The EU imported 91 cargoes of liquefied natural gas from Russia's Yamal LNG project between January and April, worth an estimated €3.8 billion, despite pledging to ban Russian fossil fuel imports by year-end. Environmental groups argue that long-term contracts with Russia keep the Arctic LNG project economically viable.
1 comment
The EU imported 91 cargoes of liquefied natural gas from Russia's Yamal LNG project between January and April, worth an estimated €3.8 billion, despite pledging to ban Russian fossil fuel imports by year-end. Environmental groups argue that long-term contracts with Russia keep the Arctic LNG project economically viable.