THE Russian invasion of Ukraine provided a tremendous opportunity to the Biden administration to dominate Europe while the American fossil fuel industry has been "licking its lips" at hitting the jackpot from the looming energy crisis.
Since the outset of the war, the liquefied natural gas (LNG) corporations and Washington worked hand in glove to steal the European wallets of the European states and raise their dependence on the US.
In a hasty letter to Joe Biden on Feb 25, the country's energy group, LNG Allies, sought the US president's public support for ramping up domestic gas and oil production to support the allies abroad.
It urged him to instruct the US Department of Energy (DoE) to immediately approve pending LNG export licences and direct the independent Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) act within six months.
Within three weeks, the DoE issued two long-term orders to authorise 0.72 billion cubic feet per day (bcf/d) of LNG exports from Corpus Christi and Sabrina Pass in Texas and Louisiana to any country including Europe.
A month later, the Department authorised two more long-term orders of 0.5 bcf/d of LNG exports from Golden Pass LNG and Magnolia LNG, operating in the same states.
America's LNG export capacity is set to grow by a combined 5.7 bcf/d as three export projects — Golden Pass LNG, Plaquemines LNG and Corpus Christi Stage III — begin construction but they will not be operational before 2025.
Meanwhile, ordinary Americans should brace for the "severe impacts" of domestic gas diversion from the US in the form of high energy bills.
The influential gas industry wanted the Biden administration to use America's strategic assets to help keep prices low, support international allies and move more natural gas to domestic consumers.
Yet in effect, none of them really cared for Americans as the FERC in May approved three natural gas and LNG projects to push the country's energy exports.
The US Energy Information Administration (EIA) claimed the authorisation improved the domestic natural gas infrastructure in those areas; the alliance between the gas industry and the White House to sell high-priced LNG and lock Europe dependence was clearly visible notwithstanding the action raised the heating bills of American households.
Prior to the Moscow-Kyiv war, America was already trying to dethrone Russia. Leveraging its vast influence in the continent, the US in 2021 finally managed to displace Russia and Qatar to become Europe's largest source of LNG.
This was despite the LNG imports of 13 European Union (EU) countries seeing a drop of 4 per cent from the previous year to 80 billion cubic meters (bcm), according to the European Commission (EC).
The US was already ratcheting up its LNG shipments to Europe.
In January, the EC data showed a surge of 44 per cent in the EU LNG imports from America. For 2021, the US LNG exports were estimated at more than 22 bcm with a projected value of €12 billion.
Once the war broke out, the US was best placed to ship more LNG to Europe at inflated prices. The continent is on track to refill its low natural gas inventories by switching to LNG (and coal) but at a price estimated to be more than 10 times higher than the historical average.
Hence, with the US as the world's largest LNG exporter in the first half of 2022 on the back of increased LNG prices in Europe, it now has the much greater room to influence European policies.
In March, Biden pledged to provide the EU, which bought 155 bcm of natural gas from the Kremlin in 2021, at least 15 bcm of more LNG to wean its dependence off Russia.
Yet, there's a catch: the US gamble to replenish the European gas stocks with 50 bcm of further LNG by at least 2030 and take control of the continent's destiny is a bridge too far.
According to the Refinitiv data, Washington by June had almost tripled its LNG shipments, 39 bcm of LNG, to Brussels; the expensive purchases elevates threats of economic recession in Europe that is gripped by rampant inflation, energy price spike and sluggish growth.
As the US LNG is pollution-intensive over production by fracking, a technology broadly banned in the EU, a supply of 50 bcm of additional American LNG every year through the decade exposes the transatlantic commitment to climate change.
Since 2016 when the US began to export LNG, the Gulf of Mexico has been a key hub for LNG shipments abroad, most of which heads to Europe.
The FERC approved several construction projects including in Texas and Louisiana; these export plants are a "lose-lose proposition" for the communities in the region, Europe and the climate for they emit large amounts of greenhouse gases with floods and hurricanes making 40 per cent of the population across the coastline vulnerable.
Phlegmatic about Americans' health and climate pledges, the Biden administration is rather keen to cement its status as the world' top fossil fuel exporter on purpose: to deepen Europe's dependence on the US.
Bringing Teheran on the global market should help Brussels, yet Washington is ascertaining Europeans do not heave a sigh of relief and are in need of America "even more" next year when the Russian oil flows dry up.
Increasing Europe's reliance on the US economy, military and culture is invariably a top American priority.
Analyses that characterise the US empire as "humane" and scare the continent of America's ability to wage war anywhere, invade any country at will and fight multiple wars simultaneously are part of a grand strategy to prevent the European economy from taking over the US and suppress its pursuit of strategic autonomy, let alone sovereignty.
The Biden administration's gluttony to heighten the European strategic dependence on the US through a close and well-coordinated nexus between the White House and the gas industry puts America's climate change promises on the back burner and delivers a free opportunity to itself to openly exploit the Ukraine war and elbow out Europe off the track of its strategic and economic autonomy.
But, the strategy is facing a strong backlash at home where expected sharp price hikes in electricity and heating bills ahead of a harsh winter will test the inflation-battered Americans, whose raging response may be reflected in the November midterms.
Europe too is feeling the pinch of the US economic pillage as the European leaders question the "great friendship."
The writer is a private professional and writes on geopolitical issues and regional conflicts.