How America's Shale Revolution Could Loosen Russia's Grip on Europe
VADUZ, Liechtenstein, April 2, 2014 /PRNewswire/ --
Russia's control over energy supplies and distribution systems in Ukraine and Western Europe could be reduced if the United States relaxed energy exports. Diminishing Russia's economic leverage over Ukraine and Western Europe could be a key component of America's policy response to the Crimea crisis, writes Nick Loris from The Heritage Foundation in World Review.
'The US has antiquated and unnecessary restrictions on exporting liquefied natural gas (LNG) and crude oil, and its government could consider lifting these restrictions as a priority,' he says. 'The US could wrest control over European energy markets and supplies crossing Ukraine by taking the lead in a broad liberalisation of global energy markets.'
Policy-makers have called for restrictions to be lifted on natural gas exports because of Ukraine's reliance on Russian energy. But companies wanting to export natural gas have to first obtain approval from both the United States Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) and the Department of Energy (DOE). This is automatically authorised if the country has a free trade agreement (FTA) with the United States but there are none with European countries.
'The decision to export natural gas should be a business decision, not a political one and natural gas should be treated as any other good traded around the world,' he adds.
Opening markets would provide a diversity of suppliers and greater energy supplies for the global market. 'This is likely to result in lower prices and would provide more choice for countries like Ukraine in the not so distant future,' he says.
'Providing that choice would diminish Russia's power. Establishing free market reforms and increasing energy supplies would help to prevent future incidents and price shocks in Ukraine and globally.'
However, as American natural gas exports and exports from around the world attempt to undermine Russian influence over Ukraine and Western Europe, Mr Putin is likely to counteract that by undercutting exports with artificially lower prices.
'Russia's ability to sell gas at artificially low prices could scare off potential importers,' he says.
Read the full World Review report here.
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About the author
World Review author Nick Loris is an economist who focuses on energy, environmental and regulatory issues as the Herbert and Joyce Morgan fellow at The Heritage Foundation in Washington, DC.
He researches and writes about energy markets, energy subsidies, and policy ideas which will return the energy economy to a more market-oriented one. He also articulates the benefits of free market environmentalism in Heritage's Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies.
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