZI occupation.
Millions of European people, including my family, have vivid memories of war and the Holocaust.
NATO, a US/UK Handmaiden
NATO has a convenient policy, which states each sovereign country has a right to make its own security arrangements.
Russia is surrounded by sovereign countries, such as Kazakhstan, etc.
Does that mean all these countries are fair game for NATO color-revolution-style regime change?
If the NATO umbrella would spread to these countries, Russia would be isolated from many countries, except China.
The image shows, NATO expansion after the US Secretary of State, James Baker, oral pledge to Gorbachev, “not to advance one inch beyond East Germany”
image did not appear ….
And more from the paranoid Russophiles.
How evil, how dare individual countries believe they have a right to make their own security arrangements, rather than have them dictated from Moscow.
Really now, belonging to NATO means one is hostile to Moscow? Really?
As to your claim about the state department being infested with extreme right wingers, do you actually live on the same planet as the rest of us? Or are you one of those people who believe that socialism is a right wing philosophy?
Not many live in in NATOstan – ‘The rest of us’ .
The NATOstan sect is passee!
Interestingly enough, Putin asked if Russia could join NATO at one point, when the relationship with America was more cordial. He was refused. So the article is not true in that regard as well.
If the US and the EU didn’t have a bunch of
pussiesgirly-menprogressives in charge, we would all hit Russia with sanctions now and really tighten the screws if Putin invades.@j.p. – Somehow I don’t think having one’s military anywhere inside it’s national borders is a reason to do what you suggest. By the way: those western media photos of supposedly Ukraine threatening Russian rows of massed motorized military equipment tellingly cut out the immediately surrounding extensive permanent soldier and maintenance barracks that exist as part of an established base.
How can the US supply future gas to anyone when Let’s go Brandon has taken steps to end fracking, rescinded oil and gas leases and ended the construction of the Keystone Pipeline. You tell me, who is Russia’s and China’s best friend?
Another war party narrative.
Russia never threatened to use gas as a weapon and always fulfilled its commitments. It was always the western side threatening and sanctioning.
European industry and Russian resources are a perfect match, and cooperation is a no-brainer.
Only the US bully is against it, because closer ties between those two turns the US oligarchic power structure into a nothingburger. The US needs the Europeans to be able to wage all these wars & coups & illegal sanctions with millions of victims, distort global media & institutions without being held accountable.
It really is fascinating how socialists the world over are convinced that the US is the source of all evil.
If only the peaceful Soviets had been allowed to win the cold war, the would would be perfect by now.
European nations have a genuine interest in Russian resources, like the best price for natural gas – both for households and industry. Lately rising cost of natural gas has impacted European production costs for nitrogen fertilizer and come spring this could become important for the European agriculture sector. Just this week Russia, which globally accounts for ~35% in global supply of ammonium nitrate fertilizer (nitrogen), has halted exports of that nitrogen fertilizer until it sees how it’s national demands are satisfied come spring – probably expanded food crop area cultivation is being considered.
Unlike it’s trade partners Russia has, as of December 2020 [as per ceicdata dot com] a low 17.7% of debt component in it’s nominal (domestic + external) GDP . In contrast it’s trade partners ratio [debt as % of GDP, as per same source standardized for Dec. 2020] is [was] surpassed by Turkey at 39.5%, Ukraine at 53.9%, Germany at 69.7%, France at 115.7%, Italy at 155.5%, and the USA at 132.5% (currently Russia supplies more oil to the USA than does Saudi Arabia); if the U.K. is a Russian trade partner I’ll mention their [2020] cipher was 104.5% debt in nominal GDP. Sorry, I don’t know if elsewhere 2021 percentages are out.
The West should be more concerned with the latest 30 year deal just signed this week between Russia and China for gas supply! The East prosper, the West withers
For the information challenged, and humor vacant, here is :
Revolver Presents: Russia’s Other Top 6 Misinformation Narratives
https://www.revolver.news/2022/02/revolver-presents-top-6-russia-misinformation-narratives/
as for point number #3. Women don’t belong in combat.
Now that’s fact-checked!
There is plenty of NG via LNG from USA, Brazil LNG ports to loosen the Gazprom hold on central Europe. But isn’t this the crux of the issue with Russia and it’s annexation of Sevastopol on the Black sea and it’s current long war with Ukraine and current saber rattling? LNG ports planned on the black sea where shut down after Russia invaded Ukraine in 2014. Additionally, there is hesitancy to fully leverage NG resources in USA due to political leveraging to control the supply of NG globally via the false flag of climate change. Putin wants a pipeline to Western Europe through Ukraine…. he is going to get it…. one way or another. Putin who could care less about climate change, because he understands it as political leveraging towards the goal of market collusion to control NG supply. Finally, he will thwart LNG ports to access the emerging markets of central Asia. Putin wants Russia to be the next Saudi Arabia like cartel power in the world for hydrocarbon fuel and he is already there. His goal is to keep Western Hemisphere hydrocarbon fuel in the Western Hemisphere. And the goal of big energy is to let Putin set the supply and prices to continue to prop profits for generations to come. This is the operating subtext for everything happening in the world in concert with the corporate left’s clearly stated project to Reset Capitalism per the Russian and Chinese model of oligarchy and centrally controlled and colluded commodities markets. The rich will get richer and have more control of global mass of smart phone serfs, including us.
