Country is hoping a new North Sea terminal can supply 8% of its gas usage as war in Ukraine upends energy policy

As tourists at the Hooksiel resort on Germany’s North Sea coastline lean back in their wicker beach chairs or stomp around the mud flats, the cast-iron jetty that stretches for 1.3km into the ocean to their right is a familiar sight. The frantic clanging of metal on metal at its furthest tip, however, is new.

Built in 1982, the jetty was designed to host not just two import terminals for chemicals but also one for liquefied natural gas (LNG), shipped in on tankers from the US. With cheap Russian gas beating LNG for price, those tankers never arrived. Two adjacent plots of land, reclaimed from the North Sea to make space for industry, instead attracted rare warblers and bitterns.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

US Capitol attack report finds intelligence, military and police failings

There was breakdown within intelligence agencies and lack of preparation for police,…

Police in London hunt for man as part of double murder inquiry

Search for 49-year-old Lee Peacock follows discovery of bodies within space of…