Technology for all pathways: An interview with Nikkiso CE&IG
In the context of an energy sector in flux, an often terse geopolitical climate and the regional thirst for energy security, liquefied natural gas (LNG) has emerged once more at the forefront of the conversation.
Where hydrogen and ammonia dominate the decarbonisation discourse, LNG frequents the trade talk.
Just last month (July) US President Donald Trump said the country was close to forming an LNG joint venture with Japan as part of a wide-ranging trade deal, while Europe is to make ‘significant purchases’ of US LNG, oil and nuclear fuels totalling $750bn under a similarly wide-ranging trade deal. The latter represents the two largest economic trading blocs, accounting for 44% of global GDP, with LNG front and centre of the new deal.
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