Franziska Holz (DIW, Berlin): Freedom Gas to Europe? Scenario Analyses with the Global Gas Model
Franziska Holz (DIW, Berlin) Freedom Gas to Europe? Scenario Analyses with the Global Gas Model című előadása a Corvinus Játékelmélet szemináriumonSzervezők elérhetősége
C épület, 708
When sanctioning
construction works on the Russian offshore natural gas pipeline
Nordstream 2 to Germany in late 2019, U.S. President Trump has drawn
attention to the United States’ own natural gas exports.
The United States of America started exporting liquefied natural gas
(LNG) over the world’s seas only a few years ago. LNG export capacities
and trade flows have increased at high speed since 2016. Observers have
wondered whether the U.S. sanctions on Nordstream
2 were in fact meant at supporting U.S. LNG exports. We shed some light
on the role of U.S. LNG for Europe and analyze the impact of several
politically motivated scenarios with a country level, global
oligopolistic gas market model. We focus on EU imports
and consumption and prices and discuss ripple effects throughout global
markets.
Our Base Case to
2050 is calibrated to IEA World Energy Outlook (2018) and PRIMES
European Reference Scenario (2016). In addition, we define three LNG
support policy scenarios that we name after the main
promoters of national gas policies: “Trump” assumes U.S. policies of
Nordstream 2 sanctions and financial support to LNG shipments to Europe,
“Altmaier” and “Jinping” assume financial support to LNG import
terminals in Germany and China, respectively. In addition,
the “Putin” scenario involves a total and lasting boycott of Russian
exports to Europe.
We find that the
interconnectedness of global gas markets through abundant LNG import
capacity both in Europe and other regions – namely in Asia – allows for
adjustments of global trade patterns that mitigate
the consequences of regional disturbances. Neither Chinese nor German
subsidies on regasification terminals nor moderate financial support of
US LNG exports affect aggregate EU consumption levels in a significant
way. Only a Russian boycott or large subsidies
on US LNG exports have a discernable effect. In any year, compared to
the Base Case, EU consumption varies not more than between -5% and +3%,
and average prices by -5% to +10% only.
Amennyiben szeretne linket kapni az esemény napján a zoom meetinghez
való csatlakozáshoz, kérem küldjön egy emailt Solymosi Tamásnak (tamas
pont solymosi kukac uni kötőjel corvinus pont hu)