Comment Re:Nuclear power is both safe and planet friendly (Score 5, Interesting) 188
Russia can't be relied upon as an energy partner
And they just proved this again: yesterday both the Nordstream 1 pipeline (which used to be operational and the main way for gas delivery from Russia to Germany but has been closed down for about a month) and the under-construction Nordstream 2 pipeline next to it were blown apart in an obvious act of sabotage..
Now the Swedish authorities are investigating this together with the defense forces and NATO intelligence, so obviously no-one besides Ukraine has directly blamed Russia yet, but one does not need to be Sherlock Holmes to figure out that this is straight out of the Kremlins playbook. Now why would Russia blow out their own pipelines? There are numerous reasons: first off, Poland is currently getting a lot of replacement gas via another pipeline through the Baltic sea going from Norway to Poland. If Russia is aiming to try and blow this one too, blowing their own (inoperational) pipelines first works as both a practice run and a plausible deniability factor: if they manage to blow up the Norwegian pipe as well (which I doubt, NATO has already (in co-operation with both Finland and Sweden) stepped up defensive measures around the pipeline) they can claim that it can't be them because they too have suffered from this. Secondly, this is great as a propaganda tool for both external and internal purposes: externally they're already blaming the west/the US/NATO/CIA on this in an attempt to sow chaos among the western allies and population. Internally they're going to use this as 'proof' that they're indeed in a war against the whole west and try to ramp up theyr (dismal) recruitment attempts.
Additionally Putin is probably getting a lot of internal pressure from the oligarchs to end the war and resume trade seeing there've been several high profile Russian oligarchs recently that have mysteriously fallen out of windows or been found dead. By destroying the pipe he ensures that even if he's thrown out of power gas trading with Europe cannot and will not resume, so he's trying to make sure they're locked into this total war approach.
So yes, there will definitely not be any more Russian gas sold to Europe/Germany, most likely not even after the war ends because the unreliability of Russia is now finally clear to everyone, even to Germany that's trusted them way too much after the collapse of the soviet Union. There's a very good reason why we here in Finland have imported basically next to no Russian gas throughout the whole millenium and have instead focused on building more nuclear power, with the new Olkiluoto 3 reactor being undergoing test use currently and once it's up and running fully by the end of the year or start of the next, it'll make the Olkiluoto nuclear plant the largest in the Nordics. As for waste disposal, we're currently the first country in the world that has an active deep geological repository for nuclear waste that will be able to store it in stable bedrock for tens of thousands of years at basically no risk of leakage because the storing requires no power and we have no earthquakes,
Resuming and increasing their nuclear power generation is also the only sensible way forwards for Germany, and even though it'll take the German political circles a while to admit their mistakes and come to this conclusion, I trust that they will do so eventually.