The US is building expensive terminals to export LNG. Now what?
LNG Exports, Another Trade War Victim
OilPrice reports China Halts U.S. LNG Imports Amid Tariff War
China hasn’t imported liquefied natural gas from the United States since early February, as the tariff war hit energy trade and could have long-term consequences for U.S. LNG export contracts.
The last LNG cargo to arrive in China from America was a tanker from Corpus Christi, which docked in the southern Chinese province of Fujian on February 6, according to shipping data cited by the Financial Times.
The Chinese tariffs on U.S. goods, including energy products, and the broader trade war between the world’s two biggest economies could have long-term consequences on the ability of new U.S. LNG export projects to attract anchor offtake commitments, analysts warn.
“I do not think Chinese LNG importers will ever contract any new US LNG,” Anne-Sophie Corbeau, a gas specialist at Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy, told FT.
Following the tariffs, Chinese LNG buyers with long-term supply contracts with U.S. producers have started reselling the cargoes to Europe, Bloomberg reported, citing trading sources. What’s more, Chinese traders have grown cold towards new long-term commitments for future supply from the United States, instead seeking long-term deals with gas producers in the Middle East and the Asia Pacific.
Goodbye US LNG Hello Russia
Russia has emerged as the third-largest supplier of LNG to China behind Australia and Quatar. Russia and China have been negotiating over a new natural gas pipeline, the Power of Siberia 2 according to the video above.
EU Trades One Problem for Another
Reuters reports EU plan to end Russian oil and gas imports due out in May
The European Commission will announce a more detailed strategy to phase out Russian oil and gas imports next month, it said on Monday, after twice delaying the plan.
The EU has pledged to quit Russian fossil fuels by 2027 in response to Moscow’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine, but the Commission has delayed publishing its “roadmap” for how to do so. The plan was initially due last month. The Commission will now publish the roadmap on May 6, an agenda published on Monday showed.
While Russian pipeline gas deliveries have plunged since 2022, the EU increased its imports of Russian liquefied natural gas (LNG) last year, and the bloc still got 19% of its total gas and LNG supply from Russia in 2024.
Unlike oil, the EU has not imposed sanctions on imports of Russian gas.
Hungary has vowed to block Russian energy sanctions, which require unanimous approval from EU countries, while some other governments have also signalled unwillingness to approve sanctions on Russian LNG before the EU secures alternative supplies.The EU has said it would consider buying more LNG from the United States, and Trump has said selling more energy to Europe would be a key focus of his administration’s efforts to eliminate its trade deficit with the EU.
U.S. LNG helped to plug the Russian supply gap in Europe during the 2022 energy crisis. Last year, the U.S. was Europe’s third-biggest gas supplier, after Russia and top supplier Norway.
Will the US Be a More Reliable Provider to the EU
Please consider Back to Russian gas? Trump-wary EU has energy security dilemma
U.S. liquefied natural gas helped to plug the Russian supply gap in Europe during the 2022-2023 energy crisis.
But now that President Donald Trump has rocked relationships with Europe established after World War Two, and turned to energy as a bargaining chip in trade negotiations, businesses are wary that reliance on the United States has become another vulnerability.
Against this backdrop, executives at major EU firms have begun to say what would have been unthinkable a year ago: that importing some Russian gas, including from Russian state giant Gazprom could be a good idea.
The head of French oil major TotalEnergies , Patrick Pouyanne, has warned Europe against over-relying on U.S. gas.
“We need to diversify, many routes, not over-rely on one or two,” Pouyanne told Reuters. Total is a large exporter of U.S. LNG and also sells Russian LNG from private firm Novatek .”Europe will never go back to importing 150 billion cubic meters from Russia like before the war … but I would bet maybe 70 bcm,” Pouyanne added.
France, which produces large amounts of nuclear power, already has one of the most diversified energy supplies in Europe.Germany relied heavily on cheap Russian gas to help drive its manufacturing sector until the Ukraine war and has fewer options.
In Leuna Chemical Park, one of Germany’s biggest chemical clusters hosting plants of Dow Chemical and Shell, some makers say Russian gas should return quickly.
Russia used to cover 60% of local needs, mainly through the Nord Stream pipeline, which was blown up in 2022. “We are in a severe crisis and can’t wait,” said Christof Guenther, managing director of InfraLeuna, the operator of the park.
