German Chancellor Olaf Scholz's assistant to economic affairs, who flew halfway around the world to Sydney, announced a shocking news: Germany will make a major adjustment in energy **, starting from August 1, no longer buying Russian coal, and until December 31, no longer buying Russian oil.
Someone used a vivid metaphor to describe this move: the Germans were cutting themselves off with their belts, strangling their own throats. With the waistband of the trousers, the pants will inevitably slip off. Losing ** in public is undoubtedly a shameless hooliganism. And strangling oneself with a trouser belt is a typical suicidal act. This makes Nietzsche, who killed himself with a gun, can't help but lament that his descendants are too environmentally friendly.
In fact, suicide is a very secret thing and will not be carried out in a big way. This time, however, Germany went to Sydney and announced the decision at a forum held by the International Energy Agency affiliated to the United Nations, which was not only high-profile, but also did not leave a way out for itself.
In fact, the assistant also knew in his heart that without Russian energy, Germany's energy gap would be irreparable. This is a typical "knowing that there are tigers in the mountains, I want to go to Tiger Mountain". German politicians think that they are Li Kui who can kill tigers, but in fact they are just Li ghosts.
Whether the Germans want to use or buy Russian energy is completely their own choice, everyone is an adult, and they will no longer be as willful as children. Russian energy will not disappear because Germany does not buy it, and although exports will decrease, the earnings will definitely not decrease.
It's like walking into a zoo alone, and no one can tell for sure. In humans, animals are kept in cages. And in the eyes of animals, people are free-range.
There is information that France has long refused to import Russian pipeline gas, but a significant part of the imported LNG comes from Russia. Fortunately, natural gas does not have DNA, otherwise the results of the paternity test would have been ** long ago.
One might ask if Germany will follow the same path as FranceOur answer is that they are all thousand-year-old foxes, and who can hide from anyone.
Finally, I would like to report two pieces of good news to you:
The first is that Russia has just discovered a large oil field in the Arctic with reserves of 82 million tons. God favors Russia so much, is the United States God's own son or godson?Or maybe it's just a grandchild.
The second is that BASF, Germany's most important chemical company, with annual sales revenue of 78 billion euros, will close Europe's largest chemical plant, which will trigger a series of knock-on effects.
Excuse me, do you hear the cries of German entrepreneurs?Perhaps the Rhine will overflow because it carries the tears of too many entrepreneurs.