
Enriched Uranium Fuels Russia’s War Machine. But the US Still Imports It
This piece by Bellona’s Dmitry Gorchakov originally appeared in The Moscow Times. On Feb. 24, the pro-Kremlin outlet EA Daily repo...
News
Publish date: April 2, 2024
News
The use and production of LNG in the Arctic is a particularly fraught issue due to the region’s vulnerable climate. All operations with natural gas inevitably emit methane – a short-lived greenhouse gas 80 times more intense than CO2. Because of this, expanding LNG’s use as a shipping fuel and increasing its extraction in Arctic reserves is a matter of great concern to environmentalists.
Prior to launching their invasion of Ukraine, Russian authorities actively lobbied for the use of natural gas as a “green” solution in the international arena in a bid to prolong the use of fossil fuels for as long as possible. Indeed, gas exports are the lifeblood of the current political regime. Subsequent sanctions targeting Russian natural gas exports and related industries have curbed Russia’s ambitions, but certainly has not stopped them.
The newly published working paper by Bellona gives an overview of the Russian LNG sector with a focus on the current status and future projections of LNG production and use as ship fuel in the Russian Arctic. The influence of economic sanctions on Russian LNG development plans are also analyzed in the paper.
Bellona supports an appeal urging the EU and G7 countries to ban LNG imports from Russia, as well as its transshipment through European ports for exports to other countries. Along with strengthened economic sanctions on oil, the appeal will help shrink Russia’s budget revenues, and therefore, its ability to continue its military invasion of Ukraine.
Download a PDF of the report here.
This piece by Bellona’s Dmitry Gorchakov originally appeared in The Moscow Times. On Feb. 24, the pro-Kremlin outlet EA Daily repo...
One hundred days into European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen’s second mandate, let’s take stock. «Since December, von d...
On February 26th, the European Commission announced a much-anticipated package, including the Action Plan for Affordable Energy, along with additiona...
Russia will restart the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant—occupied by Moscow’s troops since the beginning of their three-year-old invasion of Ukraine—...