The crunch is leaving consumers and heavy industrial users with rising bills heading into 2022. Metals smelters from France to Spain have already been forced to curb output, while some fertilizer producers were forced to halt output altogether. Norsk Hydro’s majority-owned plant in Slovakia was the latest casualty, announcing on Thursday that it would further curb production.
And there’s little relief in sight. Even as the year ends with mild weather — easing demand for heat and power — households are set to face eye-watering price increases next year when wholesale costs get passed on. Industries will also need to grapple with even tighter supplies in January, when about 30 per cent of the French nuclear fleet will be offline.
Europe’s energy crunch was a result of shortages of natural gas just as demand rebounded following 2020’s lockdowns. The crisis was also aggravated by lower than normal wind speeds and nuclear power outages that have strained power grids, forcing the region’s energy companies to burn polluting fossil fuels.
As companies burned coal, lignite and even oil to keep the lights on, the cost of buying permits to pollute surged. Carbon futures — already facing price increases because of the Brussels climate agenda — more than doubled this year to about 80 euros per metric ton (US$90.5), boosting the cost of electricity.
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