South Stream Dies

$5 Billion Down the Drain

Russia’s Gazprom has finally thrown the towel on the South Stream pipeline, after spending $5 billion on it. This follows repeated attempts by the EU to shoot itself in the foot using its “competition rules” as a pretext. These nonsensical rules are employed as a pretext for a great many things, but the protection of consumers ranges most definitely at the very bottom of priorities. South Stream would have circumvented the Ukraine and brought Russian natural gas to a number of countries (many in the Balkans, plus Austria and Italy) which are nearly 100% dependent on Russian gas already. Germany presumably doesn’t care because, tada! – it gets its gas via “North Stream”. For unknown reasons the “competition commission” had nothing against that pipeline. One wonders why? We think the only European newspaper that came closest to the truth was the Italian paper La Republicca. While it (wrongly) blamed the decline in energy prices for the decision, it wrote in an aside:

“The latest jolt sweeps away South Stream. The maxi-pipeline – dear to Vladimir Putin, supported by the former Berlusconi government, opposed by the United States – will not be built”

The truth is, the EU’s “competition commission” rigmarole was a pretext for what is at its core a political, not an economic decision. The US opposes South Stream solely for geopolitical reasons, as it has zero commercial importance for it. The EU has neither valid commercial and nor indeed valid political reasons to oppose the pipeline. Europe has been buying energy from Russia even back when it was still part of the evil Soviet Union, the communist empire that was an actual enemy. And yet, as German vice chancellor Sigmar Gabriel remarked in an address (in which he admitted that German subsidies for various “alternative energy” nonsense needed to end), Russia has never reneged on its energy deliveries, not even in the most tense moments of the cold war.

A piece of South Stream in Bulgaria, now a memento of a missed opportunity

Photo credit: Gazprom

The aggressive energy policy run by the United States (a country that has been bombing Iraq for 24 years now, with absolutely nothing to show for it but complete chaos) is an outdated relic of the Carter era, when memories of the Arab oil embargo were still fresh. It has zero applicability to the modern world. Even fricking ISIS – a sworn enemy of the West that would gladly kill all “infidels” – is selling its oil and gas to all comers, at half price to boot. The Arab oil embargo of the 70s is today considered the culprit in the large oil price rise of the era, but this is nonsense, or better said, it is propaganda designed to distract from the true reasons. The embargo was at best a short term trigger – the actual reason was the inflationary policy of the Federal Reserve, which eventually culminated in Nixon’s gold default. Were the Arabs at fault with respect to rising prices of sugar, soybeans and copper too? We’re asking because the prices of these items exploded even more than crude oil prices in the 1970s. In short, the Carter doctrine never made any sense.

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Author: Travis Esquivel

Travis Esquivel is an engineer, passionate soccer player and full-time dad. He enjoys writing about innovation and technology from time to time.

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