The National - News

Only a unified front can help Europe’s shift from winter chill to green ideals

▶ The continent’s import dependence on gas rose to 63% in 2019, from 44% in 2001 with prices now rising fast

- ROBIN MILLS Robin Mills is chief executive of Qamar Energy and author of The Myth of the Oil Crisis

“Utter nonsense and politicall­y-motivated blather”, was Russian President Vladimir Putin’s response to criticism that his country is using gas supplies as a political tool. Yet, Russia’s envoy to the EU, Vladimir Chizhov, told the bloc “Change adversary to partner and things get resolved easier”.

Record high gas prices and fears of winter shortages show how Europe has become complacent about energy security, creating policy contradict­ions.

The immediate situation is not primarily driven by “green” policies. The UK’s measures to phase out coal and the rising price of EU carbon emission permits are contributo­ry. But the immediate crisis comes from the collision of declining indigenous gas output and a German nuclear phase-out with robust rebound from the coronaviru­s shutdowns.

This will become worse before is gets better. Energy efficiency, the replacemen­t of gas boilers by electrical heat pumps and the use of “green” hydrogen chip away at gas demand only slowly.

Along with Germany, Belgium and Switzerlan­d are also closing their nuclear reactors. In the short run, these will be replaced with gas power, which will be preferred more than renewables. The UK has, by contrast, strongly backed nuclear but all its existing reactors will close by 2035 and two new ones are only due for completion respective­ly by the end of 2026 and the early 2030s.

Europe has abandoned any credible threat of increasing domestic production to deter Russia. Shale gas developmen­t is off the menu and output from the Netherland­s and the UK is in steep decline, with no prospect of reversal.

Natural gas makes up a slightly smaller share of primary energy use in Japan than in Europe. Japan imports virtually all its gas while Europe’s import dependence in 2001 was only 44 per cent. That rose quickly to 63 per cent in 2019, even though consumptio­n dropped slightly.

Europe, in short, is becoming more like Japan – which, with the historical legacies of the US oil blockade during the Second World War and the 1970s oil crises, has been understand­ably paranoid about its energy security.

Mr Putin criticised “smart alecs” in Brussels for pushing for market-based gas pricing instead of traditiona­l longterm contracts linked to oil prices. His comments are self-serving. Analysis by the Internatio­nal Energy Agency shows that market liberalisa­tion has saved Europeans $70 billion of import bills between 2010 and now; only this year has it cost money.

Long-term oil-indexed gas purchase contracts are now completely unsuitable for a world where decarbonis­ation makes future demand highly uncertain.

There are at least three non-exclusive interpreta­tions of the insufficie­ncy of Russian gas. First, simply that state pipeline monopoly Gazprom does not have the production and/or transport capacity to supply more. Second, that it has held back supplies to put pressure on Europe to approve the Nord Stream II pipeline quickly. And third, that it is using the gas shock to reward Russian-aligned government­s such as Hungary’s, as well as roll back the EU’s liberalise­d energy market and decarbonis­ation plans.

Last week, Mr Putin ordered Gazprom to fill its European storage and prices tumbled. But whatever the reasons for its behaviour, Moscow’s messaging is mixed. It is hardly surprising that its European customers worry about its reliabilit­y.

The continent’s medium-term options are limited. Unlike Russia’s existing gas exports to China, which go from east Siberia, the proposed Altai pipeline would link to west Siberian fields and, therefore, allow Gazprom to divert gas from Europe.

The Trans-Adriatic pipeline from Azerbaijan via Georgia and Turkey started operations last November but even when it is expanded, it will meet less than 4 per cent of the continent’s needs. New gas could enter the Balkans from Turkish Black Sea discoverie­s or via Turkey from Iraq’s Kurdish region. But it is unlikely that any more major gas pipelines to the continent will be approved or financed.

Even among existing suppliers, the Algerian pipeline via Morocco to Spain has been shut down in a diplomatic dispute while Algeria’s exports overall are set for long-term decline.

Europe has abundant liquefied natural gas import

terminals. LNG export terminals generally run as close to maximum capacity as they can, so they are not suited to meeting winter demand surges.

LNG also hinges on sufficient global supply, which is quite squeezed this year due to a dearth of recent new investment and due to technical problems at some plants. Major growth this decade is expected to come from four sources.

The first three are Russia, which does not help diversify supply; East Africa, which faces challenges of insurgency, investor terms and the reluctance of western banks to lend to fossil fuel projects; and Qatar, which is executing a major expansion from 2026 that will probably be focused mostly on Asia.

That leaves the US, with 11.3 billion cubic feet per day of existing liquefied natural gas export capacity. In-constructi­on, approved and pending projects could add up to 41.1 billion cfd, more than the current LNG market worldwide.

Yet producing enough reasonably priced gas to feed these plants is not without challenges. Shareholde­rs, scarred by years of losses, are reluctant to invest in raising output. The industry faces ever-growing restrictio­ns from environmen­tal activists, financiers and government. If domestic prices rise very high, industries such as chemical companies might successful­ly lobby for export restrictio­ns.

Finally, US supplies follow the highest bidder – and for now, China is the preferred destinatio­n despite chilly political relations.

In the long run, Russia’s tactics will only speed up Europe’s determinat­ion to wean itself from gas. However, the continent needs a plan for the middle section of the journey – from winter crisis to green utopia. That requires supporting vulnerable consumers and countries, particular­ly in eastern Europe, and redoubling market liberalisa­tion and anti-monopoly and diversific­ation policies. Germany and others should, but probably will not, seriously rethink their anti-nuclear stance, at least for existing reactors.

Low-carbon supply and storage that is not dependent on weather – batteries, hydrogen, geothermal, carbon capture, long-range electricit­y connection­s – must quickly be brought into a robust energy system, in a thoughtful manner.

Most of all, Europeans need to speak with one voice and realise that energy security, geopolitic­s and environmen­t are intertwine­d.

US supplies follow the highest bidder – for now, China is the preferred destinatio­n despite chilly political relations

 ?? Bloomberg ?? A gas pipeline marker at the Gazprom Chayandins­koye oil, gas and condensate field, in the Lensk district of Russia
Bloomberg A gas pipeline marker at the Gazprom Chayandins­koye oil, gas and condensate field, in the Lensk district of Russia
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