American energy dominance, a key pillar of President Donald Trump's agenda for his second term, aims to bring both peace and prosperity to the world, U.S. Interior Secretary Burgum told the audience of European energy officials and company executives at the Gastech conference. "We achieve prosperity at home and with our allies through energy abundance... Peace is achieved around the world by selling our energy to our friends and allies who don't have to buy from our adversaries," said Burgum, a former governor of the oil and gas-rich state of North Dakota.
The comments come as Washington is ratcheting up pressure on Europe to cut off its remaining purchases of Russian oil and gas to squeeze the Kremlin’s war economy and put pressure on President Vladimir Putin to agree to a ceasefire in Ukraine.
Europe sharply reduced its Russian pipeline gas imports following Moscow's invasion of Ukraine in 2022, and it aims to fully phase out purchases of Russian gas by 2027, if not earlier. Yet the region has continued to import some Russian gas through the Turkstream pipeline into Bulgaria.
And, importantly, Europe has arguably just traded one dependency for another. The region’s Russian pipeline volumes have mostly been replaced by LNG imports – and the majority of those have come from the United States. In the first half of 2025, Europe’s LNG imports rose by 25% from the previous year, reaching an all-time high of 92 billion cubic metres (bcm). The United States accounted for over 55% of those imports, followed by Russia at 14%.
Given this new reality, Europe has little choice but to go along with the Trump administration’s energy agenda.
The European Commission Director General for Energy Ditte Juul Jorgensen told the conference that the bloc will continue to strengthen its energy partnership with the United States. "The U.S. policy of energy dominance is complementary to our strategy of replacing Russian energy in our system," she said.
These words have already been translated into action, with several LNG supply deals announced in recent days.