UAE to provide Germany with gas

Middle East Eye
UAE to provide Germany with gas

The United Arab Emirates (UAE) on Sunday agreed an "energy security" deal with Germany to supply liquefied natural gas (LNG) and diesel, as Berlin searches for new power sources to replace Russian supplies, Middle East Eye reports.

Emirati Industry Minister Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber called it a "landmark new agreement" that "reinforces the rapidly growing energy partnership between the UAE and Germany", at a signing attended by German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, the UAE's state news agency WAM reported. Scholz was on a visit to the UAE as part of a Gulf tour that also includes stops in Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

The president met with Emirati counterpart Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, who said  afterwards on one of the social networks that they had discussed "further opportunities for cooperation in areas including energy security, emissions reduction and climate action".  Scholz said he "welcomed" the "energy security" agreement, WAM said.

As part of the deal, the UAE will provide "an LNG cargo for delivery in late 2022, to be used in the commissioning of Germany's floating LNG import terminal at Brunsbuettel", a North Sea port, the WAM report added.  UAE state oil company ADNOC completed its first ever direct diesel delivery to Germany this month and will "supply up to 250,000 tonnes of diesel per month in 2023", it said.  "ADNOC has reserved a number of further LNG cargoes exclusively for German customers in 2023," it said. 

Sunday was the second and final day of Scholz's Gulf tour, which he hoped would seal new energy deals to replace Russian supplies and mitigate the energy crisis resulting from Moscow's special operation in Ukraine.  On Saturday, he met in Jeddah with Saudi Arabia's de facto leader, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, and on Sunday afternoon he arrived in gas-rich Qatar to hold talks with Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani. 

Saudi crown prince meeting

Scholz's stop in the UAE included a tour of an environmental project at a mangrove park with the Emirati climate change minister, Mariam Almheiri. The UAE and Saudi Arabia have been leading critics of what they describe as "unrealistic" transition models they say have contributed to the current energy crunch. 

Scholz told reporters in Abu Dhabi that his country had "made progress on a whole series of projects here in terms of the production and purchase of diesel and gas", while adding it was determined to avoid energy dependence on Russia in the future. "The fact that we are dependent on one supplier and also dependent on its decisions will certainly not happen to us again," he said. 

After meeting on Saturday with Saudi Arabia's crown prince, Scholz said that he wanted to deepen the energy partnership between the two countries. Scholz said he also addressed issues involving human and civil rights in his talks with the crown prince.

A US intelligence report has concluded that Mohammed bin Salman was responsible for ordering the murder of the the Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, who disappeared after entering the Saudi embassy in Istanbul in 2018.  Khashoggi, who worked as a columnist for the Washington Post and Middle East Eye, was often critical of the Saudi monarchy and the crown prince.  Prominent German politicians from an array of parties, in an article on Saturday in Der Spiegel, had called on Scholz to address the matters.

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