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Economist Podcasts

Joule of denial: Russia’s energy games

Economist Podcasts

The Economist

News & Politics, News

4.35K Ratings

🗓️ 13 September 2022

⏱️ 25 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Vladimir Putin hopes the threat of cutting off fuel supplies this winter will weaken Europe’s support for Ukraine. European leaders are trying to cobble together a collective response to prevent such fracturing. Before Russia invaded, Ukraine’s surrogacy industry was booming. It has since been disrupted, but not ended. And Britain’s bird populations are changing: we ask why.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello and welcome to the intelligence from The Economist.

0:07.0

In New York, I'm John Fastman.

0:10.0

Every weekday, we provide a fresh perspective on the events shaping your world.

0:19.0

Before Russia's invasion, Ukraine was the surrogacy capital of the world with favorable laws and plenty of willing surrogates.

0:26.6

The war disrupted that industry, but didn't end it.

0:30.6

Some women who fled Ukraine have returned to give birth.

0:34.6

And birdsong can define a place just as specifically as topography or a skyline.

0:41.4

In much of Britain, the songs have changed, as once ubiquitous birds grow less common

0:46.8

and long rare species return to the skies.

0:56.2

But first.

1:08.5

Since February, Russia has been waging war on Ukraine.

1:14.8

It has also been waging an energy war across Europe. The bills for that energy have been rising ever since the European Union imposed sanctions on Russia over its

1:19.5

invasion. Russia responded by throttling supplies of gas. Vladimir Putin, Russia's president, has now threatened to freeze Europe this winter

1:30.5

if it caps the price it will pay for Russian gas.

1:37.6

Several European countries have so far unveiled measures to help people through winter.

1:46.7

Germany's Chancellor Olaf Schultz borrowed the words of a famous football anthem

1:51.3

to promise citizens that nobody would be left on their own.

2:01.5

Different European countries seem to have been taken You'll never walk alone. We will never alone.

2:06.6

Different European countries seem to have been taking different approaches to this problem.

2:10.8

But a more coordinated response appears to be on the way.

2:18.1

Europe has spent last few months scrambling to make sure that it has enough gas to get through the winter.

2:21.9

Matt Steinglass is our Deputy Europe editor.

...

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