Financier Stephen Lynch says ownership of the Nord Stream 2 would give the US control over the EU’s energy supply
An American financier and investor has asked permission from the US government to buy the sabotaged Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline if it is put up for auction, the Wall Street Journal has reported.
Stephen Lynch requested authorization in February from the US Treasury Department to bid on the pipeline if it is auctioned next year, the paper wrote on Thursday, citing a letter from the financier’s lawyers that it saw.
The investor, who had reportedly spent two decades doing business in Moscow, told the outlet that US ownership of the pipeline would give the government a tool to exert pressure in any peace negotiations with Russia to end the Ukraine conflict and would serve long-term US interests.
“The bottom line is this: This is a once-in-a-generation opportunity for American and European control over European energy supply for the rest of the fossil-fuel era,” Lynch told the WSJ.
The pipeline, which was designed to increase Russian gas supplies to the EU, was damaged by sabotage in September 2022 and now stands idle as its Swiss-based operator is scrambling to avoid insolvency.
Moscow has argued that the US benefited from the attack due to its position as a supplier of liquefied natural gas to Europe, and pointed the finger at Washington as a possible culprit. American Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Seymour Hersh has blamed the act of sabotage on the CIA, alleging that the agency carried out the attack with the help of the Norwegian Navy under direct orders of the White House.
Lynch reportedly believes he can buy the Nord Stream 2, which has been valued at around $11 billion, for pennies on the dollar, the WSJ wrote, citing people familiar with the matter.
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In a letter to the Treasury, Lynch reportedly said that in January 2025, during the bankruptcy proceedings of Nord Stream 2 AG – the pipeline’s operator and a subsidiary of Russian energy giant Gazprom – its debt will either be restructured or the company will be liquidated.
According to the article, Lynch, who was a large contributor to US President-elect Donald Trump’s campaign, is seeking a license from the Treasury that would allow him to negotiate with entities sanctioned by the US.
Lynch argued that after the end of the Ukraine conflict, it will be “tempting for both Russia and its former customers in Germany and Europe to turn on the pipeline, regardless of who owns it,” the WSJ wrote.
The Miami-based investor is also known for obtaining a license from the Treasury Department to complete the acquisition of the Swiss subsidiary of Sberbank in 2022, after the US imposed sanctions on Russia’s largest lender.
Switzerland’s m3 Groupe took control of a majority stake at the time, and Lynch became a minority shareholder.
November 22, 2024 at 07:07PM
RT