The federal government intends to spend up to 2.5 billion euros on four floating liquid gas terminals over the next ten years.

This emerges from a letter from the Federal Ministry of Finance, as reported by the news portal “The Pioneer”.

The German Press Agency also received the letter to Bundestag President Bärbel Bas on Thursday.

The Ministry of Finance has therefore already released the funds without consulting the Budget Committee beforehand.

This was necessary for "compelling reasons", it said.

Corresponding charter agreements should be signed this Thursday and on April 20th.

The aim is to import liquefied natural gas (LNG) to secure the gas supply for Germany.

More LNG is a building block in the German government's efforts to reduce dependence on Russian gas supplies.

In an “Energy Security Progress Report” from the end of March, the Ministry of Economics stated that the federal government had acquired options for three floating LNG terminals via the companies RWE and Uniper in order to further increase security of supply in Germany.

The companies are currently in contract negotiations for the lease of these floating terminals.

The negotiations are on the home stretch.

The federal government is currently examining possible locations on the North and Baltic Seas.

The terminals could be used there at short notice – in some cases as early as winter 2022/23.