Six Facts: What We Need To Know About Europe’s Energy Crisis

Econlife Team
3 min readFeb 24, 2022

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Up by 25% between December 2020 and December 2021, soaring electricity and gas bills reflect Europe’s energy crisis.

But there is more.

Six Facts: Explaining Europe’s Energy Crisis

1. Europe depends on petroleum and natural gas for more than half of its energy needs.

Then, they have to import 61% of the mix:

2. Among its energy imports, Europe gets natural gas from seven countries.

Russia and Norway have the biggest slices of Europe’s natural gas pie:

3. But demand depends on the country.

Cyprus (90%), Malta (87%), and Luxembourg (65%) mostly source their energy from petroleum products. Quite different, for Sweden, the mix is nuclear energy (41%) and renewables (31%). France (41%), too, gets a large proportion from nuclear energy. Based on Germany’s energy mix, you can see why the elimination of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline for natural gas will make a difference:

3. The price of natural gas is way up.

Since April, the price of natural gas shot up from $20.22 to $179.90 at its peak:

4. Storage is also an issue.

Trending downward, storage of natural gas can become contentious among nations when they decide what to share:

5. Based on Brent, the price of crude is up again.

In just one year, the price of Brent, a world benchmark for the price of crude, has ascended from $67.04 to more than $100:

6. Occupying 40% of tan average household bill, the wholesale price of energy is helping to worsen the energy crisis.

The EU and UK have similar fuel bill components:

Our Bottom Line: Energy Crisis Causes

Reuters had a summary list of the causes of Europe’s energy crisis:

  • Gas storage levels are low.
  • EU carbon prices are high.
  • Asia is demanding more liquefied natural gas.
  • There have been infrastructure outages.
  • Even with this year’s warmer temperatures, demand rises during the winter.
  • Norway has said it cannot replace a diminished supply of natural gas from Russia.
  • Europe reported 5.6% inflation for January 2022.

And finally, topping the list, we should add the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

My sources and more: Yesterday, during my walk, I listened to the Bruegel podcast on Europe’s energy crisis. A European economic think tank, Bruegel is my go-to source for analysis of EU issues. From there, Reuters and euronews and eurostat had more detail.

Originally published at https://econlife.com on February 24, 2022.

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Econlife Team

Located at the intersection of current events, history, and economics, econlife® slices away all of the layers that make economics boring and complex.