Browsing by Author "Miles, Steven R."
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Item A Bridge Over Troubled Water: LNG FSRUs Can Enhance European Energy Security(James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy) Miles, Steven R.; Collins, Gabriel; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyIn our recent brief Strategic Response Options If Russia Cuts Gas Supplies to Europe, 2 we and our co-authors Kenneth Medlock and Anna Mikulska address options for supplying Europe with energy through the remainder of 2022 in the event that Russian natural gas supplies suffer interruption. Since we published the brief, Europe has formally proposed to reduce its reliance on Russian natural gas by two-thirds by year-end,3 and Russia in turn has threatened to terminate all natural gas supplies to Europe.4 Rising risk demands concrete, rapidly implementable gas supply solutions that can provide a bridge until longer-term infrastructure investments are in place. We address one such bridge in this follow-on brief.Item Low-Carbon Fuels: How to Use U.S. Infrastructure and Exports to Deliver Cleaner Energy to the World(James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy) Miles, Steven R.; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem Send Lawyers, (Gas) And Money: Executive Summary for “Strategic Response Options if Russia Cuts Gas Supplies to Europe”(James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy) Collins, Gabriel; Medlock, Kenneth B. III; Mikulska, Anna; Miles, Steven R.; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem Strategic Response Options if Russia Cuts Gas Supplies to EuropeCollins, Gabriel; Medlock, Kenneth B. III; Mikulska, Anna; Miles, Steven R.; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem Trade War, Energy & Coronavirus: How to Make the US-China Deal a Success(James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy) Miles, Steven R.; Medlock, Kenneth B. III; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem US Needs LNG to Fight a Two-Front Gas War(James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy) Miles, Steven R.; Collins, Gabriel; Mikulska, Anna; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem Winning the Long War in Ukraine Requires Gas Geoeconomics(James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy) Collins, Gabriel; Mikulska, Anna; Miles, Steven R.; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyItem Winning the Long War in Ukraine Requires Gas GeoeconomicsCollins, Gabriel; Mikulska, Anna; Miles, Steven R.; James A. Baker III Institute for Public PolicyProactive U.S. efforts to enhance Europe’s gas security and blunt Russia’s ability to use gas for hybrid warfare would directly support its ability to sustain and upgrade its combat credibility in East and Southeast Asia. By incentivizing upstream gas investments globally through the demand call associated with a broader European move to replace Russian gas with LNG, gas geoeconomics would over the medium term also help increase global LNG supply to the ultimate benefit of U.S. allies in Asia, foremost among them Japan and South Korea. Meanwhile, the sooner Europe can end purchases of Russian gas, the sooner the Kremlin faces a decision between effectively exiting the global gas market or else spending tens of billions to build more gas pipelines to China—obligating financial resources that would otherwise be used to rebuild Russia’s military. Gas geoeconomics is an essential prerequisite for victory in Ukraine, U.S. credibility in Asia, and should be one of Washington’s top national security priorities.