The EU is already buying the lion's share of US oil and gas
exports, according to US government data, and no additional volumes are
currently available unless the United States increases output or volumes are
re-routed frm Asia - another big consumer of US energy.
"I told the European Union that they must make up their
tremendous deficit with the United States by the large scale purchase of our
oil and gas," Trump said in a post on Truth Social.
"Otherwise, it is tariffs all the way!!!," he
added.
The European Commission said it was ready to discuss with
the president-elect how to strengthen an already strong relationship, including
in the energy sector.
"The EU is committed to phasing out energy imports from
Russia and diversifying our sources of supply," a spokesperson said.
The
United States already supplied 47% of the European Union's LNG imports and 17%
of its oil imports in the first quarter of 2024, according to data from EU
statistics office Eurostat.
Trump has vowed to impose tariffs on most if not
all imports, and said Europe would pay a heavy price for having run a large
trade surplus with the US for decades.
Trump has repeatedly highlighted the US trade deficit for
goods, but not trade as a whole.
The US had a goods trade deficit with the EU of 155.8
billion euros (US$161.9 billion) last year. However, in services it had a surplus
of 104 billion euros, Eurostat data shows.
Trump, who takes office on January 20, 2025 has already
pledged hefty tariffs on three of the United States' largest trading
partners - Canada, Mexico and China.
Most European oil refiners and gas firms are private and the
governments have no say on where the purchases are coming from unless
authorities impose sanctions or tariffs. The owners usually buy their resources
based on price and efficiencies.
The EU has steeply increased purchases of US oil and gas
following the block's decision to impose sanctions and cut reliance on Russian
energy after Moscow invaded Ukraine in 2022.
The United States has grown to become the largest oil
producer in recent years with output of over 20 million barrels per day of oil
liquids or a fifth of global demand.
US crude exports to Europe stand at over two million bpd
representing over a half of US total exports with the rest going to Asia. The
Netherlands, Spain, France, Germany, Italy, Denmark, and Sweden are the biggest
importers, according to the US government data.
The United States is also the world's biggest gas producer
and consumer with output of over 103 billion cubic feet per day (bcfd).
The US government projects that US exports of liquefied gas
(LNG) will average 12 bcfd in 2024. In 2023, Europe accounted for 66% of US LNG
exports, with the Britain, France, Spain and Germany being the main
destinations.
EU exports are dominated by Germany with key goods being
cars, machinery and chemicals.
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