Authored by Mike Shedlock via MishTalk.com,
European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen declares an energy emergency. The crisis will not be contained to Europe.
EC President Seeks 'Emergency Intervention' in Electricity Market
Please note Ursula von der Leyen Calls for 'Emergency Intervention' in Electricity Market.
"The skyrocketing electricity prices are now exposing, for different reasons, the limitations of our current electricity market design," the European Commission president said on Monday while addressing the Bled Strategic Forum in Slovenia. "[The market] was developed under completely different circumstances and for completely different purposes. It is no longer fit for purpose.
"That is why we, the Commission, are now working on an emergency intervention and a structural reform of the electricity market. We need a new market model for electricity that really functions and brings us back into balance."
Under this system, all electricity producers – from fossil fuels to wind and solar – bid into the market and offer power according to their production costs. The bidding starts from the cheapest resources – the renewables – and finishes with the most expensive ones, usually gas.
Since most EU countries still rely on fossil fuels to meet all their energy demands, the final price of electricity is often set by the price of gas. If gas becomes more expensive, electricity bills inevitably go up, even if clean, cheaper sources also contribute to the total energy supply.
What a hoot. If clean energy was really cheaper and easier to produce, without subsidies, it would have won out long ago.
Clean may be cheaper now, but that is thanks to the EU's sanctions on Russia.
Non-Solutions
Spain, Portugal, Greece, France, Italy and Belgium seek a "decoupling" of gas and electricity prices to put an end to the contagion effect.
How can that possibly help?
Say you pay $X for clean energy and $Y for natural gas produced electricity. The total price paid is based on the percentage use of both. There is not enough X to go around.
European Power Prices Shatter Records as Energy Crisis Intensifies
CNN Reports European Power Prices Shatter Records as Energy Crisis Intensifies
German power prices for next year, which are considered Europe's benchmark, briefly jumped above €1,000 ($999.80) per megawatt hour on Monday before falling back to €840 ($839.69) per megawatt hour.
"This is not normal at all. It's incredibly volatile," said Fabian Rønningen, a senior analyst at Rystad Energy. "These prices are reaching levels now that we thought we would never see."
The World Will Bear the Cost
Time Magazine reports Europe's Energy Crisis Is Going to Get Worse. The World Will Bear the Cost
Until blackouts begin or pump prices make driving actually unaffordable, most people generally think no more often of energy than of air. For this reason, Americans have mostly been sheltered from the energy crisis unfolding urgently and in some cases lethally in countries around the world. In many other places, especially Europe, the escalating situation is impossible to ignore, and it’s going to get a lot worse.
To be clear, the energy crisis is already here, and Russia is fully to blame. Natural gas prices topped $3100 per 1000 cubic meters in mid-August, a 610% increase over the same time last year as measured by the Dutch TTF market. At this price, many power stations cannot afford to operate for long. As a consequence of the rising cost of input fuels, benchmark electricity prices in Europe have surged almost 300% in 2022, breaking records. Taken together, energy prices are ten times higher than the five-year average.
Not only do average households struggle to pay for power and heating at such a cost, but governments are coming up short, too. The $279 billion European governments have recently allocated to help small consumers is already not enough.
The worst has yet to come. Russian Security Council Deputy Chairman Dmitry Medvedev threatened on August 28 that gas prices will hit $5000/1000m3 by the end of 2022. With Europe dependent on Russian imports for over 40% of its gas needs, and 46% for coal and 27% for oil, Putin has a lot of leverage. And this year, he is not playing nice.
If Russia cuts off the gas—perhaps when, not if—the European consequences will be massive and the global economic consequences could be tragic. The IMF calculated in mid-July that for Hungary, Slovakia, and the Czech Republic a full cut off of natural gas from Russia could drop GDPs by up to 6%. Global economic growth would drop by 2.6% in 2022 and another 2% in 2023. On a human level, some people will not have heating, others will have to choose between warmth and food.
