This Was Not Planned So It Cannot Be Happening

Or will not be happening, I should say.

Fracking

As you know, Germany is green. And Germans are greener than green. Why, Germans are so green that Jamaicans want to roll them up and smoke them.

And Germans also like sticking to “the plan,” too (think Stalingrad). So they do not, I repeat do not appreciate it when, as in this case, their ambitious environmental plans get disturbed by unforseen technological developments that were not considered in the original plan and therefore start turning the whole Schlamassel (mess) into a really, really big and annoying, well, Schlamassel (think Stalingrad again).

It goes like this: “Ambitious environmental goals are far less meaningful if the economy withers in achieving them.” So when something really tempting comes along like shale gas drilling (hydraulic fracturing or “fracking”), a technology that could give Germany access to enough reserves to feed natural gas demand for 20 years, then that gets not-so-thoroughly-green people (yes, there still are a few specimens left) to thinking, plan or not.

So there we have it. And that’s the end of it (ask any German Green Shirt). Fracking can’t happen here. It is ideologically inadmissable. Fracking is something that those crazy Americans and their evil multi-national oil companies do, not us (multi-national oil companies are always American, by the way – don’t ask). Nope, fracking can never happen here. Never in a million years. Not this year anyway.

“We are sitting on Swiss cheese. The risks are just too high.”

Gazprom Gerd Strikes Again

Former chancellor Gerhard Schroeder (SPD) is always good for popping a cork or two.

This time he’s ruffled a few German feathers by getting all warm and fuzzy about his good old buddy Vladimir Putin again. More specifically about Putin’s stunning (not) election victory over the weekend, praising him for being the “flawless democrat” that he is.

But this is nothing new. Schroeder has always been generous with praise for Putin. Especially since landing that 1 million euro-per-year consulting job from him at Gazprom’s Nord Stream consortium – just a few months (weeks?) after having left office.

It’s the gas, stupid.

Wes Brot ich ess, des Lied ich sing.

We’re in a corner and we like it there

Constraints, what constraints? We love constraints! And what’s a monopoly, between friends? Germans love board games of all kinds, you know, and they’ll play monopoly with anybody, as long as he or she’s a Russian, I guess.

 

That gives me gas

 

So whatcha gonna do? Achieving full energy independence isn’t an option for Germany and, being that the Germans won’t go nuclear or burn more coal (neither options are allowed for some strange reason) they’re going to have to be happy with their gas dependency on Russia (it’s around 40% at the moment).

 

And that’s why Angela Merkel, like that guy before her, believes that it’s good that the planned Nord Stream gas pipeline will bypass “veto players” like Poland and supply Germany directly with gas. It’s better for Europe that way, or something. Schroeder’s “unprecedented mixing of political and private commercial interests” was an awful, dreadful and despicable thing, Angie will tell you, but we’ll take that Russian gas all the same, no strings, I mean constraints, attached.

 

“The Nord Stream pipeline project was initially agreed to in late 2005 by then-Russian President Putin and former Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, who signed the deal during his last days in office.”