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La Grèce, "nouvelle porte d’entrée de l’énergie américaine en Europe", selon le secrétaire d'État américain à l'Énergie

S'adressant à euronews, Chris Wright a souligné le rôle de la Grèce en tant que plaque tournante énergétique, et a précisé qu'il ne participerait pas aux négociations sur le climat qui se tiendront au Brésil.

LIRE L’ARTICLE : http://fr.euronews.com/2025/11/07/la-grece-nouvelle-porte-dentree-de-lenergie-americaine-en-europe-selon-le-secretaire-detat

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00:00La France a commencé à l'année dernière, en ce qui concerne le nombre de l'Etat,
00:04en ce qui concerne l'Etat, en ce qui concerne les énergies renouvelables et l'Etat,
00:09pour la réglage de l'Etat entre l'Etat, l'Etat et l'Etat.
00:15En ce qui concerne l'Etat, l'Etat, l'Etat, l'Etat, l'Etat, l'Etat, l'Etat.
00:24Pour tout cela, nous nous demandons avec le Américain de l'Etat, Chris Wright.
00:29Si la guerre de l'Etat Конnacées, l'Etat l'Etat eingère a la pluscesso,
00:34la très sayingeffétrie du support de l'Etat.
00:38Vos politiques habituellement, l'Etat l'Etat des葉 des sièges de l'Etat ?
00:41Je crois que l'Etat des rapports de l'Etat Blanc,
00:44l'Etat a été éveillé avec les pays aux Français agricoles linté dans le Royaume de l'Etat.
00:49La ressources sont émerке.
00:51Le lui wantrum d'émer��를 les opératsaleale entre起來 sur la mondiale et national.
00:57Laметrique de l'Etat aèler.
00:58Yeah, the United States will be here for the long run.
01:01With Europe reducing its dependency on Russian energy, how does the U.S. see its own role?
01:08I mean, more like a long-term partner or just a crisis supplier?
01:14Oh, no, we view it very much as a long-term supplier, very much as a long-term supplier.
01:18United States' natural gas production is more than twice Russian natural gas production,
01:23and ours is growing rapidly, and our export capacity is expanding even more rapidly than
01:29our gas production is expanding. So, no, our goal, President Trump's agenda is prosperity at home
01:36and peace abroad. We think nations that are well-supplied with energy have greater economic
01:42opportunities, greater prosperity, and having these cross-border, cross-ocean energy cooperations
01:49leads to long-term sticky relationships and drives peace in the world.
01:53Projects like Alexandrupolis, LNG Terminal, and interconnectors to the Balkans have shown again
02:01the strategic importance of Greece. How does Washington see Greece's growing role in Europe's
02:10energy security architecture?
02:12I think it's fantastic, and Greece is a tremendous partner. Greece is historically a shipping powerhouse.
02:19Something like 20 percent of global shipping and over a third of all LNG, liquefied natural
02:25gas shipping, is done by Greek companies. But when the Russian dominated as the energy supplier
02:31into Europe, Greece was the end of the line, was just a node at the end of the energy transportation
02:36system. Now we've seen a totally different role for Greece. Greece is now the gateway from overseas
02:42from the United States to American energy as it flows into Europe. I think it's huge economic
02:48benefits for Greece, and it's great for the United States to have such a long-lasting ally and partner
02:54as Greece, playing this role as the gateway for American energy to Europe.
02:58And since we cannot discuss energy without mentioning environment, I would like to ask you,
03:03you have expressed very specific views about climate change. You have said that the threat is exaggerated.
03:10Please explain these views to us. And I would also like to ask you if you're going to attend
03:16UN's climate talks in Brazil this November.
03:19I won't make the climate talks this year. I think there's a very good chance I will go
03:23next year. Look, I've been working, studying, writing, reading about climate change for over
03:2820 years, very involved in that discussion and debate. So I follow very closely the science
03:34of climate change and the economic efforts and the studies on climate change. It is a real,
03:39slow-moving, global, physical phenomenon. The world has been decarbonizing for 200 years,
03:45from wood to coal to oil to gas, ultimately to nuclear. So I think you will see continued
03:51reduction in greenhouse gas intensity per unit of energy produced. I don't even know when global
03:58greenhouse gas emissions will peak. We still have a billion people living wealthy, wonderful
04:03lives and seven billion people wanting that. So I think we're going to see many, many decades
04:09of growth in energy production, likely continued gradual rises in greenhouse gas emissions.
04:15Fortunately, a more energized, wealthier world is better able to withstand any changes. Climate
04:22change is a real thing, but it's just been wildly exaggerated for political purposes. I think it's
04:28very unfortunate. Secretary, thank you very much for this discussion. Thank you so much for having me.
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