He said the German chemical industry has cut jobs for five quarters in a row, something not seen for decades.“Reopening pipelines would reduce prices more than any current subsidy programmes,” he said. “It’s a taboo topic,” Guenther added, saying many colleagues agreed on the need to go back to Russian gas.
Almost a third of Germans voted for Russia-friendly parties in the February federal election.In the state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, the east German region where the Nord Stream pipeline comes ashore after running from Russia under the Baltic Sea, 49% of Germans want a return to Russian gas supplies, a poll carried out by the Forsa institute found.
“We need Russian gas, we need cheap energy – no matter where it comes from,” said Klaus Paur, managing director of Leuna-Harze, a mid-sized petrochemical maker at the Leuna Park. “We need Nord Stream 2 because we have to keep energy costs in check.”
U.S. LNG Expansion Plans Unravel as Trade War Escalates
CleanTechnica reports U.S. LNG Expansion Plans Unravel as Trade War Escalates
China has just suspended all LNG imports from the United States. No warning, no phasedown, just an apparent state directive that Chinese buyers, including the national oil companies, were no longer to sign, lift, or receive U.S. liquefied natural gas.
But the trade war launched in 2018 by the first Trump administration slammed on the brakes. China imposed retaliatory tariffs on U.S. LNG — first 10%, then 25% — and imports plummeted to near zero by 2019. Only the Phase One trade agreement in early 2020 restarted flows. That year, U.S. LNG volumes to China rebounded to over 4 million tonnes, rising to a record 9.3 MTPA in 2021. In that banner year, China represented over 12% of total U.S. LNG exports, and the deals were worth over $3.4 billion in nominal dollars. Dozens of long-term contracts were signed, and U.S. project developers counted on China to underwrite future expansion.
That faith proved misplaced. By 2022, U.S. LNG flows to China dropped sharply as Europe, reeling from Russia’s war in Ukraine, bid aggressively on spot cargoes.
Chinese imports hovered around 2 MTPA in 2022 and rose modestly in 2023, but never recovered to their 2021 peak. Now, with Beijing’s abrupt suspension of U.S. LNG, the relationship has collapsed entirely. Contracts are frozen. Cargoes already loaded are being diverted. And any terminal with offtake exposure to Chinese buyers is facing the real prospect of default or renegotiation. In just a few weeks, a decade of growth has been reversed.
The loss of China as a customer comes as the U.S. LNG industry is still navigating Europe’s shifting role. Europe became the largest destination for U.S. LNG almost overnight after 2022, when Russian pipeline gas was cut off and European countries scrambled for replacements. U.S. export volumes to Europe surged to over 60% of total shipments in early 2023, with countries like France, the Netherlands, and the UK relying on American LNG to keep industries running and homes heated.
As early as 2024, forward-looking European utilities began declining 20-year LNG deals, instead favoring short-term contracts or portfolio purchases. The message was clear: European gas demand was peaking and would soon be in structural decline.
That left the U.S. LNG sector reliant on a delicate two-legged stool: China and Europe. And now one leg has been kicked out from under it.
Over 20 proposed U.S. LNG terminals are in various stages of development. Some, like Venture Global’s CP2, Sempra’s Port Arthur, and NextDecade’s Rio Grande, have already secured partial financing or begun early construction. Others remain in the permitting and contracting phase, awaiting final investment decision (FID). Across the Gulf Coast, the vision has been consistent: build more capacity, serve growing Asian demand, and use flexible destination clauses to capitalize on European price spikes.
In a series of publications over the past three years, I’ve argued that this expansion was speculative at best. The assumptions behind the next 100 MTPA of capacity were shaky: that global demand would continue rising, that geopolitics would remain stable, that carbon pricing wouldn’t bite, and that markets like China and India would buy whatever the U.S. was selling. I’ve pointed out that most of these new terminals were being justified on the back of long-term contracts that wouldn’t hold up to scrutiny, and that a significant share of planned capacity risked becoming stranded as demand plateaued or declined. Now, those warnings are materializing.
The implications for these terminals are severe. Without Chinese offtake, nearly a third of the volume committed to future U.S. projects has evaporated. Some developers will attempt to resell this capacity, but few buyers have China’s appetite, credit profile, or willingness to sign 20-year deals. With Europe capping long-term gas infrastructure growth and preparing for a long-term decline in fossil imports, the second fallback market is shrinking fast. Projects that have yet to reach FID may be shelved entirely. Banks and institutional investors will demand more conservative projections. Risk premiums will rise. Insurance may become harder to obtain. Terminal utilization rates will fall short of modeled expectations, and the entire economics of Gulf Coast LNG will have to be revisited.
