Energy crisis: Ursula von der Leyen calls for 'emergency intervention' in electricity market

Ursula von der Leyen said her team was working on an "emergency intervention" of the electricity market.
Ursula von der Leyen said her team was working on an "emergency intervention" of the electricity market. Copyright Euronews.
Copyright Euronews.
By Jorge Liboreiro
Share this articleComments
Share this articleClose Button
Copy/paste the article video embed link below:Copy to clipboardCopied

Amid record-breaking gas prices, the European Commission president said the current market rules are no longer "fit for purpose".

ADVERTISEMENT

The worsening energy crisis besieging Europe has laid bare the "limitations" of the electricity market and requires an "emergency intervention" to bring down soaring prices, Ursula von der Leyen has said.

"The skyrocketing electricity prices are now exposing, for different reasons, the limitations of our current electricity market design," the European Commission president said on Monday while addressing the Bled Strategic Forum in Slovenia.

"[The market] was developed under completely different circumstances and for completely different purposes. It is no longer fit for purpose.

"That is why we, the Commission, are now working on an emergency intervention and a structural reform of the electricity market. We need a new market model for electricity that really functions and brings us back into balance."

How does the electricity market work?

Today, the EU's wholesale electricity market works on the basis of marginal pricing, also known as the "pay-as-clear market".

Under this system, all electricity producers – from fossil fuels to wind and solar – bid into the market and offer power according to their production costs. The bidding starts from the cheapest resources – the renewables – and finishes with the most expensive ones, usually gas.

Since most EU countries still rely on fossil fuels to meet all their energy demands, the final price of electricity is often set by the price of gas. If gas becomes more expensive, electricity bills inevitably go up, even if clean, cheaper sources also contribute to the total energy supply.

The system was initially praised for boosting transparency and promoting the switch to green sources, but since late 2021, it has come under intense criticism.

Russia's invasion of Ukraine has brought the market design to its most extreme limits, fuelling calls for state intervention and meaningful reforms.

Spain, Portugal, Greece, France, Italy and Belgium are among those calling for a "decoupling" of gas and electricity prices to put an end to the contagion effect.

The Czech presidency of the EU Council has already convened an extraordinary meeting of energy ministers, scheduled to take place on 9 September.

Soaring gas prices

President von der Leyen did not unveil further details in her speech, which touched upon a wider range of topics, including rule of law, climate change, the economic recovery and EU enlargement.

Her comments come amid a record-breaking spike in gas prices, driven by speculation around Gazprom, Russia's state-controlled energy giant.

The multinational has repeatedly limited and even shut down gas flows to several EU countries. Deliveries across the Nord Stream 1 pipeline are at 20% of its daily capacity.

On Friday, future gas prices at the Title Transfer Facility (TTF), the continent's leading trading hub, reached €339 per megawatt-hour, a stratospheric figure compared to the €27 mark set a year ago.

The seemingly unstoppable upward trend is raising fears of bankruptcy for companies and energy poverty for households ahead of the winter season, when heating consumption is expected to increase drastically.

In late July, the EU decided to establish a voluntary plan to reduce gas demand by 15% between now and next spring with the hopes of somehow cushioning the impact of the Kremlin's energy manipulation.

Share this articleComments

You might also like

VIDEO: Ukraine features heavily in State of the EU speech

Shipping firms plead for UN help amid escalating Middle East conflict

EU sanctions extremist Israeli settlers over violence in the West Bank