European Union officials are urgently seeking methods to alleviate the pressure of rising energy costs on consumers and businesses, with energy ministers from member states scheduled to convene a meeting later today to deliberate on various options.
Reportedly, the options under consideration include increasing the supply of carbon allowances to lower their price, providing state support for industrial energy consumers, and implementing tax reductions. The options being discussed indicate that European leaders are, in a rare move, prioritizing energy affordability over emissions reduction.
The option to increase carbon allowance supply is particularly telling. The European Commission initially planned to reduce the number of such allowances provided to industrial energy consumers to incentivize greater investment in emissions reduction. This objective has now taken a back seat to the pressing need to prevent a full-scale collapse of industry caused by soaring oil and gas prices.
The surge in natural gas prices has hit the EU particularly hard, as nearly two-thirds of the bloc's hydrocarbon energy is imported from external sources. However, the EU is especially sensitive to gas prices due to a newly formed over-reliance on US liquefied natural gas (LNG), which is primarily traded on spot markets and is vulnerable to supply shocks. With a fifth of global LNG production capacity from Qatar and the UAE halted due to the war with Iran, LNG prices have predictably surged—and the European benchmark gas price has followed, rising 50% above pre-war levels.
Nevertheless, regardless of what the energy ministers discuss today, there is no universal solution. The financial capacity of member states varies significantly; some nations have the means to support their industrial energy consumers, while others may struggle to do the same. Furthermore, the issue of energy mix complicates matters. Member states with a lower proportion of natural gas in their energy structure will be less impacted than those more dependent on it.