PPI - Radically Pragmatic
  • Donate
Skip to content
  • Home
  • About
    • About Us
    • Locations
    • Careers
  • People
  • Projects
  • Our Work
  • Events
  • Donate

Our Work

Europe’s Second Winter Without Russian Gas: The Role of American LNG Exports

  • December 12, 2023
  • Elan Sykes
Download PDF

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Approaching the second winter after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the European Union has made real progress in overcoming the severe energy shortage that followed the August 2022 shutdown of the Nord Stream pipelines. Through the first nine months of this year, Russian gas comprised only 6% of EU imports compared to 38% in pre-pandemic 2019.

More than any other supplier, United States exports of Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) have
stepped in to fill the gap: U.S. exports are at all-time historic highs and America is now the single largest LNG exporter in the world, with roughly half of U.S. cargoes going to Europe since the invasion and America rising to become the second-largest supplier of gas to Europe after only Norway.

It is impossible to imagine unified support for Ukraine between the U.S. and EU could have continued as it did without the long-term project of expanding U.S. export capacity and the rapid short-term expansion of import terminals in Europe. The EU paired the rapid expansion of temporary and permanent new LNG import terminals with demand reduction targets, accelerated deployment of renewable energy and electrified heating, and increased coal combustion; though European energy costs remain high and energy-intensive industry has languished, the shortage is no longer an acute crisis. In the near future, the U.S. should build on this success by continuing to play a backstop role for world energy markets, implement ambitious IRA policies to push down upstream methane leakage, and expand the global coalition of low-methane producer and consumer markets for LNG with stringent and transparent certification metrics. The U.S. is leading this pragmatic and orderly global transition to netzero.

Read the full report.

Related Work

In the News  |  December 3, 2025

Brown in The New York Post: Dem-leaning group roasts NY’s green energy law as an ‘undeniable’ failure as customers zapped by soaring costs

  • Neel Brown
Press Release  |  November 25, 2025

New PPI Report Warns New York’s Climate Strategy Is Failing as Energy Costs Surge

  • Neel Brown
Publication  |  November 25, 2025

New York’s Climate Crossroads: Assuring Affordable Energy

  • Neel Brown
Op-Ed  |  November 21, 2025

Ryan for Washington Examiner: Bill Gates is right: It’s time to put people at the center of climate policy

  • Tim Ryan
Publication  |  November 20, 2025

Bureaucracy Blocks Green Progress: 9 Ideas for Democratic Permitting Reform

  • Colin Mortimer
Press Release  |  November 20, 2025

PPI Proposes Nine Reforms to Fix America’s Broken Permitting System

  • Colin Mortimer
  • Never miss an update:

  • Subscribe to our newsletter
PPI Logo
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Donate
  • Careers
  • © 2025 Progressive Policy Institute. All Rights Reserved.
  • |
  • Privacy Policy
  • |
  • Privacy Settings