EU Seeks New Gas And Wind To Boost Energy Security
BELGIUM: November 14, 2008
BRUSSELS - Europe must harness more energy from the wind, sun and sea and
tap new gas sources in Africa and the Caspian, the European Commission said
on Thursday, as the EU seeks to limit its growing dependence on Russian gas.
"We must break the vicious circle of increasing energy consumption and
increasing imports," said European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso.
"We must shield EU citizens from the risk external suppliers can not honour
their commitments."
The 27-nation bloc is seeking to prevent its reliance on Russian gas growing
after pricing disputes between Russia and transit states disrupted supplies
in recent years and Russia's invasion of Georgia in August stoked tensions
with the west.
Barroso said he hoped Friday's summit between the EU and Russia in Nice
would shed light on Moscow's vision of future energy relations with the EU.
The Commission's Strategic Energy Review outlined future plans for a giant
North Sea windfarm linked by undersea cables to help power northern Europe.
It included new proposals to overhaul 40-year-old laws on emergency oil
stocks, to strengthen the response to gas crises and to encourage efficient
vehicle tyres aimed at cutting petrol consumption.
It also included adaptations to existing laws and pledges to seek more gas
from Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan and to create a new consortium for buying
Caspian gas.
WINDFARMS
The Commission laid out a long-term vision in which national gas and power
networks would be replaced by a pan-European grid, linking thousands of
small, renewable energy sources, needing around 1.2 trillion euros ($1.5
billion) of investment by 2030.
The European power grid would also be powered from the north by linked
windfarms in the North Sea and from the south by a Mediterranean Ring
tapping into North Africa's huge solar power resources.
"Thousands upon thousands of wind turbines, spread across hundreds of miles,
could feed into the supergrid," said Greenpeace campaigner Robin Oakley.
"This would mean that a dip in power in one area could be balanced by higher
production in another -- making wind power even more reliable," he added.
The cost of the project is estimated at $30 billion.
But the backbone of EU energy security would come from boosting energy
efficiency and existing plans to cut EU carbon dioxide emissions by a fifth
by 2020 in the fight against climate change, said Energy Commissioner Andris
Piebalgs.
"We have to do more, be more ambitious, and be even bolder to avoid the risk
of energy disruption in the future," he added.
But environmental pressure group WWF described the review as an unambitious
"Christmas tree of actions", and criticised it for not bringing in mandatory
energy efficiency targets.
"Europe's buildings account for 40 percent of EU final energy use," said WWF
campaigner Mariangiola Fabbri. "We need to shift buildings from being energy
wasters to climate savers."
The review did include plans to tweak construction rules for buildings.
Additional moves to cut wasted energy from household boilers, electronic
appliances and car tyres could save EU families around 1,000 euros a year,
the Commission said.
EU plans to curb energy consumption are already worrying producers, who see
future oil and gas revenues drying up, said Susanne Nies at France's IFRI
think tank.
"Talks between Iran and Russia about creating a gas OPEC are a clear
reaction to that," she said. "Producers are very worried about security of
consumption."
(Reporting by Pete Harrison, editing by Dale Hudson)
Story by Pete Harrison
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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