Wednesday, October 12, 2022

Is Europe In 'Deindustrialization' Spiral Due To Energy Crisis?

Europe in “deindustrialization” spiral due to energy crisis, warns Goldman Sachs



Banking behemoth Goldman Sachs is now warning that the European energy crisis will lead to the “deindustrialization of Europe.”

The chemical sector in particular is expected to collapse, resulting in a cascade of financial fallout totaling at least $1.6 trillion dollars, the bank says.

“We … now expect a protracted period (> 2 years) of lower production for European chemicals on the back of the region’s energy crisis,” Goldman says.


“We see up to 40% of Europe’s chemical industry (petrochemicals and basic inorganics) at risk of permanent rationalization unless a sufficient economic assistance package is introduced, or natural gas prices fall to / below c.f70 / MWh.”

Should European energy assets close, there is expected to be a sharp rise in import requirements to meet “an inelastic global supply base and drive inflation over the mid-term,” Goldman added. (Related: Is the war in Ukraine being used as a cover for the collapsing global economy, which was going to happen anyway?)

Not just chemicals but also glass, paper, steel, ceramics and cement are also having to be curtailed due to skyrocketing energy prices and increasingly limited energy availability.

Western sanctions against Russia are only hurting the West, it turns out. And Europe’s obedience to U.S.-led NATO is rapidly becoming the continent’s undoing as a first world region of the world.

By next spring, Europe will probably look a whole lot more like the third world if Goldman’s predictions end up panning out as expected.

On September 8, Goldman issued a report about the shutdown of the Nord Stream 1 (NS1) pipeline from Russia to Germany, warning that this “threatens to further squeeze the disposable income of Europeans.

Since that time, as we all know, both NS1 and Nord Stream 2 (NS2) are damaged due to alleged sabotage, meaning no more Russian gas will be flowing through these two pipelines any time soon – if ever again.

“This is a very painful process and it’s impacting the European population in many different ways,” said Samantha Dar, a senior energy strategist at Goldman. “Ordinary people haven’t even felt the full brunt of this situation.”


With no more Russian gas in Europe, the chasm between supply and demand continues to widen, which means increasingly higher prices with no end in sight.

With the cold winter season soon on the way, that deficit will only expand even more, creating a serious crisis, the full extent of which is still to be seen.

Since the Ukraine crisis was launched, the 10-year average price of natural gas has increased at least tenfold.

“The depth or severity of this crisis could be defined by the weather over the coming months,” Goldman warns.



No comments: