Die EU befürchtet nach der Krise eine neue Gasabhängigkeit von den USA

https://www.brusselstimes.com/news/1941431/eu-fears-new-gas-dependency-on-us-after-greenland-crisis/

Von Crossstoney

23 Kommentare

  1. Any-Original-6113 on

    That’s a perfectly reasonable concern.
    Europe needs to stick to its strategy of generating energy from sources available within the EU. Well, maybe except for buying uranium from Canada or Australia.

  2. Just continue to outsoarce everything outside of Europe and thiss is what you’ll get.

    Retards.

  3. FingalForever on

    The primary focus must be as the Green Party has harped on for decades, decentralised and sustainable sources. That must account for the majority of our energy. Supplemental energy, or energy sources that can’t be obtained locally, we need to look at reliable and stable allies.

  4. chaoticprovidence on

    Canadian gas as a temporary solution, while focusing on long term sustainable options, might be a better plan.

  5. FitSyrup2403 on

    How about a rule, that the EU shall not source more than 20% of its fossil fuels from one Country outside the EU?
    And Push EU companies to optimize their fossil fuel output

  6. DeRpY_CUCUMBER on

    EU fears literally everything, including their own shadow, according to western media.

  7. Never forget that time that those asshole German politicians were laughing at Trump when he said that we were too dependent on Russia’s gas and oil. They were thinking themselves so smart yet they didn’t see the threat anywhere and failed to make us independent. Nobody’s laughing now

  8. Come and take over UK gas fields, our Governments in London and Edinburgh don’t want them.

  9. gamesbrainiac on

    There’s gas pretty nearby. Qatar and Algeria both have gas. We just need to build the infra.

  10. IDreamOfLoveLost on

    Take it from a Canadian. We’re already dependent on the US, but we don’t need to remain as dependent as we are now. If we can help each other to build up infrastructure for processing, delivery, and storage? We’re all better off for it.

  11. Practical-Bobcat2911 on

    I don’t see it being a problem into 2026 and 2027. Energy analysts predict a supply glut in the next years. There will be extra supply on the market from multiple countries, next to US also Qatar and Algeria. These countries will be very eager to sell it to a massive trade block like the EU. In the meanwhile, don’t become complacent, enforce extra stimuli packages to get people off the gas, invest in industrial and commercial heat pumps, full pull on renewables to lower your gas imports towards the end of the decade.

    [https://energynow.com/2025/09/global-lng-market-faces-looming-supply-glut-after-years-of-scarcity/](https://energynow.com/2025/09/global-lng-market-faces-looming-supply-glut-after-years-of-scarcity/)

  12. Alex_Strgzr on

    Coal can fill a gap in electricity generation. Sad but true. Nuclear cannot be built in a short timespan and renewables have their own limitations which are not yet fully solved

  13. VicenteOlisipo on

    EU imports 16% of its gas from the US. And no-one has pipelines running directly between them and the US like some had with the Russians so the same ports used to import from the US can be used to import from any other suppliers. The two situations are completely different.

    Also I’m way more worried about the 33% we import from Norway.

  14. USA forced EU to stop buying from Russia just so they would buy from USA. This has nothing to do with Ukraine.

  15. What a wonderful occasion to move away from fossil fuels – which we urgently should be doing anyway.

    (Before somebody states the super obvious – of course we can’t switch from fossils to renewables within a day, but the priorities need to change. ASAP)

  16. Real-Ranger4968 on

    If only Canada had had the proper leadership and vision to sell gas to the EU back in 2021….

    DONT FORGET, your Liberal woke government refused to do so…

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