Electrical power lines hang from a transmission tower near the Agios Dimitrios Power Plant, operated by Public Power Corp. SA (PPC), in Kozani, Greece, on Monday, Sept. 26, 2022. The economic damage from the shutdown of Russian gas flows is piling up fast in Europe and risks eventually eclipsing the impact of the global financial crisis. Photographer: Konstantinos Tsakalidis/Bloomberg
Locked
Europe’s imperfect options for transforming its energy markets
Policymakers now have a once-in-a-generation opportunity to cut the tie to gas, allowing the region to become more reliant on cheaper, greener energy. The stakes are huge.
By Josefine Fokuhl and Todd Gillespie
(Bloomberg) — The European Union is hoarding natural gas to make it through the winter, but it's also trying to solve a bigger problem: breaking the link between gas and power prices altogether.
Currently, the most expensive form of generation — gas — sets the price for all electricity that's sold into the market. That means consumers are bearing the brunt of Russia's supply cuts to the continent. It also means Europe isn't feeling much of the benefit of low-cost renewables like wind farms, which get to sell at big margins.
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