Fracking is a divisive issue, on both sides of the
Atlantic, and has been banned outright in several countries.[Shutterstock]
Euroactiv.com
By Nicole Sagener in Euroactiv.de/ Translated by Samuel Morgan
27/10/2016
The
European Parliament has welcomed more imports of fracked gas from the US,
leading to criticism questioning the EU’s commitment to the Paris Agreement on
climate change. EurActiv
Germany reports
Although the EU’s gas
demand is at a 20-year-low, the bloc’s falling production volume, as reported
by the European Commission back in February, has led to fears of a gas
shortage.
The Commission has been
clear that more imports of liquefied natural gas (LNG) are vital, despite
more power being generated by wind and solar power. Gas is the cleanest fossil
fuel and is therefore an important cog in the transition to a low carbon
economy, explained Climate Commissioner Miguel Arias Cañete.
The executive’s main
objective is more gas imports from third countries, but also building
cross-border gas storage using the Connecting Europe Facility and structural
funds. According to analysis by the European Policy Centre, the EU’s existing
LNG terminals can only cope with 195 million cubic metres per year, which is
between 40% and 50% of the EU’s annual demand.
Critics are not
convinced by these arguments. The fact that the European Parliament adopted the
EU’s LNG strategy and gas storage by a majority just a few days before the
entry into force of the Paris Agreement on climate was not well received. The
production, delivery and use of LNG causes methane leakage, which is more
damaging to the environment than CO2.
The EU will not be able
to fulfill its Paris obligations, if it pushes other fossil fuels and expands
the existing gas infrastructure, warned Andy Gheorghiu of NGO Food & Water
Europe.
Die Linke’s European
Parliament energy spokesperson Cornelia Ernst insisted that the EU’s strategy
is going in “completely the wrong direction”.
“Today’s demand for gas
in the EU is 23% of its peak in 2010, as a result of energy efficiency measures
and the use of renewable energies. If it now ups its investment in LNG, then
the EU will be creating infrastructure it doesn’t really need and which all
taxpayers are going to have to pay for,” she added.
The Parliament’s
decision also welcomed more fracked gas from the United States. The related
report by the energy committee said that a single energy market with fully
integrated LNG and gas storage is essential to a crisis-proof Energy Union.
“Crisis-proof”
ultimately means more independence from Russia. The majority of the EU’s gas
supply is in LNG form and is pumped around the continent by pipelines
originating in a few third-party countries. As the existing network means that
some member states can only get their gas from the Baltic region, south-east
Europe and Russia, there is an uncertainty that the Commission wishes to
address through diversified gas imports and more flexibility of supply.
Price plays its part.
In the fracking hot beds of the US and Australia there are a lot of terminals,
a situation that has caused the price of gas imports to tumble…
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