A Paris street. Some French cities plan to turn
off streetlamps to conserve energy in winter.
Liz
Alderman
By Liz
Alderman
Liz
Alderman, who covers business and economic issues in Europe, reported this
article from Paris.
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/05/business/russia-gas-europe-france.html
Sept. 5,
2022, 12:00 a.m. ET
A factory
making iconic French bistro glasses is idling its furnaces to offset soaring
energy costs. Cities around France are turning off streetlamps and other
outdoor lighting to curb electricity use. In Normandy, some schools will start
heating classrooms by burning wood to conserve natural gas.
As Russia
tightens its chokehold on Europe’s energy supplies, France is embarking on its
biggest energy conservation effort since the 1970s oil crisis. President
Emmanuel Macron’s government is calling on the French to prepare for a new era
of energy “sobriety” to face down the threat of a hard winter, while reassuring
households and businesses about the government’s ability to protect them.
“We have
been confronted with a series of crises, one more grave than the other,” Mr.
Macron said in a televised speech to the nation late last month. “The picture
that I’m painting is one of the end of abundance,” he added. “We have reached a
tipping point.”
The
national effort calls for businesses and individuals to embrace energy
conservation by increasing car-pooling, lowering thermostats and shutting off
illuminated advertising signs at night — to name a few — or face the risk of
rolling blackouts or energy rationing.
On
Friday, Agnès Pannier-Runacher, the
energy transition minister, sought to reassure wary citizens, saying the
government would try to “avoid restrictive measures” over energy use in the
peak winter cold season.
The
government has been spending lavishly — over 26 billion euros ($26 billion)
since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — to keep gas and electric bills affordable,
and last week it announced that its cap on household energy bills would be
extended until the end of the year. The moves to control energy costs,
including the re-nationalization of the energy provider EDF, have helped give
France one of the lowest inflation rates in Europe, at 6.5 percent. (The
overall eurozone rate for August was 9.1 percent.)
But with
food and fuel costs still straining French families, Prime Minister Élisabeth
Borne has called on businesses to make the bulk of the nation’s energy savings
— fast. Companies will be required to cut their energy use by 10 percent or
face enforced rationing of electricity and gas.
Businesses
will have to appoint an “ambassador of energy sobriety” this month, and present
blueprints to the government for cutting their electricity consumption.
France is
hardly alone in scrambling to confront a severe energy crunch brought on by
Russia’s grinding invasion of Ukraine.
President
Vladimir V. Putin’s apparent willingness to use energy as a weapon — last week
Russia’s state-owned gas company, Gazprom, halted gas supplies to France — has
sent oil and gas prices to record highs.
Countries
including France have increased reserves as Gazprom turns off the taps: This
weekend, France’s gas storage facilities were 92 percent full. Even so, energy
bills for households and businesses have soared, prompting European governments
to resort to a range of offsets that few would have thought possible before the
war.
Germany,
Europe’s biggest user of Russian gas, is moving toward reversing plans to shut
down its last nuclear power plants by the end of the year, and on Sunday
announced a $65 billion aid package to ease the burden of high energy costs on
citizens. Italy is looking to Algeria as a potential new supplier of natural
gas to replace Russian fuel. In Spain, the government has begun a huge effort
to improve energy efficiency in buildings and in industry.
France
would seem to be less vulnerable than its neighbors: It boasts the biggest
nuclear energy arsenal of any European Union country, and is one of the least
reliant on Russian natural gas. But France faces an energy crisis of its own,
as its nuclear industry addresses cracks, corrosion and other troubles that
have forced EDF to temporarily shut down 32 of France’s 56 nuclear reactors.
The outages
at EDF, which is also Europe’s biggest electricity exporter, have sent France’s
nuclear power output plunging to its lowest level in nearly three decades. In
addition, France’s worst drought in 30 years this summer has lowered river
levels, cutting supplies of hydroelectric power.
Instead of
pumping vast amounts of electricity to Britain, Italy and other European
countries pivoting from Russian fuel, France now faces the unsettling prospect
of initiating rolling blackouts in winter and having to import power or resort
to coal-fired plants to meet its energy needs — scenarios the government is
desperate to avoid.
The crunch
is already starting to force temporary shutdowns at energy-intensive companies,
including steel, chemical and glass makers. On Friday, wholesale electricity
prices for 2023 in France set a record, surging past €1,000 per megawatt-hour.
Many French companies and retailers buy their electricity with three-year
contracts that are set to expire, meaning they will have to be renewed at peak
prices.
Duralex
International, the maker of classic bistro wine and water glasses, announced
last week that it would put its furnaces on standby for at least four months
starting in November and place its 250 employees on furlough to save energy and
cash.
The company
said it had been facing “for several months very unfavorable financial
production conditions, solely linked to the price of energy,” which exploded
after the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
“Producing
at the daily price energy rate would generate unsustainable losses,” José-Luis
Llacuna, president of Duralex, said in the statement, adding that he didn’t
expect the factory to restart until the second quarter of 2023.
At Cristal
d’Arques, the French maker of elegant crystal wine goblets, 1,650 of the
company’s 5,000 employees will be put on partial furlough through year-end.
Guillaume Rabel-Suquet, the communications director, told French television
that the company’s gas bill quadrupled from the end of last year, to €75
million, and could reach €260 million in 2023 if prices don’t drop, making
operations “economically unviable.”
The
government has tried to offset some, but not all, of the pain for companies,
although it recently announced a special €3 billion fund to help businesses
that can’t pay their energy bills.
President
Macron, who faced a stiff presidential election campaign in April that saw the
far-right challenger, Marine Le Pen, gain ground by addressing French families’
worries over purchasing power, has focused on shielding households from rising
energy costs.
A 4 percent
cap on increases to household electricity prices that began last winter will be
extended until the end of the year, and will continue into 2023 for vulnerable
families, France’s finance minister, Bruno Le Maire, said last week. The price
ceiling is a stark contrast to an 80 percent increase in energy bills that
households in Britain are expected to face next month.
Without the
cap, French inflation would be about three percentage points higher, the French statistics agency Insee said in a
report issued Friday.
Nonetheless,
French citizens will have to pull their weight, Ms. Borne cautioned. In recent
days, the government issued announcements calling on the French to curb a range
of activities, in hopes of collectively saving energy. Among them: refraining
from running washers at night, keeping thermostats at 66 degrees Fahrenheit and
increasing use of public transportation.
Towns and
cities across the land were urged to double down on energy savings in almost
any way they saw fit. Many municipalities outside Paris started closing
swimming pools intermittently this summer to save money. Other cities are
restricting public lighting, which can account for over 40 percent of
electricity bills.
The town of
Thouars in western France has been turning off streetlights from 10 p.m. to 6
a.m. since June and plans to replace bulbs with LED lighting. Strasbourg, a
mid-size city on the German border, will close museums two days a week instead
of one.
In northern
France, some high schools in Brittany will lower their thermostats, while the
neighboring region of Normandy will experiment with using wood-burning furnaces
for heat in some schools as an alternative to gas.
And
businesses have until October to submit their plans for cutting electrical
consumption by 10 percent.
“We need a
radical change,” Ms. Borne said. “Everyone must ask themselves what they can do
to consume less.”
Liz
Alderman is the Paris-based chief European business correspondent, covering
economic and inequality challenges around Europe. She was previously an
assistant business editor, and spent five years as the business editor of what
was The International Herald Tribune. @LizAldermanNYT


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