The Capital

Spain, Portugal an ‘energy island’ amid crisis in Europe

- By Joseph Wilson and Hernan Munoz

BARCELONA, Spain — Amid the mayhem provoked in the world energy market by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Spain and Portugal have emerged in a strategica­lly advantageo­us position as an “energy island” in Europe, with a relatively low reliance on Russian natural gas.

Leaders in renewable energy thanks to solar, wind and hydraulic power, Spain and Portugal are now poised to reap the benefits of long-term investment­s in liquefied natural gas, or LNG.

With six LNG plants in Spain — including Europe’s largest, in Barcelona — and one in Portugal, the Iberian neighbors account for one-third of Europe’s LNG processing capacity. The port-based terminals turn boatloads of supercoole­d LNG back into gas that then flows into homes and businesses.

Spain and Portugal are set to receive more gas imports, along with the rest of Europe, after the United States announced last month that it would help its allies reduce their dependence on Russian gas.

The war has turned Europe’s dependence on Russian gas into a critical strategic liability. In a rush to find alternativ­es, European Union leaders want to accelerate mid- to longterm goals to shift further into renewable energy, while finding alternativ­e sources of natural gas in the meantime. Russia has kept the gas flowing for now but has turned off the taps in the past during spats with Ukraine and Belarus.

The crisis also has shown that the EU, despite being a common market for 27 nations, has major internal bottleneck­s in its energy distributi­on system.

The LNG arriving to Spain could in theory be sent on to needier neighbors further east, but there’s no easy way to get it there. Spain and France share two small gas pipelines that can transport the equivalent of seven boatloads of LNG each month, while Spain received 27 boatloads at its terminals in March, in addition to natural gas pumped through an Algerian pipeline, according to Enagas.

There is talk in Madrid and Brussels about reviving a plan to build a larger pipeline for gas and green hydrogen energy to cross the Pyrenees, but even if that gets funding, it would take several years to start working. And there would still need to be more work in France to help get the gas to where it’s really needed.

In the meantime, said Enagas spokesman Claudio Rodriguez, the company that runs Spain’s natural gas network, the nation’s LNG terminals could be used to send along ships of LNG to other European ports to “reinforce Europe’s gas and energy systems,”

Experts agree, however, that if Europe wants energy autonomy, it must strengthen its connection­s.

“Spain is part of the solution, but, unfortunat­ely, it is limited in what it can do,” said Gonzalo Escribano, energy and climate analyst of Spain’s Elcano Institute think tank.

“For years, Spain has been issuing warnings to other member states on their dependence on Russia ... (now) we want to turn off the Russian tap, and, dear sirs, we can’t.”

 ?? EMILIO MORENATTI/AP ?? Operators work Tuesday at an Enagas plant in Barcelona, Spain. The energy crisis resulting from the war in Ukraine has Spain and Portugal in a favorable position.
EMILIO MORENATTI/AP Operators work Tuesday at an Enagas plant in Barcelona, Spain. The energy crisis resulting from the war in Ukraine has Spain and Portugal in a favorable position.

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