The final irony is political. U.S. oil and gas executives spent heavily during the 2024 election cycle, once again backing Trump in the hopes of favorable policies, looser regulations, and accelerated fossil fuel exports. Billions were spent on lobbying, campaign donations, and friendly media to amplify the message that fossil fuels meant freedom and prosperity.
And what did they get in return? A trade war that shuttered their second-largest LNG market, destabilized long-term supply relationships, and sent shockwaves through global energy finance.
It makes no economic sense for the EU to buy expensive US LNG when it can get cheap Russian gas by pipeline.
And closer to home, the EU should look to Iran and the Mideast.
Trump wanted bilateral relationships. He succeeded in moving China and Russia closer, China and India closer, China and Iran closer, India and Iran closer, and now it seems the EU and Russia closer.
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I think that Trump truly is determined to make both China and Russia Superpowers, while turning the USA into a 3rd rate country.
Halting imports of NatGas from the US was a symbolic string for China to pull. It was never allowed to be imported in such large amounts as to expose China to become dependent on US NatGas.
As long as Ukraine and Russia are at war, Ukraine’s NatGas is staying underground. Russia needs to sell its energy to finance war, and citizens to fight it. China could supply rigs and refineries with labor instead of military. Oops, Western missiles hit a refinery and anger China.
Europe is energy deficient, so it will gladly, privately take the futures contracts Chinese energy dealers are liquidating. Europe cannot simultaneously support Ukraine military efforts and import energy from Russia. Germany’s, and soon to be the Continent’s, recession will put pressures on leaders to back off of tariffs for energy.
Global NatGas demand has not changed, only the paths it takes.
That is fine if you ignore Nordstream 2 being re-opened to Europe and the pipeline to China from Russia completed and opened. LNG exports directly from Russia to Germany? You bet!
Global demand is down and alternate sources are the clear winners over trumps stench of economic abuse.
Trump is destroying America day after day…
As long as Ukraine and Russia are at war, Ukraine’s NatGas is staying underground. Russia needs to sell its energy to finance war, and citizens to fight it. C
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so much BU11LLSH111IT, I really doubt you are real human or some kind of bbc/cnn/abc bot!
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=1 what ukraine natgas???
there is NO natgas production in Ukraine!! Ukraine always, I repeat always imported gas during USSR times, and from Russia after 1991. !! outside some local production points it is 100% depend on import. same for oil.
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=Russia needs to sell its energy to finance war
what finance? Russia is ruble based economy, same as USA $based, and China us yean based.
Russia is 4th biggest economy in world, bigger than Germany! it has gdp nominal over 2 trln$, by PPP it is about 5 trln$ or more.
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Russia during hey days exported 200 bln cm of gas ! mostly into Europe,.
before 2022, if avg prices was $200 per 1000 cm, it is $ 40 bln, GROSS.
from those $40 bln you have to pay salaries, taxes, etc
do you even have basic knowledge of macro, finance, etc?
or you are just mor1on who repeats usual mass media idiocy how Russia sells energy to finance itself?
ps
you can do same calc for about 4*5 mln barrel of oil per day Russia used to export.
As a natural gas consumer through my utility I’ll look forward to lower heating bills next winter and possibly this summer thx to Trump’s tariffs.
https://tradingeconomics.com/commodity/natural-gas
Who would’ve thought that raising tariffs on foreign goods would benefit US energy consumers?
Right there with you. Gas bills are 2.5 times more than 5 years ago.
Good luck if you think your utility will lower your monthly bills just because their gas supply cost decreased. Other costs are more relevant. They have pensions just like states and municipalities and ever-rising healthcare costs.
In the state I reside if input costs are lower, the state regulator files tariffs reducing rates for customers. The utility has futures contracts stretching out to 5 years but also one year and the spot market.
Costs for anything NEVER go down in CA!
This one is an unintentional blessing in disguise. Keep the natural gas in the ground for coming energy shortages.
Of course, the US has no long-term energy policy, it only has a long-term gun boat policy. Substituting one for the other explains the permanent military waste.
It should also continue the acceleration of coal fired power plants to gas fired. Here’s one example that’s finishing up:
https://stories.xcelenergy.com/stories/Fueling-the-future-at-Harrington-Station–Transitioning-from-coal-to-natural-gas#:~:text=The%20end%20of%202024%20marked,fully%20complete%20in%20May%202025.
