European gas shortages likely to last several
winters, says Shell chief
Warning raises prospect of continued rationing, as
Total boss says Europe has to plan for future without Russian supplies
Gwyn Topham
@GwynTopham
Mon 29 Aug
2022 18.47 BST
Gas
shortages across Europe are likely to last for several winters to come, the
chief executive of Shell has said, raising the prospect of continued energy
rationing as governments across the continent push to develop alternative
supplies.
Cuts to the
supply of Russian gas since the invasion of Ukraine have plunged European
countries into a devastating energy crisis, driving up wholesale prices to
leave consumers facing huge bills and the highest rates of inflation since the
1980s.
Speaking at
a press conference in Norway on Monday, Ben van Beurden said the situation
could persist for several years. “It may well be that we will have a number of
winters where we have to somehow find solutions,” he said.
Van Beurden
said solutions to the energy crisis would have to found through “efficiency
savings, through rationing and a very, very quick buildout of alternatives”.
“That this
is going to be somehow easy, or over, I think is a fantasy that we should put
aside,” he added.
His
comments come as Europe’s biggest economies brace for a tough winter of soaring
inflation and the threat of recession, as record increases in gas and
electricity bills pile pressure on households and businesses across the
continent.
Russia, the
major supplier of gas to most of the EU before the war in Ukraine, has
throttled exports in response to western sanctions imposed since Vladimir
Putin’s invasion six months ago. While not all EU countries are directly
reliant on Russian supplies, competition for scarce resources has pushed
wholesale European gas prices up by a factor of 12 compared with a year ago.
Britain
sources little of its gas directly from Russia, although is exposed to soaring
prices on the wholesale market. Liz Truss, who is likely to be the next British
prime minister, has so far refused to spell out what help she would give to
households as the price cap on energy bills jumps 80% to £3,549 a year from
October.
Speaking on
Monday, the president of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, said a
package of emergency measures would be unveiled soon. Speaking in Slovenia as
EU officials work on a plan, which could be announced as early as this week,
Von der Leyen said “emergency interventions” would be introduced in addition to
longer-term energy market reforms.
“Skyrocketing
electricity prices are now exposing, for different reasons, the limitations of
our current electricity market design,” she said.
The French
prime minister, Elizabeth Borne, warned companies that energy could be rationed
this winter, while Belgium’s energy minister said the next five to 10 years
could be difficult.
Speaking
alongside the Shell chief executive in Norway, the head of another energy
company, TotalEnergies’s Patrick Pouyanné, said Europe’s governments and
policymakers would have to plan for a future without Russian gas.
The
comments were made at a ceremony to mark a carbon capture and storage deal
between the two firms, the Financial Times reported. “If you think without it
[Russian gas], we will manage. There is enough energy in this planet to do
without it,” Pouyanné added.
European
gas prices have soared in recent weeks, reaching almost €350 (£299) a megawatt
hour last week as countries rushed to build up supplies before the winter. The
Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, on Monday accused Russia of “economic
terror” by trying to cut gas supplies to Europe.
“It is
exerting pressure with price crisis, with poverty, to weaken Europe,” he said.
Maintenance
work is expected to take place this week by Russian state-owned company Gazprom
on the Nord Stream 1 pipeline that links Russia and Germany via the Baltic Sea,
complicating efforts to fill up gas storage sites.
Wholesale
gas prices fell back on Monday after Germany’s economy minister said he
expected the country’s storage to be 85% full next month. However, prices still
remain more than triple the level at the start of this year.
Soaring
energy prices have helped oil and gas companies to record bumper profits,
prompting demands for windfall taxes to help finance emergency support for
struggling households and businesses. Shell made record profits of nearly £10bn
between April and June and promised to give shareholders dividends worth
£6.5bn.
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