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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: marcher who wrote (193009)10/28/2022 10:15:29 PM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
marcher

  Respond to of 217561
 
Re <<surrounded by neolibcons...>>

the nut is having a fun time deploying the sorting hat on them all

been a busy month

attending John Mearsheimer Q&A lecture, photo taken w/ Joe Lieberman, distant pic taken of Hilary Clinton, listening in on Zelensky

I am glad I am able to post-trauma-immunise her with the Roger Waters Message 34056954 interview recording and introduced his music to her

Now instead of taking all as given, she can deploy the sorting hat




To: marcher who wrote (193009)11/2/2022 4:10:39 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217561
 
Seems Teams France and Japan are cheating, rug-pulling on coalition of the willing, and China just minding business and remaining traditional all-weather good-customer
bloomberg.com

Russia’s Near-Record LNG Shipments Show World’s Struggle to Cut Reliance

France, China and Japan were top buyers from Russia in October LNG shipments from Russia rose to highest since March

Stephen Stapczynski
2 November 2022 at 15:28 GMT+8
Russian liquefied natural gas shipments increased in October to nearly a record, illustrating how the world is struggling to curb its dependence on the major supplier ahead of winter.

LNG exports from Russia rose 1.1% year on year in October to the highest level since March, according to ship-tracking data compiled by Bloomberg since 2016. That is in stark contrast to plummeting pipeline flows to Europe following the deterioration of relations between the West and the Kremlin over its invasion of Ukraine in February.



While almost half of the shipborne gas is still in transit, the top importing nations were France, China and Japan, the data showed. There currently aren’t any direct sanctions on Russian LNG, but the rise in exports shows how there is still strong demand for the fuel in preparation for winter, when cold weather is expected to boost consumption and tighten global supply.

Some utilities and governments are moving to halt additional purchases or stop deliveries from Russia altogether. The UK hasn’t imported the super-chilled fuel from Russia since the war started in February, and will formally ban it from January.

Meanwhile, buyers in China increased purchases of Russian LNG to take advantage of a discount to the spot market, according to traders.