It’s time to partner with Canada and the South American countries to build the Hydrocarbon fuel infrastructure needed to power a 21st century industrial manufacturing powerhouse. If we don’t move fast, all that will be left in America will be 401K/ IRA money and health care and a population of Americans who think working is an obsolete affair for the less fortunate… this is a recipe for economic disaster. I don’t blame people for not wanting to work in a global gig economy for low pay and no benefits. We need manufacturing revolution now. We need to build the will, the know how and the desire to work for decent wages and benefits. Russia and China will industrial Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Russia by protecting it’s gas cow and industrializing and China by industrializing the East and central Europe… and south America. We are being beat to shreds in the emerging markets of the Europe and central Asia…. time for America turn off the phone and get to work.
Final note. Where will all the climate change activists be when the USA descends into the path of Venezuela and there not enough money to pay the electricity bill? It will be just like when the draft ended in 1974, and the hoard of activists turned into capitalistic YUPPIES. They’ll will be screaming for pipelines and more fracking. Or they will be screaming for the Next Gen BATTERY and decentralized power generation, storage and distribution to take a big bite out of the global energy cartel.
Let them burn coal.
Burn coal at home and export the NG to drive the price of oil to $20 just to watch Putin sweat.
In a real honest to goodness war, I wouldn’t want to be on an LNG boat watching the torpedo heading my way…..
What is missing from the entire discussion is death.
Putin will die tomorrow, either due to natural causes or due to a lead in the brain, what then?
All dictatorships end with the dictator.
Putin will die tomorrow
So will Soros
So will Pelosi
So will Buffet, Trump and Biden
Champagne makers – go long
Perhaps a few European countries will start developing their own tight gas and have some independence or even a valuable commodity to export. This would require them to use hydraulic fracturing, which many leaders in Europe have promised not to do. Much smarter for them to have allowed it while claiming that the tight regulations would prevent any environmental impact. But, alas.
Can Russia find enough natural gas sources to neutralize the US’s energy leverage over europe?
Seems like the prospect is only taking place in the demented mind of our dear diapered leader, or possibly the alleged minds of his handlers. Nato doesn’t want it, Ukraine doesn’t believe in it, and Russia already has agents in place in Ukraine’s government to make invasion unnecessary. Biden’s already paid to take a dive in the first round, so if it all works as a distraction, it is all to the good.
Germany wants fuel to cover up their “renewable” and anti-nuclear blunder. No one in Nato did anything but scream loudly and look for payouts over Crimea. There’s plenty of fuel underground in the North Sea and under German, Dutch, and Polish territory, if only they would frack for it.
If Ukraine asked for help, I would change my mind. Ukraine asked the U.S. to stop talking up this Russia nonsense. But Biden and Boris, and their politically entwined intelligence agencies, are hopelessly corrupt and this looks more like a client media non-event.
Joe is too senile to tell the difference between Kiev and Kabul. After the latter, no one will give him any credibility about the former.
“There’s plenty of fuel underground in the North Sea and under German, Dutch, and Polish territory, if only they would frack for it.”
There is more resource to be developed but whether there is “plenty” and whatever that means is uncertain, at best.
“Can the US find enough natural gas sources to neutralize Russia’s energy leverage over Europe?”
Don’t know. But if we embraced nuclear, it wouldn’t matter.
Russia is already working hard to diversify its customer base. I understand that a pipeline to Pakistan is signed up, a repeat of the Power of Siberia via Mongolia is close to signature, and India is showing considerable interest. If those come off, then Gazprom will no longer need its European customers according to the latest flow charts that I have seen published.
Isn’t the Russia thing all just propaganda? I mean, take the phrase “Putins sabre rattling over gas”. I assume this statement is supposed to mean that Putin has threatened to restrict gas supplies, in violation of contracted agreements. If truth be told, neither he, nor any official has ever made such a threat. In fact, they have consistently stated that all gas contracts will be honoured.
What is this all about then? Well, obviously, for the US, getting Europe fully dependent on US Lng is a great business idea. For both the UK and the US, driving a wedge between Russia and Germany is another good idea. But the interesting thing about propaganda is that it often conveys the opposite of reality. Another good piece of propaganda currently in vogue is that Russia is threatening to invade Ukraine. The fact that no such threat has been made is simply brushed aside. Any denials of these threats by Russia is also brushed aside as misinformation. Any questioning of the logic for Russia to get bogged down in a brutal bloody war in Ukraine, or the logic of having to pay pensions and all manner of other Ukrainian costs is also brushed aside. The whole thing would be risible if the consequence wasn’t so dangerous.
For both the UK and the US, driving a wedge between Russia and Germany is another good idea.
Everything that the UK and US do and say drive Germany and Russia closer together.
They’re going to wake up one morning and find out that Germany is Russia.
Well, I’m not sure how realistic Russia shutting off gas exports is. Keep in mind, at the height of the Soviet Union, gas was still exported.
The real reality is that western sanctions can be made to look a little silly if sanctions are put in place, but you still need to buy gas from Russia. Is that a having your cake and eating it moment?
Russia can find other markets for its gas anyway. The only thing Europe can expect is ever higher prices.
Not just that, but it seems the further east you go, the less people are worried about a Russian invasion, bizarrely.
Could this latest round of Russian phobia actually be because they sold more gas to China, which decreased the amount on the spot market, which Europeans liked to use?
Unlike Amy, Economist Michael Hudson sees a different future for Europeans which the US is desperately trying to prevent. “The threat to U.S. dominance is that China, Russia and Mackinder’s Eurasian World Island heartland are offering better trade and investment opportunities than are available from the United States with its increasingly desperate demand for sacrifices from its NATO and other allies”. The emerging reality is the economic and energy future of Europe lies to the east with the far larger economic and energy synergies of Russia, China and Eurasia
https://michael-hudson.com/2022/02/americas-real-adversaries-are-its-european-and-other-allies/