Blog post

Is Europe’s gas and electricity price surge a one-off?

Surging natural gas prices in Europe, driven by rising demand and tight supply, are pushing up electricity prices; to prevent volatility, governments

Publishing date
13 September 2021

The authors gratefully acknowledge the support of for the preparation of the charts included in this blogpost.

You can also listen to this episode of The Sound of Economics: , where the authors of this blog post discuss rising energy prices further.

Since January 2021, natural gas prices have soared by more than 170% in Europe (Figure 1), sparking concerns about the potential macroeconomic implications.

Both demand and supply factors have contributed to a tightening of the European gas market.

European gas demand is increasing in residential heating, industry and power generation. Higher demand for residential heating due to a cold winter and widespread remote working pushed up overall European gas demand by in the first quarter of 2021. Also, a combination of continued industrial output rebound, summer heatwaves with increased use of air conditioning and rallying EU carbon prices fostering a switch from coal to gas, throughout the second quarter of the year.

Supply constraints have also emerged. Russia has limited pipeline exports to Europe because of high domestic demand, output disruptions and high liquified natural gas (LNG) prices related to Asia’s economic recovery. Russia is also potentially limiting natural gas delivery into Europe to support its case for starting flows via Nord Stream 2.

European gas reserves are low and what was used during the winter could not be replenished in the summer months. The need to replenish these reserves means higher European LNG and gas imports in the next months, fostering competition between Europe and Asia for LNG supplies and thus a further increase in gas prices.

The advanced structure of the European gas market, ironically, makes the situation worse. Since 2005, the European gas pricing has evolved from the classical oil-indexation formula to gas-to-gas competition, similar to the US market. of the natural gas consumed in Europe in 2020 was priced based on gas-on-gas competition, with only the remaining 20% still being indexed to oil. For the sake of comparison, gas pricing in east Asia continues to be predominantly based on oil-indexation. This feature makes the European gas market more flexible, but exposes Europe to strong international market fluctuations.

While natural gas only supplies around , higher gas prices are putting disproportionate upward pressure on electricity prices. Gas-fired power plants have become price-setting units because of and due to hot weather and low wind speeds during the summer), a and the in the EU carbon price. Hence, wholesale electricity prices are increasing rapidly (Figure 2).

Rising energy prices have now become macroeconomically relevant in Europe. On an annual basis, a doubling of wholesale electricity prices from about €50/megawatt hour to €100/MWh would imply that EU consumers pay up to €150 billion (€50/MWh*3bn MWh) more for their electricity. High gas and electricity prices reverberate through supply chains and cause inflationary pressure (Figure 3). Drastic increases in energy spending will shrink the disposable income of the poorest households with their high propensity to consume.

Energy poverty across Europe is a major issue: the is high in many EU countries including Bulgaria (30.1%), Lithuania (26.7%), Cyprus (21.0%), Portugal (18.9%), Greece (17.9%) and Italy (11.1%). This increase in price will have socio-economic implications.

If badly managed by governments, low gas storage levels and a cold winter could even result in supply shortages. High prices today are therefore an economic signal that demand should be controlled to prevent the situation from worsening during the winter.

The key question for policymakers is whether this price development is a one-off shock arising from a quick recovery and bad weather. This would imply that letting the market work in the short-term is the best way to return to ‘normal’ prices. Temporary government intervention might help to protect the most vulnerable households from the energy price spikes. For instance, extra revenue from the EU carbon price and energy VAT could be returned to citizens as per capita lump-sums.

In our view, however, there are more fundamental reasons for high volatility and excessive price spikes. The industry knows the energy system is undergoing a profound and fast transformation. Investments in fossil assets aren’t sustainable long-term. But governments have not yet committed clearly enough to a low-carbon future. So, the energy supply-demand balance in the EU will be volatile depending on how quickly fossil fuels are phased out and green energy is phased in. Clearer commitments from governments to introduce low-carbon energy sources, for example by financing the necessary infrastructure and committing to substantial carbon prices in all sectors, could help move away from this precarious balance. As moving to net-zero will imply ever-growing electricity demand, investors will not have to worry about overinvesting in low-carbon power systems. At EU level, the prompt approval and implementation of the ‘’ package would thus represent a more structural solution to avoid future energy-price spikes and ensure an orderly transition from brown to green.



Recommended citation:
 

Tagliapietra, S. and G. Zachmann (2021) ‘Is Europe’s gas and electricity price surge a one-off?’, Bruegel Blog, 13 September

About the authors

  • Georg Zachmann

    Georg Zachmann is a Senior Fellow at Bruegel, where he has worked since 2009 on energy and climate policy. His work focuses on regional and distributional impacts of decarbonisation, the analysis and design of carbon, gas and electricity markets, and EU energy and climate policies. Previously, he worked at the German Ministry of Finance, the German Institute for Economic Research in Berlin, the energy think tank LARSEN in Paris, and the policy consultancy Berlin Economics.

  • Simone Tagliapietra

    Simone Tagliapietra is a Senior fellow at Bruegel.

    He is also a Part-time professor at the Florence School of Transnational Governance (STG) of the European University Institute and an Adjunct professor at the School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) Europe of The Johns Hopkins University.

    His research focuses on the EU climate and energy policy, and on its industrial and social dimensions. With a record of numerous policy and scientific publications, also in leading journals such as Nature and Science, he is the author of Global Energy Fundamentals (Cambridge University Press, 2020) and co-author of The Macroeconomics of Decarbonisation (Cambridge University Press, 2024).

    On the basis of his policy and scientific production, Dr. Tagliapietra regularly supports EU and national institutions in the development of their public policies in the field of climate and energy, also through regular interaction with public decision-makers in EU and national institutions, as well as through regular parliamentary testimonies in the European Parliament and various national parliamentary assemblies inside and outside Europe, such as the French Senate, the UK House of Lords and the US Senate. His columns and policy work are widely published and cited in leading international media.

    Dr. Tagliapietra also is a Member of the Board of Directors of the Clean Air Task Force (CATF) and Senior associate of the Payne Institute at the Colorado School of Mines in Golden. He holds a PhD in International Political Economy from the Catholic University of Milan, where he previously graduated under the supervision of Professor Alberto Quadrio Curzio and where he also served as an Assistant professor (tenure-track) until 2024. Born in the Dolomites in 1988, he speaks Italian, English and French.

Related content

Dataset

European natural gas imports

This dataset aggregates daily data on European natural gas import flows and storage levels.

Georg Zachmann, Ben McWilliams, UgnÄ— KeliauskaitÄ— and Giovanni Sgaravatti