The year Russia turbocharged a global energy crisis
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[December 13, 2022] By
David Gaffen
(Reuters) - For the energy industry, 2022 will be remembered as the year
Russia's invasion of Ukraine accelerated a global energy crisis.
The invasion, and subsequent Western sanctions, heaped new pressures on
oil and gas supplies already strained from the rapid economic rebound
from the pandemic.
The world's top energy companies beat a hasty retreat from Russia and
wrote off tens of billions of dollars in assets. European nations
scrambled to make sure they could keep the lights on and their residents
from freezing to death
Natural gas prices hit multi-year highs and oil nearly $140 a barrel,
not far from an all-time record, turbocharging a post-pandemic
inflationary spiral that caused a cost-of-living crisis in many
countries.
The invasion and subsequent Western sanctions led to a breakdown in
supply relationships that had existed for decades.
Major world economies scrambled to find energy sources - using anything
and everything they could find to keep the lights on. Governments pushed
to accelerate the deployment of solar and wind - but also to buy coal.
Climate change targets went on the back burner.
Governments spent billions of dollars to prop up major utilities like
Germany's Uniper. South Africa experienced its worst power cuts in
history. Sri Lanka, short on foreign cash reserves, simply ran out of
fuel.
WHY IT MATTERS
Russia's invasion of Ukraine caused European countries to re-evaluate
their relationship with that nation, long the continent's primary
supplier of natural gas.
Western nations have since discussed and began to implement a price cap
on Russian oil, while Europe is discussing a gas price cap and investing
more heavily in liquefied natural gas (LNG) to meet energy needs.
"We are seeing nothing less than the termination of a successful 50-year
partnership on gas between Russia and Europe," said Michael Stoppard,
special adviser and global gas analyst at S&P Global Commodity Insights.
"That is leading to a recalibration of supply and demand and that will
take time, and we will suffer the pain of that through 2023 and beyond."
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A man rests while waiting in a line to
buy diesel near a Ceylon Petroleum Corporation fuel station, amid
the country's economic crisis in Colombo, Sri Lanka, April 7, 2022.
REUTERS/Dinuka Liyanawatte/File Photo
That dichotomy is evident in numerous countries. Poland is Europe’s
fastest-growing market in terms of adding heat pumps. At the same
time, rules to limit smog have been postponed, and residents are
increasingly burning whatever materials they can, be it harmful
lignite oil and trash to heat their homes. In Klodzko, a town of
28,000 in southwestern Poland, people are saving trash for fuel,
said the mayor, Michal Piszko.
WHAT DOES IT MEAN FOR 2023?
The disarray has not ended. Major industrialized economies are
girding for supply constraints in 2023 as well, if not for years
after that.
Governments in the United States and Europe both openly shifted to
supporting "friendshoring" of strategic supplies to allies,
regardless of the likely higher cost, and amped up the use of tax
and aid packages to develop nuclear, solar, wind, and hydrogen
resources. Their moves are not just meant as a specific response to
Russia, but to counter China as well, by developing resources to
offset that nation's dominance in production of solar panels and
mining for key materials for batteries.
"It will be regarded as a seminal year, or really the beginning of a
completely new system," said Francesco Starace, CEO of Italy's Enel,
one of the world's largest power companies. "The year '22 and part
of '23 we will all say, that’s when all these consequential things
took place. It’s a year of breaking habits and changing very, very
clearly."
As the year comes to a close, costs for natural gas and heating fuel
have ebbed as economic activity declines. But people are still
struggling and could continue to for some time as tight supply
causes more price shocks.
“I warm only the room that I'm in and I would only put the heating
on for an hour. And then I sit with a jumper, hat and coat on," said
Ruth Johanne, unemployed in Coventry, England, who cannot afford to
heat her whole house in winter.
Explore the Reuters round-up of news stories that dominated the
year, and the outlook for 2023.
(Reporting by David Gaffen; Additional reporting by Bozorgmehr
Sharafedin in London and Marek Strzelecki in Warsaw; Editing by Lisa
Shumaker)
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