The trade deal agreed this weekend between the US and the European Union hinges on natural gas — but both sides seem to have overpromised what each can realistically buy and sell.  In exchange for a modest reduction in economy-wide tariffs imposed by the US, and exemptions for aviation and some other sectors, EU officials agreed on Sunday to invest $600 billion in the US and to buy $750 billion in American energy products over the next three years. The investment promise is already crumbling, as the bloc has admitted it has no control over how the private sector spends its money. The energy promise will be next to fall. It faces the same fundamental problem: Bureaucrats in Brussels and Washington can’t dictate the flow of global energy trade. And even if they could, the new target is far out of reach. Total US energy exports to the world were worth $318 billion last year, of which about $74.4 billion went to the EU, according to Rystad Energy. So to meet the target, the EU would need to more than triple its purchases of US fossil fuels — and the US would need to stop selling them to almost anyone else. “These numbers make no sense,” said Anne-Sophie Corbeau, a researcher specializing in European gas markets at Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy. |