Trumps love of Tarrifs is a dissater for US workers and the US econ
Complaining about Trump tariffs is a sign of a short time horizon. The game has only begun. The trade deals are yet to be made. For example, China’s economy is such a disaster that China won’t need oil and gas imports until Xi begs for a deal or is assassinated by a horde of starving Chinese. US tariffs interrupted a third of Chinese exports and the rest of Chinese exports will soon dry up as Europe and Asia feel the pinch of their own tariffs. Europe and China are export driven economies. US is immune to counter tafiffs and US can build whatever is not imported. Get busy and start building.
There must have been a sale on Tester’s airplane glue in your vicinity.
Your opinion does not count when Trump and I agree.
And the games are just beginning…………
2024: China accounted for approximately 5-6% of U.S. LNG exports, totaling about 4.16 million metric tons ($2.4 billion). This was a small fraction of the U.S.’s total LNG exports, which reached 11.9 billion cubic feet per day, making the U.S. the world’s largest LNG exporter.
Not for long! Russia is building the China 2 pipeline to China and Qatar has huge projects coming on-line to add pain to the U.S.exporters.
Plus with the U.S. abandoning Ukraine to Russia the NOrdstream 2 pipeline will re-open.
Who does Trump work for?
Dollar down and Ruble up, any questions?
Really do not need Gas purchasing when your economy has run out of customers for what it produces with that Gas.
Other then that another Yawn article.
There was much bashing of Biden admin for calling for a slowdown in the future expansion of LNG terminals after it was clear that Europe was not going to be able to take in the lofty export goals of the industry and right wing talking heads.
Most of us here are fiscal conservatives. It is natural that most here would have chosen Trump over Harris. When will conservatives come to the conclusion that Trump is a disaster?
I am eternally grateful that Mish provides an economic forum, that is not paywalled, to debate these issues.
How many here can bring themselves to admit that the US would have been better off with the Biden style guidance? Not ready? I’ll give you another 90 days and re-poll then…
Trump’s not even a conservative.
He’s more of a corrupt autocrat sort of guy.
What exactly is conservative about Trump? He cut long-term revenues without reducing corresponding expenditures. He hates free trade. He has no plans to take on out of control medical costs or the social security deficit. He hasn’t gotten us out of any wars. He sent hundreds of billions of dollars of free money to the general population. He has little respect for the Constitution or historic institutional norms. Anybody? Anything?
He didn’t start any wars for his first administration and he reduced troop levels in Afghanistan from 13,000 to 2,500. But yeah, that’s all I can give him credit for.
He sold a lot of red hats which was good for Chinese hat manufacturing.
Trump is not a conservative in the traditional sense. He’s why conservatives are vilified. He just happened to run under that banner. He’s an outlier, and not in a good way.
define fiscal conservative in the context of long term economic goals. define the attributes of biden style guidance.
biden guidance was mostly a fraudulent sleep walk of non-action. he said so himself in that room of donors muttering how things will not fundamentally change.
I was going to give you a thumbs up for Trump being a disaster until I saw the part about how we would have been better off with Biden-style guidance. Maybe, but only if Republicans controlled both houses of Congress and stopped anything from passing.
Would you not prefer turning the calendar back to Nov1st 2024? You liking this shit show?
So JD Vance was one of the last to have met with the pope. What was said? Elon will be the next pope, no black or white smoke carbon emissions going up the Sistine Chapel chimney?
That’s the new Democrat meme since this morning. They are flooding all the blogs with the same meme trying as always to build a narrative.
That companies planned to build many export terminals has nothing to do with Trump but was a stupid herd mentality action.
As for gas markets globally if China switches to another supplier then that supplier has less output to supply other customers. Might not those customers then turn to US gas? Those doing that would also benefit from reducing their trade surplus with the US and thus getting lower tariffs on their exports to the US.
China is also facing a recession so it will likely need less US gas even without the tariff war tit for tat.
And at some point the US has to stop running huge trade deficits so however disruptive the tariffs are now they will have a benefit in making the US self sufficient in most things that will become unobtainium when China becomes more belligerent
The only problem is – no one wants to trade with the US anymore.
If you talked to heads of companies they would relieve you of that delusion quickly.
How do you know this?
Can you point us to some specific earnings information from US exporting companies pre- and post- (and future) Trump’s election?
