Pickering Angels

Europe Must Act To Avert An Energy Crisis This Winter

oil&gas

Well-known member
Apr 16, 2002
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Ghawar
Tsvetana Paraskova
Sept 26, 2021

With natural gas storage levels at a 10-year low just ahead of the winter heating season, Europe is facing hard choices from its limited range of options to alleviate the gas crisis. Governments across Europe have pledged to protect the most vulnerable consumers, as soaring gas and electricity prices are hot potatoes that no ruling party or coalition wants to encounter. But the energy price spike is here, and it could worsen as we enter the heating season in the northern hemisphere between November and March.

European governments have already announced moves to protect consumers from energy price spikes, including through the energy price cap that has been and will continue to be in place in the UK and a temporary tax cut on power prices in Spain.

Protecting select consumer groups from price hikes, however, would put more pressure on other gas and power consumers, including industry, Reuters columnist John Kemp notes. If European countries let gas and energy prices rise moderately from already record levels, this would trigger demand destruction, easing the very tight gas market, Kemp argues.

However, many European leaders are unwilling to let consumers (voters) feel the heat of soaring energy bills this winter.

Moreover, demand destruction has already started. But it’s not coming from household energy consumption—it comes from electricity producers and from heavy industry.

Utilities are using more coal and other fuels—where possible—to generate electricity at the expense of natural gas. Increased use of coal-fired power in the electricity mix is in direct conflict with the ambitions of the European Union (EU) and the UK to reach net-zero emissions by 2050.

Sweden, one of the EU members with the greenest electricity mix in the bloc—with hydroelectric, nuclear, and wind power dominant—has seen the Karlshamn fuel oil power plant running in recent weeks due to the record power prices, although there are no shortages of electricity in the country.

The UK, which has pledged to phase out coal-fired power generation by October 2024, had to fire up earlier this month an old coal plant that was on standby in order to meet its electricity demand.

So far this month, the share of coal in Britain’s electricity mix—albeit below 3 percent—has been more than double compared to the below-1-percent share in September 2020.

UK power company Drax could have its last two coal-fired plants in the country operating beyond the 2022 deadline that it had set for closure if the government asks it to keep them operational amid the energy crisis, Drax’s CEO Will Gardiner told the Financial Times this week.

Demand destruction in the industry is also underway. Industries across Europe are scaling back operations due to record natural gas and power prices, threatening to deal a blow to the post-COVID recovery.

Fertilizer and ammonia production in Europe has been curtailed as “downstream European gas markets suffered further financial pain with new record spot gas highs” this week, Ben Samuel at Independent Commodity Intelligence Services (ICIS) noted on Thursday.

CF Industries, a manufacturer of hydrogen and nitrogen products, said last week that it was halting operations at both its Billingham and Ince manufacturing complexes in the UK due to high natural gas prices.

The Billingham plant makes carbon dioxide (CO2)—an essential supply to the food sector. So, the UK government secured a short-term deal with the company, which produces 60 percent of the UK’s CO2, to ensure the continued supply to businesses.

“Industrial shutdowns will reduce demand, helping limit further upside to prices. Switching from gas to coal in the European power mix also cuts gas demand, but this can then be counter-balanced by increased emissions prices that prompt switching back to gas,” ICIS’s Alex Froley wrote this week.

The gas crunch and price spike showed once again that Europe—and everyone pushing for ‘no more fossil fuels ASAP’—should consider market realities before indulging in ‘100-percent renewables’ fantasies.

The International Energy Agency (IEA)—which has suggested that a net-zero by 2050 world wouldn’t need new oil and gas investment after 2021—said this week, commenting on the surging gas and power price:

“The links between electricity and gas markets are not going to go away anytime soon. Gas remains an important tool for balancing electricity markets in many regions today.”

 

oil&gas

Well-known member
Apr 16, 2002
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Ghawar
Oil producers are cautious about increasing capital
expenses on drilling to raise supply. They are frightened
by Greta's message. Here in North America we do have
a surplus of natural gas which we have to export to Asia.
I can see that we will happily fund our future import of solar
panel and Tesla EVs from China by selling them our dirty oil sands
and natural gas. That surely will help reduce emission
here in North America while China is happily burning our
fossil fuel exports.

No worry if you are concerned about energy prices rising
further. Oil will eventually become worthless after ICE cars
sales are banned by 2035. Until then keep up the good work
of climate strike lest rising gas prices lure Big Oil back to
to drill more wells to destroy our planet.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
96,809
25,128
113
Oil producers are cautious about increasing capital
expenses on drilling to raise supply. They are frightened
by Greta's message. Here in North America we do have
a surplus of natural gas which we have to export to Asia.
I can see that we will happily fund our future import of solar
panel and Tesla EVs from China by selling them our dirty oil sands
and natural gas. That surely will help reduce emission
here in North America while China is happily burning our
fossil fuel exports.

No worry if you are concerned about energy prices rising
further. Oil will eventually become worthless after ICE cars
sales are banned by 2035. Until then keep up the good work
of climate strike lest rising gas prices lure Big Oil back to
to drill more wells to destroy our planet.
Don't worry, the kids are starting their friday climate strikes again.
Totally a bummer if high gas prices work like a carbon tax, eh?

 

nottyboi

Well-known member
May 14, 2008
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james t kirk

Well-known member
Aug 17, 2001
24,072
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Let Greta figure out how to keep them warm in the winter.

After all, they all listen to her for all the answers right now.
 

jcpro

Well-known member
Jan 31, 2014
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ROTFLMFAO!! Nothing brings priorities into focus like a cold European winter, especially when it's combined with the inflationary pressure.
 

JohnLarue

Well-known member
Jan 19, 2005
18,609
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it should be no surprise
shutting down existing sources of energy without a reliable replacement in place has been utter stupidity
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
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NotADcotor

His most imperial galactic atheistic majesty.
Mar 8, 2017
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I guess you really need that populist, free market mantra to fix that problem too.

So the government putting restrictions on who can work is a problem of the free market?

Every time I unignore your posts out of curiosity I get reminded of why I put you on ignore in the first place.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
96,809
25,128
113
So the government putting restrictions on who can work is a problem of the free market?

Every time I unignore your posts out of curiosity I get reminded of why I put you on ignore in the first place.
Ok, more clearly its a right wing, anti-immigrant thing.
That's really the mandate of the populists, they aren't truly free market so I'll give you that point.

Getting the world off coal will hurt a bit, but really, governments should have been putting in way more solar and wind so its their own faults.

And even while that's going on climate change is screwing with hydro power all around the world.
 
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