Window is closing’:
US Senate makes last-ditch effort to ax Nord Stream 2 pipeline
After failing to persuade allies in Europe to scrap the Nord
Stream 2 pipeline, which is set to transport natural gas from Europe to Russia,
US lawmakers are planning to roll a new batch of sanctions into a defense
spending bill.
The sanctions against the companies involved in the project
have been included in the draft 2020 National Defense Authorization Act. Senate
Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Jim Risch told Defense News on Saturday
that the legislation essentially mimics the last anti-Nord Stream bill – the
so-called Protecting Europe’s Energy Security Act – which was approved by the
committee in July but then got stuck in procedural hurdles.
“The reason for the push is that this window is closing. A
lot of Nord Stream is done already,” Risch said, hoping that the
sanctioned companies working with the Russians “will shut down,” should
the sanctions scheme take effect.
The clock
is ticking indeed: the pipeline, designed to deliver natural gas from Russia
through the Black Sea to Germany and other buyers in Europe, is expected to
start operating in mid-2020. Denmark, which was the last country on the
route of the pipeline to approve the project, had greenlighted Nord Stream 2
last month.
This
stirred something of a panic in anti-Russian circles in the West, with the
Atlantic Council publishing an article poignantly titled ‘Three months
left to kill Nord Stream 2’ this week. Same sentiment was voiced by
Senator Ted Cruz on Saturday, who tweeted that “time is running out for
the US to act.”
The US
officials have long attempted to torpedo the project, arguing that it would
make Europe too dependent on energy supply from Russia. Germany, meanwhile,
insists that its powerful economy requires a stable and logistically
comfortable supply of natural gas, and Moscow is a suitable, trustworthy
partner.
Chancellor Angela Merkel dismissed Washington’s concerns
that Berlin would grow overdependent on Russia, saying that building a new
pipeline from Moscow is part of the country’s efforts to diversify its energy
sources.
24 Nov, 2019 13:19
© Ilya Pitalev / Sputnik

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