You talk to the heads of companies obviously.
No, I don’t talk to heads of companies. But I don’t think you do either.
Yet only one of us is ‘sure’ of collectively how these heads of companies think about foreign trade relations with the US.
Hubris ever?
What moved China and Russia together was the misguided response of the US to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which was Russia’s response to the misguided US policy of repeatedly goading the Russians with the threat of bringing Ukraine into NATO. To say that Trump caused this shows your true colors and is no surprise. What will be interesting will be the US response. We should probably hold firm against China and move quickly toward tax cuts, deregulation, and a new Fed chairman.
No need to fire him. Just set up his successor and the “Shadow Fed Chairman” and the markets will follow him instead.
But he would have no power to do anything. The scary thing is that, even if Trump gets rid of Powell, the voting board members could outvote Trump replacement. The Treasury needs to step in with its own open market operations.
No power except everyone would know the present head is a lame duck and act accordingly.
The world doesn’t revolve around US policy the way it did 20 years ago. Russia’s invasion had its own set of priorities and motivations, some of which had to do with our actions and many had nothing to do with us.
The people yapping about this don’t speak russian or ukr, have never studied Russian or Ukr history or understand the history of this part of the world. You read headlines and think you’re an expert.
We all need to cut the crap.
Oh really? Well tell me what you know, mr. expert. Why did Russia invade Ukraine. If it was to annex the Russian part of Ukraine, they’ve paid a high price for something of questionable benefit.
It is a commodity. Commodities will flow from place to place over time. This site should quit panicking so easily.
I agree with this statement, however LNG is temperamental unlike other fuels such as oil. It must be stored at -160C to avoid evaporation and rapid pressure increase. Pumping LNG requires specialized equipment to maintain the low temperature and pressure. Constant boiling off LNG steam via a “tea kettle” maintains the low temperature.
Wikipedia has a nice LNG article. I am not an expert… just recognizing the difficulty of preparing, transporting and maitaining LNG is not as simple as other fungible goods.
– Russia has emerged as the third-largest supplier of LNG to China behind Australia and Quatar. Russia and China have been negotiating over a new natural gas pipeline.
> So Russia LNG to China and no longer to the EU, who won’t take it anyway. Got It!
– The European Commission will announce a more detailed strategy to phase out Russian oil and gas imports next month. The EU has pledged to quit Russian fossil fuels by 2027.
> The EU already had decided to No Longer accept Gas & Oil from Russia. Got It!
– The EU has said it would consider buying more LNG from the United States, and Trump has said selling more energy to Europe would be a key focus of his
> So EU Gas & Oil will come from The U.S. moving forward, as thy had already agreed to in Principle. Got It!
– Last year, the U.S. was Europe’s third-biggest gas supplier, after Russia.
> This Year the U.S. will be the Largest Gas Supplier to the EU. Got It!
What I don’t get, is where is the story? All of this has been in play for quite sometime, as we could see. Nothing new, nothing different, just the same, but said again? Just Curious…
If I had gone through what Mish just went through I would not have been able to do much of anything let alone keep writing a blog. My hat goes off to him for his devotion but I would prefer that he takes it easy for a while.
I’m sorry, I missed any news about Mish. What happened?
He had a grievous cardiac accident that put him into the hospital Had to have four stents put in. His aorta was 90% blocked up.
Thank you for letting long-time readers know.
I 100% Agree!
Good job. Increase domestic inflation, check. Strengthen your adversaries, check. Alienate your allies, check. Bull in a china shop, check.
What else would Russia have a Manchurian Candidate do in addition to all of these things? Maybe install Tulsi Gabbard as DNI?
More supply chain disruptions caused by Trump’s trade war.
In addition to being the largest oil importer in the world (11 mbpd), China is also the largest LNG importer. They are using more natural gas every year to replace coal and oil, for industrial use and for transportation use (half of China’s large trucks have converted to natgas from diesel).
Six percent of Chinese LNG comes from the US as a result of long term contracts signed in the last few years. China placed a 15% tariff on these US imports in February, in response to Trump’s new tariffs on China. And now placed a ban on US LNG. Chinese importers with long term contacts have no choice but to resell the LNG elsewhere.
As I mentioned, most LNG is sold with long term contracts. These contracts are necessary in order to secure the financing to build new LNG facilities, such as the many new facilities planned in the US over the next decade. Some of these new facilities may be i jeopardy now as the world’s largest LNG importer looks elsewhere for that gas.