You Have No Idea How Bad Europe’s Energy Crisis Is
Foreign Policy says You Have No Idea How Bad Europe’s Energy Crisis Is
European natural gas prices are now around 10 times higher than they were on average over the last decade and about 10 times pricier than in the United States. Alex Munton, an expert on global gas markets at Rapidan Energy Group, a consultancy, said European natural gas is so expensive it’s like paying $500 for a barrel of oil. And these are the good months.
“Things are [at] a crisis point,” said Munton. “We have astronomic gas prices, and we’re still a few months away from when gas demand really peaks during the winter. There’s genuine uncertainty whether there will be sufficient gas to meet demand throughout the winter.”
It’s unclear how long industries and households can hold together. The United Kingdom, for instance, is looking at double-digit inflation in large part due to skyrocketing energy prices and a sharp downward revision to GDP estimates, according to Oxford Economics.
Businesses Closing
My mum owns a small café in Leicester. Her electricity bill has just jumped from £10k ($12k) a year to £55k ($64k) a year.
— Callum ⭐️ (@CallumMckeefery) August 29, 2022
She is working out her options but more than likely she will be forced to close. pic.twitter.com/7GN4WC77Gl
Spotlight Finland
This means households will be paying 700 € / peak MWh. Last year it was 30-40 € - Finland is not alone concerned. Sweden same quantum.
— Kitty Kitty Gang Bang KKGB (Carlo Casio) (@INArteCarloDoss) August 30, 2022
Can you post your own experience with electricity and gas bills below? ⬇️⬇️⬇️
Copy of bills welcome https://t.co/uq2zK1TeGk
Spotlight UK
#UK businesses are already starting to fold under high energy costs https://t.co/ZVDYIewcgy
— Tracy (𝒞𝒽𝒾 ) (@chigrl) August 30, 2022
Spotlight Germany
How do you say 'No s#it' Sherlock!' in German? #EnergyCrisis #Germany #RussianGas https://t.co/TrqCBf1H9y
— alex (@flyalex666) August 29, 2022
A Word About Scale
Ppl don't realize that 80% of businesses in the EU have 250employees or less. They don't have the scale to handle large jumps in energy...
— Ronin Research (@ResearchRonin) August 30, 2022
What About Aluminum?
Another one down, Europe has lost over half of its aluminium smelting capacity over the last year. The problems started well before the Ukraine invasion, curtailments started last fall with rising energy prices. https://t.co/v022Pd3q0o
— Tracy (𝒞𝒽𝒾 ) (@chigrl) August 30, 2022
A UK Gym
>Holy Crap. This is it. End Game. Only solution will be government printing to keep these businesses alive or alternative of 1929 is a garden party. It’s over folks. FIAT HAS FAILED https://t.co/LBS5BMoP1x
— Lawrence Lepard, "fix the money, fix the world" (@LawrenceLepard) August 28, 2022
Ursula von der Leyen Emergency Declaration Speech
No Details of Emergency Plan
The EC president declared an emergency but released no details.
Q: Why?
A: There are only bad choices.
Five Bad Choices
The EU can subsidize the price of energy increasing deficits in treaty violation
The EU can do nothing and let businesses go under
The EU can remove sanctions on Russia and pray that Russia will go along
The EU can set price controls that will force producers out of business
The EU can ration energy
The best solution is number 3, hoping that Russia will go along. But that will not even be considered.
I suspect the EU nannycrats will opt for door number 4, the absolute worst choice. Perhaps they will go with a combination of #1, #4, and #5.
But businesses will go under no matter what the EU does.
Bonus Tweet Option
In the UK, over 130,000 have already pledged that they will not pay their electricity bills once the 80% increase occurs October 1st. https://t.co/l8JFzXZ6Nb
— Sam Callahan (@samcallah) August 30, 2022
6. Don't pay the bill.
In the US that would likely lead to liens in red states and some other weird actions in blue one perhaps with Biden declaring an energy moratorium.
Good Luck to Europe, Biden Threatens Energy Exporters With Stop Exporting Mandate!
Meanwhile, the Biden administration is so concerned about inflation here it is considering a ban on US energy exports.
For discussion, please see Good Luck to Europe, Biden Threatens Energy Exporters With Stop Exporting Mandate!
The European crisis is a direct result of sanction madness.
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