How Europe Has Navigated Its Energy Crises
As Winter Approaches, the Crisis Is Far From Over and Risks Are Getting Worse
While European energy pricesĀ have eased slightly in recent months, stress continues to build across a continent that has long been dependent on access to cheap Russian energy.
Protests related to high energy costs have been held fromĀ BelgiumĀ to theĀ Czech RepublicĀ in Europe. Fuel shortages have led to long queues to buy petrol at gas stationsĀ in France. TheĀ Donāt Pay UKĀ movement has urged British citizens to enter a ābill strikeā by refusing to pay energy billsĀ until gas and electricity pricesĀ are reduced to an āaffordable level.ā Europeās remarkably high energy prices have alsoĀ fueledĀ climate change protests across the continent.
European governments have resorted to diverse measures to manage the crisis. After the EUĀ bannedĀ Russian coal imports, coal regulationsĀ were reducedĀ in Poland, which has led toĀ illegal coal minesĀ being operated in the country. Aid packages, such as AustriaāsĀ 1.3 billion euro initiative, aim to help companies struggling with mounting energy costs. TheĀ UKĀ āhas capped the price of average household energy bills at 2,500 pounds ($2,770) a year for two years from Octoberā and also announced a cap on energy per unit for businesses, charities, and NGOsĀ in September.
Italy has shown considerable capability inĀ diversifyingĀ its energy imports from Russia since the beginning of the year to reduce its dependence on the Kremlin. Under former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi,Ā Italy began to increase its reliance on Russian energy, a processĀ that continuedĀ even after his election defeat in 2011 and Russiaās annexation of Crimea in 2014.
This reliance came to an abrupt end after Russiaās invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Italy signed natural gas dealsĀ with Egypt and Algeria in AprilĀ and held additional talks with the Republic of Congo and Angola regarding energy supplies as well.Ā In June, Italy also purchased two additional liquefied natural gas (LNG) vessels, adding to theĀ threeĀ LNG terminals it already operates, to further diversify its natural gas (gas for short) supplies.
Not all countries, however, have matched Italyās success of diversifying their energy imports. France declared it wouldĀ cap power and gas price increasesĀ for households at 15 per cent in 2023. But since more than half of Franceās 56 nuclear reactorsĀ have been shut downĀ for maintenance (Europeās summer drought also prevented the water-based cooling systems of the French nuclear plantsĀ from functioning), France will struggle with mounting energy costs as well as upholding itsĀ traditional role as an electricity exporter to other European countries.
Like other European countries, GermanyĀ chose to nationalize some of its major energy companies, such as UniperĀ in September. In October, the German government proposed aĀ 200 billion Euro energy subsidies initiative. With gas storageĀ projected to reach 95 per cent capacityĀ by November, Germany has also provided itself with significant protection.
But GermanyĀ lacksĀ LNG infrastructure and remainsĀ vulnerableĀ if Russia cuts off gas through pipelines completely. Currently,Ā Germany is at level two of the countryās three-tierĀ emergency gas plan, with the last stageĀ introducingĀ direct government intervention in gas distribution and rationing.
Because Germany makes the largestĀ contributionsĀ of funds to the EU, its economic vulnerability poses concerning implications for the rest of the bloc. And in addition to suffering from gas shortages,Ā Central European countries will āalso suffer from the effects of gas rationing in the German industrial sector, given their integration into German supply chains.ā Such uncertainty has blunted investment in the region, further compounding Europeās economic issues.
These issues have underlined the perception that while Russian coal has been relatively easy to ban in Europe and Russian oil is slowly being phased out,Ā Russian natural gas remains too important for much of the continentās energy mixĀ to be shunned completely.
