UN Gas Crisis Threatens Europe With Heatless, Meatless Winter — and a Slower Recovery

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Spiralling prices of gas that have already created shortages are likely to spread to the rest of Europe in the coming months and threaten the nascent economic recovery, business analysts have begun to warn.

The consequences won’t be measured only by households facing exploding energy bills and businesses going under. As a consequence of higher wholesale gas prices, two fertiliser plants have been forced to shut down in the UK, in turn threatening the supply of carbon dioxide – a byproduct of their manufacturing process.

That in turn imperils the production of food and meat: Carbon dioxide of CO2 is not only one of the major causes of global warming. It also has industrial usages, most notably in the fizzy drinks, the vacuum packing of food or the slaughtering of animals—not to mention the cooling of nuclear power plants or in some surgical procedures.

Nippon Gases, one of the largest distributors of natural gases, told the Financial Times that its deliveries of CO2 to Europe have fallen by half this year, because of the rocketing prices. In the U.K., the meat industry lobby has also warned that meat processors may have to close as soon as this week because of the lack of CO2.

The gas crisis has propelled prices up 280% since the beginning of the year, and 100% in the U.S., due to several causes: colder weather throughout Europe in April and May, some outages in gas fields in Norway and Russia, and higher demand in Asia, which rerouted some of the global liquefied natural gas (LNG) traffic to the region.

Some European policy makers also suspect that Russia is refusing to increase deliveries to Europe just to make the case that its controversial Nord Stream 2 pipeline, which has faced opposition from the U.S. and European Union governments, needs to be completed without delays.

As a result of the crisis, gas storage tanks in Europe are only 72% full ahead of the winter season, compared with the usual 87% at this time of the year, ING economist Warren Patterson has noted.
The impact of the crisis will be different between countries. It will be milder in the U.S. where users of gas are mostly industrial, Morgan Stanley expects. In Europe, the U.K., for example, is more reliant on gas than France, with its dense network of nuclear plants. But the economic consequences will affect everyone.

Norway has already promised it would increase its deliveries to Europe. A mild winter may help bring prices back to lower levels, and beyond that some form of energy substitution—for example from gas to coal—could help alleviate shortages somewhat. And LNG deliveries to Europe might increase in the coming months.

But if these don’t happen, the recovery, already weakened by the coronavirus Delta variant, will take another hit. Inflation could become more lasting than economists and central bankers now expect, and political problems may arise when households receive their gas bills.

Governments will have to help cushion the impact, stressing public finances further after public debts ballooned under the Covid-19 pandemic: Some have already started to subsidize energy bills or support businesses most affected by the crisis.

Meanwhile, the irony should not be lost that Europe is trying to produce more CO2 while expecting that a much-maligned pipeline from Russia will bring more gas to its shores.

Dontcha just love the nu-70's?

I'm sure the prospect of the peasants freezing and starving has Bill Gates and the WEF furiously stroking themselves.
 
Ach! Mein eggnoodlez!

Who could've foreseen demolishing perfectly good power plants and buying energy from a foreign nation whose past with you is checkered to say the least would lead to a power crisis?


Import some more minorities and ignore the street crime harder, see if that fixes it....
 
This is an entirely engineered 'crisis' that could be solved by redoing plans from sixty years ago, and just building storage, pipelines and extraction facilities. But no, we gotta have wind turbines and wave generators. Absolute faggotry has led to this, and I hope that people who are cold, warm themselves by breaking into and burning down the homes of the tossrockets that have caused this shit.
 
The high gas prices have nothing to do with cold weather, and everything to do with COVID lockdowns. Germany now has the highest inflation since the end of WWII, at 28% or so, and shut down three of its nuclear reactors. Countries that would be energy independent now depend on Russian gas and the Russians know it. All they have to do, as the Saudis did in the 70s, is shut off the tap. Europe, especially Greece and Italy, are on the verge of total bankruptcy. Food prices skyrocketing and people freezing in their homes is exactly the thing they've been pushing for with their 'green energy' bullshit. Solar and wind won't work in -30 temps and windmills crack at that weather.

Hope Greta enjoys freezing in her mansion.
 
It's almost like the Chernobyl Power Plant was a poorly engineered, poorly managed Soviet joke & we shouldn't take example from it.

Don't hold your breath on nuclear fusion either, Europe. That shit is like fifty years into the future. Possibly never.
They also tried to use a civilian plant with military-level doses of radiation, IIRC. The plant was not built for that.
 
The high gas prices have nothing to do with cold weather, and everything to do with COVID lockdowns. Germany now has the highest inflation since the end of WWII, at 28% or so, and shut down three of its nuclear reactors. Countries that would be energy independent now depend on Russian gas and the Russians know it. All they have to do, as the Saudis did in the 70s, is shut off the tap. Europe, especially Greece and Italy, are on the verge of total bankruptcy. Food prices skyrocketing and people freezing in their homes is exactly the thing they've been pushing for with their 'green energy' bullshit. Solar and wind won't work in -30 temps and windmills crack at that weather.

Hope Greta enjoys freezing in her mansion.
I always assumed General Winter only specialized in defense. Turns out he can do offense too.
 
I always assumed General Winter only specialized in defense. Turns out he can do offense too.
Russia has circumvented sanctions for almost 100 years. They've learned to become independent. They have the Siberian Traps that is loaded with natural resources and huge oil reserves. They know Europe depends on them because Europe, foolishly, shut down the things that made it energy independent.

BTW, phosphorous is in short supply too. So crops WILL go to shit. It'll get worse in the 2030s as that is when the moon is expected to 'wobble', causing nasty riptides in our oceans and when global temperatures are expected to plummet. Dirty 30s redux.
 
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