In its attempts to phase out Russian gas, Germany plans to build six liquified natural gas terminals to accept compressed and shipped natural gas from non-Russian producers, including the US. The climate and economy minister ceremonially started construction for the first floating terminal last week. Now, environmental activists and communities where the terminals are proposed are protesting. They worry that building expensive new infrastructure will lock in use of natural gas in Germany for far longer than global climate targets allow for. The World’s environment correspondent Carolyn Beeler reports from the North Sea coast in Germany.