Too bad Trump doesn’t want to get rich quick selling US LNG to China.
Will they though?
Worldwide demand for LNG is still the same. If China doesn’t import from the USA it must import from elsewhere. That means ‘elsewhere’ now has less to sell to country Y. So country Y can simply pick up the slack from the USA.
The only way it’s a problem is if ‘elsewhere’ can increase production to the point that it satisfies all the demand that China is moving the the US. I’m not sure that can happen in the short run (ie Trumps term) because as the articles mention, China isn’t importing that gas to China, but they are still taking it and simply offloading it elsewhere.
Not a good argument. If China imports from countries other than the US, they will just produce more. Oil/gas production isn’t fixed in place and the US is about to learn the hard way what it feels like when nobody wants to buy our stuff.
There is demand for LNG only to the extent piped NG is not available.
And Europe does not want long-term contracts. China did. A definite loss to the US.
Correct. The US is not the only player in the booming LNG market. Qatar, Iran, Oman, UAE, Saudi, Egypt, and Canada are all rapidly expanding their LNG export capacity to meet the growing global demand. These countries can easily displace the US.
If China (and others) turn to them, rather than the US, because of Trump’s tariffs and rhetoric, then US facilities won’t get built. Because they need long term contracts in order to get financing.
China’s overall demand for LNG is by my guess collapsing. Lots of their factories are idle and consequently don’t need energy. No idea how long it will last but it is rippling through their economy.
Your guess! Lol!
No hard data. You’re as bad as Michael. Why should I bother with people who simply make sh*t up because they want it to be true?
Here’s a guess with numbers for you.
Shell expects global LNG demand to grow by 60% in the next decade. Maybe that guess is wrong, but it’s an informed guess. Not something pulled out of their ass like yours.
Whether it turns out to be 60% growth or even 30% growth, that LNG has to come from somewhere. And as things stand now, it probably won’t come from the US if we keep pissing off our potential customers.
No exports equals no business equals no revenue making it hard to pay workers and suppliers ect. You know that. You just don’t want to admit it.
NO exports! Another fantasy pulled from your ass.
China exports more to both AESEAN and Europe than it does to the US.
The US is just 12.5% of China’s exports.
How do you expect me to take you seriously when you keep posting this garbage?
You still take him seriously ???
I am just about done with him. And a few others here. Their tongues are so far up Trump’s ass that they will never be able to see what’s going on.
More and more LNG is going to be supplied by Russia.
LNG is fungible. What might happen is that China could finally agree to pay for the pipeline across Russia to China. Till now they have not wanted to pay for it and they wanted to pay the same price as Russian domestic users pay which is very low. Anyway to get it up and working would take a few years and who knows what the world will be then. Not a easy problem for China to solve.
Is the car wiring with soy ingredients a good thing for GDP after the squirrels chew it up? Did Krugman come up with that?
Thank you – very informative article.
Back in 2003, Warren Buffett had a good idea on how to deal with trade imbalances and it required no tariffs or government bureaucracy. Import Certificates that could be bought/sold on the open & free market.
For everyone asking for “solutions” well here you go.
https://www.berkshirehathaway.com/letters/growing.pdf
Not sure why Trump didn’t pick up on this, digitize them and call them “Trump Trade Tokens”
Now China isn’t buying US LNG or soybeans and farmers are getting scared. They shouldn’t be, they should just reap what they sowed – idiots.
Article on China dumping US soybeans in favor of Brazil’s.
Lol. Shut up and take your medicine!
https://archive.is/gNkAB
You get what you vote for.
Unless your IQ is really low, then you vote against your interests every four years and eventually get speared like a hog.
And you deserve to get it good and hard.
Collassal-scale monoculture is not a good way of life. They can ditch the GMO, improve soil health, and thank tariffs for compelling them to leave that life behind.
It takes a LONG time to switch crops. Its not just a simple as planting something else. You need the right equipment (tractors, watering etc), right fertilizers, right shipping / storage etc. All on top of hoping this new crop produces the same revenue per acre. That’s a lot of things that need to go right.
You forgot to mention.
In America you need the right Government subsidies.
There’s no market for little boutique farmers, in the middle of Nebraska.
Growing boutiques is no longer profitable.
They need to plant hope-ium.
Trump never figured it out because he is too absorbed in his own ego to learn much from anyone
Every post points to Gold.