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Irina Slav

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Irina is a writer for Oilprice.com with over a decade of experience writing on the oil and gas industry.

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The European Energy Crisis Is About To Go Global

Energy crisis

It was only a matter of time, really. In a globalized world, energy crunches can hardly remain regionally contained for very long, especially in a context of damaged supply chains and a rush to cut investment in fossil fuels. The energy crunch that began in Europe earlier this month may now be on its way to America. For now, all is well with one of the world's top gas producers. U.S. gas exporters have enjoyed a solid increase in demand from Asia and Europe as the recovery in economic activity pushed demand for electricity higher. According to a recent Financial Times report, there is a veritable bidding war for U.S. cargos of liquefied natural gas between Asian and European buyers—and the Asians are winning.

Coal exports are on the rise, too, and have been for a while now, especially after a political spat had China shun Australian coal. But supply is tightening, Argus reported earlier this month. In July, according to the report, U.S. coking coal exports dropped by as much as 20.3 percent from June. The report noted supply was constrained by producers' limited access to funding and a labor shortage that has plagued many industries amid the pandemic.

All this should be good news for U.S. producers of fossil fuels. But it may easily become bad news as winter approaches. The Wall Street Journal's Jinjoo Lee wrote earlier this week high energy prices could be the next hot import for the United States. Lee cited data showing gas inventory replenishment was running below average rates for this season, and gas in storage in early September was 7.4 percent below the five-year average.

Related: Goldman Sachs: Here’s How Oil Prices Could Reach $90 This Winter Coal inventories are also running low because of stronger exports, with prices for thermal coal three times higher than they were a year ago. According to calculations from the Energy Information Administration cited in the WSJ report, coal inventories in the United States could fall to less than half last year's inventory levels by the end of the year. Last year, energy demand was depressed because of the pandemic. This year, the U.S. economy is firing on all cylinders once again. 

No wonder electricity prices are already going up.

In a way, the events in Europe could be seen as a trailer of what might happen in the United States. It is a trailer because it shows all the worst bits. The United States is much more energy independent than, say, the UK, and that's a big plus. Yet exports bring in revenues, and it would require government intervention to make gas producers cut exports.

In an alarming move, such intervention was requested last week by a manufacturing industry group. Industrial Energy Consumers of America, an organization representing companies producing chemicals, food, and materials, asked the Department of Energy to institute limits on the exports of liquefied natural gas in order to avoid soaring prices and gas shortages during the winter, Reuters reported on Friday.

Opinions seem to differ on whether rising LNG exports are in fact hurting U.S. consumers. But the fact is that gas prices are already double what they were a year ago. According to the IECA, they are not, however, high enough to motivate a ramp-up in natural gas production. Therefore, in order to stockpile enough gas for the winter, the U.S. government must force a reduction in exports.

The LNG industry is, of course, against this. The executive director of Center for Liquefied Natural Gas told Reuters most LNG exports are shipped under long-term fixed-price contracts that have no relation to benchmark gas prices and their movements. Yet some cargos are sold on the spot market.

"Buyers of LNG who compete for natural gas with U.S. consumers are state-owned enterprises and foreign government-controlled utilities with automatic cost pass through," Paul Cicio, president of IECA, said, as quoted by Reuters. "U.S. manufacturers cannot compete with them on prices."

Related: Crude Stocks At Cushing Have Dropped By 42% So Far This Year

Traders are already getting jittery, and this will likely contribute to price uncertainty; regardless of how the fundamentals situation develops. Again, Europe is at the heart of the uncertainty - or rather the certainty that prices have higher to climb. But now, China has added to concern about gas supply and the potential for shortages.

For now, China's biggest problem seems to be coal rather than gas. A recent Bloomberg report said that China coal power plant operators are struggling to buy enough coal to keep their plants running, and some are being forced to shut down their boilers because of insufficient coal supply. This, however, might lead to stronger gas demand to ensure enough electricity and heating for the winter. This will further exacerbate the difference between global demand and supply.

The European energy crunch is spilling over into other regions. The blame game has begun with culprits ranging from years of underinvestment in local gas production to a Gazprom scheme to get Nord Stream 2 approved by Germany. For now, it is still unclear how much of the price surge is due to a gap between demand and supply and how much of it is due to market nervousness, at least according to RBC commodity strategist Christopher Louney, as quoted by the WSJ's Lee. This question is less important than another, however, and it is a scary one:

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Just how bad could things get this winter?

By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com

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  • Mamdouh Salameh on September 23 2021 said:
    With a globalized energy market, it was a matter of time before a problem which has started in the European Union (EU) should spell over to other regions of the world quickly particularly in an environment of rising global demand for fossil fuels.

    The EU dilemma is, however, a special European one. The EU has politicized energy and has been approving legislations, preaching to the world the importance of accelerating energy transition and even taking court measures to force the global oil industry to divest of its fossil fuels. In so doing, it has neglected to fill its own gas storage in anticipation of winter and forced European supermajors to reduce investments and cut production in their core business. Any wonder then why the EU is in such a mess.

    The environmental policies of the EU can only adversely affect the production of fossil fuels without affecting the global demand for them thus creating deficits in the market and skyrocketing prices. These policies will weaken the global economy because it will have to spend a huge chunk of funds earmarked for investments on paying for soaring prices these fuels.

    It isn’t too late for the EU to solve its energy problems and that could ease pressure on other regions of the world.

    The EU could have extra Russian natural gas supplies ahead of the winter season but it can’t dictate to Russia to send the extra supplies via Ukraine.

    The extra gas has to be shipped via Nord Stream 2 which is ready to bring 50 billion cubic metres (bcm) of additional Russian gas supplies to the EU. But to do this, the EU should facilitate the issuing of at least a temporary operational licence to Nord Stream 2 if it wants to satisfy the EU’s demand and prevent the Europeans from shivering in the coming winter. If the European Secretariat wants to give precedence to Ukraine over the soaring prices, that is its affair but it shouldn’t blame Russia for that.

    Dr Mamdouh G Salameh
    International Oil Economist
    Visiting Professor of Energy Economics at ESCP Europe Business School, London
  • Kay Uwe Boehm on September 24 2021 said:
    Gas is not stored alone in tanks but in old gas fields that way huge so not always filled fully in spring and summer time and still not cold enough for much heating demand.
  • Jason K on September 25 2021 said:
    Excellent analysis as usual Irina.
    Keep up the good work!

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