Power grids across Europe are coming under increasing strain as the Iran conflict drives both oil and natural gas prices to their highest levels in years, threatening energy supply reliability and adding to inflationary pressures that are already testing the continent’s economic resilience. With European gas prices hitting three-year highs and oil above $90 a barrel, the cost and reliability of electricity supply have become acute concerns for governments and households alike.
The gas price surge is being driven primarily by disruption to Qatar’s LNG exports following drone-strike damage to a key terminal. Qatar supplies roughly 20% of global LNG, and its difficulties have set off a competitive scramble for alternative supplies between European and Asian buyers. European gas prices have responded by climbing to their highest levels since the worst of the 2022 energy crisis, raising the cost of gas-fired electricity generation and, in turn, electricity prices for consumers and businesses.
The oil price dimension adds to the power grid stress. Many European countries still use oil-fired backup generation capacity, which becomes economically unviable when crude prices are above $90 a barrel. The cost of all forms of energy generation is rising simultaneously, squeezing the economics of the electricity supply industry and threatening the affordability of power for households and businesses already under significant financial pressure.
Qatar’s energy minister has warned of a prolonged gas supply disruption — weeks to months even in the event of an immediate ceasefire — and has predicted that continued conflict could push oil to $150 a barrel. At that price, the pressure on European power grids would intensify significantly. The continent is already competing with Asian buyers for available LNG cargoes; if Qatar remains offline for months, that competition will only intensify.
Financial markets have registered the European energy stress. UK and eurozone bond yields have surged to multi-year highs, interest rate cut expectations have been abandoned, and stock markets have fallen sharply. European governments, which spent hundreds of billions supporting consumers through the 2022 energy crisis, are now contemplating the possibility of having to do so again — at a time when their fiscal positions are significantly weaker than they were before.
Power Grids Across Europe Under Strain as Oil and Gas Prices Soar
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