Germany discussed energy cooperation with Qatar
The German government, working to reduce its dependence on
Russian oil and gas, discussed energy supplies with Qatar this week, the
federal chancellery’s state secretary said on Saturday.
“We discussed bilateral cooperation particularly in energy
and corporate investments,” Joerg Kukies said on Twitter, adding he talked to
Deputy Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani, who also heads
the Qatar Investment Authority sovereign wealth fund, on Wednesday.
Germany is to close its last nuclear power plants this year
and plans to build its first liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal within two
years.
Qatar is one of the countries that recently have been
approached by the United States to reroute gas supplies to Europe. The country
has said it could divert probably 10 to 15 percent of its LNG shipping volumes.
It plans to raise LNG production capacity to 126 million ton a year by 2027
from 77 million ton at present.
The European Commission is working on plans to phase out the
EU’s dependency on Russian gas, oil and coal in five years following Russia’s
invasion of Ukraine, its head Ursula von der Leyen said on Friday.
German Economy Minister Robert Habeck told the Frankfurter
Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung he planned to make Germany independent of Russian
coal and oil in less than a year.
“Every day, in fact every hour, we say goodbye to Russian
imports to a certain extent,” Habeck told the weekly. “If it works, we will be
independent of Russian coal in the autumn and almost independent of oil from
Russia by the end of the year.”
He said gas was more complicated as Germany does not yet
have capacity to import LNG and reiterated an immediate embargo on supplies
could cause bottlenecks next winter, an economic slump and high inflation.
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