{"id":14475,"date":"2026-02-06T09:41:44","date_gmt":"2026-02-06T10:41:44","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.globaltalenthq.com\/?p=14475"},"modified":"2026-02-10T06:45:46","modified_gmt":"2026-02-10T06:45:46","slug":"brussels-dependency-dilemma-the-eu-is-a-victim-of-its-own-energy-arrogance","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.globaltalenthq.com\/index.php\/2026\/02\/06\/brussels-dependency-dilemma-the-eu-is-a-victim-of-its-own-energy-arrogance\/","title":{"rendered":"Brussels\u2019 dependency dilemma: The EU is a victim of its own energy arrogance"},"content":{"rendered":"
The bloc\u2019s determination to obliterate a stable energy relationship with Russia, claiming it was over-reliant on one source, is a hypocrisy<\/strong><\/p>\n<\/p>\n Lacking in resources and sandwiched between two energy superpowers, the EU has to play some basic geopolitical chess to keep the gas flowing and the lights on. But Brussels can’t even play checkers.<\/p>\n EU energy ministers agreed last month to completely halt Russian gas imports by late 2027, ending what the bloc’s chief diplomat, Kaja Kallas, called a “dependency”<\/em> on Moscow. “Now, we’re turning off the tap for good,”<\/em> she said. “Russia will no longer be able to use energy as a weapon against us.”<\/em><\/p>\n It took two days for reality to set in. Economies run on energy, not good vibes, and with Russia ruled out as a supplier, the bloc has only one viable alternative: the US. “There is a growing concern, which I share, that we risk replacing one dependency with another,”<\/em> Energy Commissioner Dan Jorgensen of Denmark told reporters. The “geopolitical turmoil”<\/em> surrounding US President Donald Trump’s plans to annex Greenland had given Europe a “wake-up call,”<\/em> he explained, and reliance on American gas no longer looked like the worry-free deal promised by Kallas and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.<\/p>\n If only someone could have seen this coming.<\/p>\n The dependency problem<\/strong><\/p>\n \n Read more<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n Anyone with a geography textbook could have warned Jorgensen. Barring some deposits in the Netherlands and Romania, the EU cannot meet its own natural gas needs. The bloc imported 85.6% of its gas in 2024, according to European Commission figures. The EU’s dependency on foreign oil is even higher – between 95% and 97% – but as the bloc depends primarily on gas to power its industries, ensuring a reliable source of this fuel is its strategic imperative.<\/p>\n Norway, which is not an EU member, supplies 33% of the bloc’s imported gas. For the rest, Brussels has to look abroad: to either Russia or the US. Located in Europe, Russia was for decades the obvious choice. Moscow honored its energy contracts, its gas was cheaper than the American alternative, and it was conveniently piped overland rather than liquefied and conveyed across the Atlantic on container ships. As such, Russia supplied 45% of the EU’s gas before 2022. <\/p>\n Former German Chancellor Angela Merkel defended her decision to tie Germany’s economic success to Russian gas. “It was right from the perspective of the time,”<\/em> she told the BBC in 2022, adding that Russian gas helped Germany wean itself off coal and nuclear power. <\/p>\n \n Read more<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n Her predecessor, Gerhard Schroeder, was more explicit. Germany needed gas “at reasonable prices,”<\/em> he told a parliamentary inquiry last year. Therefore it was an “extremely sensible decision”<\/em> to build the Nord Stream gas pipelines and purchase it from a “proven”<\/em> partner like Russia.<\/p>\n What Kallas and von der Leyen called “dependency,”<\/em> Merkel, Schroeder, and an entire generation of European politicians including Silvio Berlusconi, Nicolas Sarkozy, and Jacques Chirac called pragmatism. All they had to do was keep the Americans off their backs.<\/p>\n Despite pressure from the Bush, Obama, Trump, and Biden administrations, the Europeans didn’t make the switch to American LNG. Their main motivation was economic: even now with more than 40 regasification terminals built or under construction in the EU, and with the number of US export terminals set to double in the next decade, American LNG is 30-50% more expensive than Russian gas. <\/p>\n Around 88% of American natural gas is extracted through the hydraulic fracturing of shale gas fields, or fracking. While this industry boomed in the early 2000s, fracking comes with high upfront costs and is only profitable during times of high global energy prices. Furthermore, as fracking is an environmentally destructive industry that a Democratic administration could easily choke with regulations, reliance on fracked gas places the EU at the mercy of Washington’s capricious left-right mood swings. One ‘Green New Deal’ would spell disaster for Europe.<\/p>\n


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