Global Energy Monitor
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San Francisco, CA–A proposed 35% increase in the EU’s gas import capacity will threaten climate goals and create an €87 billion stranded asset risk, according to a new report from Global Energy Monitor (GEM). Pipelines and LNG terminals under construction or planned would, if all built, increase gas import capacity by at least 222 billion cubic meters per year—equivalent to the annual consumption of the EU’s three largest gas consumers, Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands.

The proposed expansion is at odds with the EU’s December 2020 pledge to reduce emissions  55% by 2030, the study finds, and is irreconcilable with findings by the European Commission that climate goals depend on a 36% reduction in EU gas consumption from 2020 to 2030.

The Europe Gas Tracker Report found that pipelines in construction or pre-construction would cost an estimated €71 billion, while LNG import terminals in construction or pre-construction would cost an estimated €16 billion. The report also found that €5 billion worth of gas projects were cancelled or shelved in 2020, while another €25 billion worth of projects have been delayed as sponsors struggled to obtain funding amid historically low oil and gas prices and rising public alarm about climate change.

“Our research shows that gas infrastructure in the EU continues to be built and planned at a rapid pace, enough to raise the bloc’s gas import capacity by 35%,” said Mason Inman, GEM’s Program Director for Oil & Gas. “But the EU’s ambitious climate targets require gas consumption to drop sharply by 2030, and continue dropping through 2050. If this gas build-out goes ahead, the EU is likely to see emissions exceed their targets—or to wind up spending billions of euros on gas infrastructure that isn’t needed.”

“EU public finance has delivered for the European gas industry over the last decade, to the extent that CO2 emissions across the EU from fossil gas are now almost as high as those from coal,” said Greig Aitken, GEM’s finance researcher. “Further financial support for fossil gas infrastructure brings huge climate and stranded asset risks, which the European Investment Bank and funding lines under the Commission’s control are now recognising. Private sector financial institutions must now follow suit and introduce measures to end their support for further fossil gas expansion which Europe and the climate clearly do not need.”

“With the EU Green Deal and 55% target, natural gas demand in Europe needs to start declining today, otherwise we risk wasting billions of private and public funding on stranded assets,” said Laurence Tubiana, CEO of the European Climate Foundation. “The fossil fuel era has passed—we must invest crucial public resources into reliable and cheap renewable energy that is ready today.”

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About Global Energy Monitor

Global Energy Monitor (GEM) develops and shares information on fossil fuel projects in support of the worldwide movement for clean energy. Current projects include the Global Coal Plant Tracker, the Global Fossil Infrastructure Tracker, the Europe Gas Tracker, the CoalWire newsletter, and the GEM wiki. For more information, visit www.globalenergymonitor.org
GEM’s Europe Gas Tracker tool provides a comprehensive picture and data set for gas infrastructure across the European Union, with some components included in non-EU countries.