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#Post#: 10--------------------------------------------------
What to do with Google Search Console keywords
By: chandna rani Date: September 3, 2023, 4:47 am
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Instead, the way governments have carried out the energy
transition has seemed more like an attempt to put the present on
hold and jump into the future by sheer force of will. European
governments have profound new geopolitical reasons to aspire to
a future they already desired, in which, as Angela Merkel
declared in January 2020, Europe would become "the first
continent free of co2". In other words: in the geopolitical and
economic necessity of oil is the potential subordination; in the
hope of solar and wind power and electrification is Emmanuel
Macron's offer of European sovereignty.
Yet the war could not have made the Phone Number Listy
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of such material change any clearer.
Energy forces both those who make war and those who suffer it:
Ukraine transports Russian oil and gas to Europe through its
pipelines; Russia pays Ukraine to transport those exports. When
it comes to energy, even the transformative power of war has its
limits. The options are now more difficult. The bet on a
different energy future is already making it difficult for
Germany to seek non-Russian gas supplies today.
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In March, German Economy Minister Robert Habeck traveled to
Qatar to try to reach an agreement on LNG. When a deal was
finally reached on May 20, Germany could only hold a Qatari
commitment for gas exported from the US Golden Pass plant from
2024 and a promise of new long-term supply talks. Much of the
problem is that Qatar wants a 20+ year deal, while Germany wants
to exit the gas market by 2040. More broadly, the question of
whether governments and citizens will have to deal with
constraints of fossil fuel supply in the face of the
environmental imperatives of the energy transition brings us
closer to an answer.
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