Commenti

Crisi energetica, l’industria europea è in grado di sopravvivere al 2023?

29 November 2022, Schleswig-Holstein, Brunsb'ttel: Workers assemble gas pipelines for the planned LNG liquefied natural gas floating terminal. According to Qatar's energy minister, energy giant Qatar Energy has signed an agreement to supply liquefied natural gas to Germany. The gas is to be sold to U.S. company Conoco Phillips, which will supply it further to Brunsb'ttel, he said. The deliveries are to begin in 2026 and run for at least 15 years. Photo by: Marcus Brandt/picture-alliance/dpa/AP Images
29 November 2022, Schleswig-Holstein, Brunsb'ttel: Workers assemble gas pipelines for the planned LNG liquefied natural gas floating terminal. According to Qatar's energy minister, energy giant Qatar Energy has signed an agreement to supply liquefied natural gas to Germany. The gas is to be sold to U.S. company Conoco Phillips, which will supply it further to Brunsb'ttel, he said. The deliveries are to begin in 2026 and run for at least 15 years. Photo by: Marcus Brandt/picture-alliance/dpa/AP Images
  • Prima della guerra in Ucraina, l’Unione europea importava 140 miliardi di metri cubi di gas ogni anno, più 15 di Lng (gas naturale liquefatto). A fine 2022, le importazioni dell’anno risulteranno circa 60 miliardi.
  • Nel 2023 la Russia darà all’Europa soltanto 20 miliardi di metri cubi circa in un anno, dai gasdotti possiamo sperare di ottenerne 15, forse l’importazione di Gnl potrebbe arrivare a 30 miliardi di metri cubi, ma molto dipende dalla Cina.
  • Prima o poi la guerra in Ucraina finirà e il gas russo tornerà sul mercato a prezzi bassissimi, ci sarà ancora una industria europea bisognosa di consumarlo?

Per continuare a leggere questo articolo