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Germany pulls plug on Nord Stream 2 pipeline
Undersea pipeline, meant to ferry natural gas directly from Russia to northern Germany, is owned by a subsidiary of Gazprom.
Germany is pulling the plug on the controversial Nord Stream 2 pipeline in light of Russia's incursion into Ukraine, Chancellor Olaf Scholz said.
The undersea pipeline, meant to ferry natural gas directly from Russia to northern Germany, is owned by a subsidiary of Russia's state-owned Gazprom. Berlin has previously been reluctant to impose sanctions that would affect Nord Stream 2.
But at a press conference Tuesday, Scholz said that "the situation today is fundamentally different and therefore, in light of recent events, we must also reassess this situation ... also with regard to Nord Stream 2."
He continued: "Today, I asked the economy ministry to withdraw the existing report on the analysis of supply security" submitted to Germany's energy regulator.
That binding opinion from October last year stated that the pipeline posed no security of supply threats.
"This sounds technical, but it is the necessary administrative step so that no certification of the pipeline can now take place," he added. "And without this certification, Nord Stream 2 cannot go into operation."
www.politico.eu
Ukraine’s nuclear lesson: Don’t trust Russia’s security ‘guarantees’
Russia lied when it offered security in exchange for Ukraine’s nukes, Kyiv’s former nuclear negotiator tells POLITICO. Don’t let it happen again, he warns.
Around 30 years ago, Ukraine handed all its nuclear weapons to Russia in exchange for promises of peace from Moscow. Western powers brokered the deal.
The promises proved empty.
Now, Yuri Kostenko is fearful history may be repeating itself. Kostenko, a 70-year-old Ukrainian politician, was at the forefront of Ukraine’s nuclear disarmament in the 1990s, with stints as environment minister and nuclear safety minister. For six months, he was also Kyiv’s lead negotiator over the nuclear deal.
www.politico.eu/article/ukraines-nuclear-lesson-with-russia-written-guarantees-can-be-worth-little/