Commodities

EU on track to quit Russian fossil fuels – report

1 Mins read

By Kate Abnett

BRUSSELS (Reuters) – The European Union is on track towards its goal of ending Europe’s reliance on Russian fossil fuels within this decade, the European Commission said on Tuesday.

European countries are heading into their second winter with scarce Russian gas, after Moscow slashed deliveries last year following its invasion of Ukraine – inflicting an energy crisis of record-high gas prices in Europe.

In a report published on Tuesday, Brussels said the EU expected imports of Russian gas to drop to 40-45 billion cubic metres this year, compared with 155 bcm in 2021, the year before the Ukraine war. The 27-country EU has sanctioned Russian coal and seaborne oil imports.

“The worst effects of the crisis may now be behind us, but there is no room for complacency,” the Commission said.

“Energy markets remain vulnerable, fossil fuel subsidies have increased during the crisis, the inflation is still high, our critical infrastructure needs to be protected, including from sabotages,” it added.

To replace Russian gas, EU countries have hiked imports from other suppliers and, at the same time, slashed gas use. Norway has replaced Russia as the EU’s biggest pipeline gas supplier and liquefied imports have surged, led by supplies from the United States.

Across the EU, gas storage caverns are 99% full, Gas Infrastructure Europe data show, giving countries a buffer against potential supply shocks this winter.

A record expansion of solar energy has also helped reduce Europe’s call on gas-fuelled power plants this year, particularly during summer months when power use for air conditioning peaks.

But while analysts say a return to the record-high prices seen last year is unlikely, global gas markets are unusually tight, posing the risk that prices could still rise in response to cold weather or further supply shocks.

The Commission also warned that EU countries are still not expanding renewable energy fast enough to reach their legally binding target to get 42.5% of all energy from renewable sources by 2030 – nearly double the current share.

To help speed that up, the Commission published a plan to support Europe’s wind energy industry, which is struggling with high inflation and mounting competition from Chinese companies.

Read the full article here

Related posts
Commodities

Chile wants 3 or 4 new lithium projects running in 2026, finance minister says By Reuters

1 Mins read
SANTIAGO (Reuters) – Chile wants to have three or four new lithium projects operational by 2026, the country’s Minister of Finance Mario…
Commodities

OPEC+ producers extend oil output cuts to second quarter By Reuters

3 Mins read
By Maha El Dahan and Alex Lawler DUBAI (Reuters) -OPEC+ members led by Saudi Arabia and Russia agreed on Sunday to extend…
Commodities

US considers selling Northeast gasoline reserve in 2024 in draft bill By Reuters

1 Mins read
By Laura Sanicola (Reuters) – The United States may sell its 1 million barrel Northeast gasoline reserve in fiscal year 2024, according…
Get The Latest News

Subscribe to get the top fintech and
finance news and updates.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *