Analysis-In Ukraine Crisis, Germany Faces Tough Decisions Over Gas Pipeline
BERLIN - Germany could find itself in a no-win situation if
Russia invades Ukraine, pitting Berlin's main gas supplier against its most
important security allies.
Chancellor Olaf Scholz would face pressure from the United
States and other Western allies to respond to any invasion by stopping the
recently completed Nord Stream 2 pipeline from Russia to Germany going into
operation.
But doing so would risk exacerbating a gas supply crunch in
Europe that has been widely blamed on a dearth of gas flows from Russia, and
has caused energy prices in Europe to soar.
The price surge has hit companies and consumers across the
region hard, not least the low-income workers in Germany that Scholz's Social
Democrats (SPD) rely on for votes.
"Germany is between a rock and a hard place," said
Marcel Dirsus, Non-Resident Fellow at the Institute for Security Policy at Kiel
University.
"The Scholz government wants to keep the Americans
happy because they are Germany's most important allies outside of Europe. But
they don't want to annoy the Russians either. That's tough to do."
Russia has massed troops
https://www.reuters.com/world/blinken-arrives-berlin-ukraine-talks-with-european-allies-2022-01-20
near its border with Ukraine and demanded security guarantees from the West,
but denies it plans to invade its former Soviet neighbour.
Any invasion would be likely to trigger new international
sanctions against Russia, with measures against Nord Stream 2 widely seen as
one of the strongest ways to put pressure on Moscow.
But Scholz, who replaced Angela Merkel as chancellor late
last year, already faces disagreements in his coalition government about how
far German sanctions on Nord Stream 2 should go if Russia attacks Ukraine.
The Greens would like to scrap the project, which is still
awaiting regulatory approval, as they oppose fossil fuels. They also want to
send a clear signal to Russian President Vladimir Putin that military
aggression abroad and undemocratic practices at home will not be rewarded with
gas contracts.
The pro-business Free Democrats (FDP) have also signalled
they prefer a tougher approach toward Russia.
Scholz will hope to find a compromise that satisfies both
his coalition partners and senior members of his party such as Defence Minister
Christine Lambrecht, who said Nord Stream 2 - which runs under the Baltic Sea
and bypasses Ukrainian territory - should not be dragged into the Ukraine
crisis.
MORATORIUM?
The European Union's most populous country and biggest
economy is in danger of looking divided, and Scholz risks looking weak if he
does not show firm leadership in the crisis.
"Scholz appears too passive and absent," said
Gwendolyn Sasse, senior fellow at Carnegie Europe, suggesting he should be
trying to take on a bigger role in the EU.
The SPD sees itself as the natural heir to Germany's
pioneering 'Ostpolitik' policy of opening up to the Soviet Union in the 1970s.
But other European countries want Germany to do more to project Europe's
influence and protect eastern neighbors that are nervous of what they see as
Russian aggression.
Scholz could have one eye on opinion polls that show around
60% of Germans back Nord Stream 2, said Thorsten Benner of the Global Public
Policy Institute (GPPi).
"For Scholz, there is also a concern about fairness:
the U.S. is a major importer of Russian crude but hasn't committed to stopping
imports while Germany is expected to call off Nord Stream 2," said Benner.
Energy prices in Germany in December were up 69% compared
with December 2020. Russian military action in Ukraine would be likely to push
them even higher.
"In case of an invasion, we would see wild spikes in
gas prices. All bets are off," said Hanns Koenig, an energy analyst with
Aurora Energy Research.
The government would then face pressure to provide subsidies
for low-income Germans and manufacturers that rely on gas for production,
putting more strain on public finances already stretched by the coronavirus
crisis.
Some European politicians say Russia can do more to reduce
prices and consumer bills in Europe, and have accused Moscow of using the
energy situation for political purposes.
"The flows of natural gas coming from Russia are at
historically low levels," said Koenig. "Russia is prioritising the
routes it owns, and sending much less than they have done historically through
the other ones."
Russia denies manipulating supplies, and Russian Foreign
Minister Sergei Lavrov told visiting German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock
this week that Western attempts to politicise the Nord Stream 2 project would
be "counter-productive".
Dirsus said Scholz was unlikely to kill the project but could
impose a moratorium on it in the event of an invasion.
"It will be a step designed to show the Americans and
other allies that Germany is responding, but at the same time they will send a
signal to Russia that the project could still be revived," he said.
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