Dozens of ships carrying LNG have been stuck off Europeās coast, as the plants āthat convert the seaborne fuel back to gas are operating at maximum limit.ā High gas pricesĀ have, meanwhile, resulted in key industries across Europe that are reliant on the energy sourceĀ shutting down, sparking fears of āuncontrolled deindustrialization.ā
In addition to national strategies, European countries have pursued collective initiatives to confront the energy crisis.Ā On 27 September, Norway, Denmark, and Poland officially opened the Baltic Pipe to supply Poland with natural gas.Ā On October 1, Greece and Bulgaria began commercial operation of the Interconnector Greece-Bulgaria (IGB) pipeline, which serves as another link in the Western-backedĀ Southern Gas CorridorĀ project to bring natural gas from Azerbaijan to Europe.
On 13 October,Ā France began sending Germany natural gas for the first time, based on an agreement that āGermany would generate more electricity to supply France during times of peak consumption.ā The European Council statedĀ on 30 SeptemberĀ that EU states will implement āa voluntary overall reduction target of 10 percent of gross electricity consumption and a mandatory reduction target of 5 percent of the electricity consumption in peak hours.ā
Additionally, the EU continues toĀ debateĀ imposing a price cap on Russian gas to the EU, and the G7 countries and its allies agreed on September 2 to implement a price cap on Russian crude oil and oil productsĀ in December 2022Ā and February 2023, respectively.
Germany, however, has led criticism over the āproposal to cap the price on all gas imports to the EU,āĀ stating that the EU lacks the authority to do so, alongside expressing concerns that gas providers will simply sell gas to other countries. Norway, traditionally EuropeāsĀ second-largest gas providerĀ after Russia, also indicated itĀ would not accept a gas cap, and RussiaĀ stated it would not sell oil or gasĀ to countries doing so either. The resulting restrictions in energy supplyĀ would likely further raise prices.
European countries also remain bound by their own interests, further undermining multilateral cooperation. Croatia, for example,Ā announced it would ban natural gas exportsĀ in September. Many European countries have criticized Germanyās planned 200 billion euro subsidies plan forĀ fearĀ that it ācould trigger economic imbalances in the bloc.ā Germany, meanwhile, declared it would notĀ supportĀ a joint EU debt issuance on 11 October, only later agreeing to theĀ measures out of pressure from its European allies.
In September,Ā the UK accused the EUĀ of pushing British energy prices higher by severing energy cooperation following Brexit. The U.S. and NorwayĀ have also been singled out by EU membersĀ for profiting off the current energy crisis.
Varying levels of vulnerability have resulted in some European countries breaking with the continental norm and negotiating with Russia. Serbia, which is not in NATO or part of the EU, signed its ownĀ natural gas deal with Russia in May, while Hungary drew the ire of Western allies by signing its own gas deal with RussiaĀ in August. Hungary was among the first European countriesĀ to agree to purchase Russian natural gas in rubles, stabilizing the Russian currency as sanctions were placed on the Russian economy. If the crisis worsens considerably, other countries may follow suit.
As Europeās energy crisis has continued, many countries across the world have become increasingly wary. European demand for LNG and a willingness to pay premiums has meant suppliers areĀ increasingly rerouting gas to the continent.
Though rich competitors like South Korea and JapanĀ have been able to contend with European competitionĀ for LNG, it has caused shortages elsewhere. Bangladesh and Pakistan, for example, have struggled to secure their traditionalĀ LNG importsĀ since the beginning of the Russian invasion. Blackouts in these countries have increased, causing them to resort toĀ more carbon-intensive energy alternativesĀ andĀ prompting renewed talks with RussiaĀ over LNG imports and developing pipeline networks to supply natural gas to Asia.
Europeās decades-long exposure to Russian energy means that its current energy crisis will persist for years. Even with predictions for a relatively mild upcoming winter, overcoming this energy crisis will require cooperation and sacrifice among European statesāparticularly if the war in Ukraine escalates further. While the Westās solidarity will be put to the test, poorer, energy-vulnerable countries will continue to fall victim as a result of the fallout from the Russian invasion of Ukraine.