Dubai Telegraph - Ukraine tensions jumble up Germany's energy puzzle

EUR -
AED 4.007909
AFN 77.444578
ALL 99.448497
AMD 422.93642
ANG 1.953427
AOA 1000.605281
ARS 1170.632718
AUD 1.738506
AWG 1.966839
AZN 1.858297
BAM 1.959694
BBD 2.183959
BDT 131.441149
BGN 1.957028
BHD 0.411243
BIF 3215.259576
BMD 1.091173
BND 1.453701
BOB 7.473712
BRL 6.183786
BSD 1.081659
BTN 92.452839
BWP 14.970882
BYN 3.53983
BYR 21386.989945
BZD 2.172696
CAD 1.554687
CDF 3132.75732
CHF 0.955786
CLF 0.027179
CLP 1042.986429
CNY 7.930752
CNH 7.973381
COP 4529.731735
CRC 543.399553
CUC 1.091173
CUP 28.916083
CVE 110.483498
CZK 24.935436
DJF 192.614454
DKK 7.460873
DOP 68.30822
DZD 146.246695
EGP 55.182909
ERN 16.367594
ETB 143.187399
FJD 2.540087
FKP 0.844388
GBP 0.835309
GEL 3.01206
GGP 0.844388
GHS 16.863513
GIP 0.844388
GMD 78.7039
GNF 9438.299655
GTQ 8.41646
GYD 229.091566
HKD 8.492408
HNL 27.895774
HRK 7.532037
HTG 142.338697
HUF 406.240303
IDR 18242.858974
ILS 4.056349
IMP 0.844388
INR 93.354601
IQD 1427.580573
IRR 45943.05688
ISK 145.182683
JEP 0.844388
JMD 170.583366
JOD 0.773664
JPY 161.074044
KES 141.031107
KGS 94.424704
KHR 4357.312403
KMF 497.021326
KPW 982.077284
KRW 1605.375927
KWD 0.336441
KYD 0.907584
KZT 549.340726
LAK 23606.608472
LBP 97466.366087
LKR 321.536356
LRD 218.173026
LSL 20.062893
LTL 3.22195
LVL 0.660039
LYD 5.24965
MAD 10.507563
MDL 19.595565
MGA 5095.972357
MKD 62.134232
MMK 2290.928542
MNT 3798.791921
MOP 8.744577
MRU 43.316666
MUR 49.783899
MVR 16.850002
MWK 1889.777692
MXN 22.050151
MYR 4.840952
MZN 69.709368
NAD 20.062893
NGN 1677.016713
NIO 40.112342
NOK 11.333648
NPR 149.437377
NZD 1.900766
OMR 0.420096
PAB 1.091173
PEN 4.003408
PGK 4.463011
PHP 62.456764
PKR 305.125843
PLN 4.225166
PYG 8671.33167
QAR 3.97243
RON 5.028882
RSD 118.38001
RUB 92.23618
RWF 1547.68544
SAR 4.092165
SBD 9.275306
SCR 15.805491
SDG 655.211518
SEK 10.741398
SGD 1.465922
SHP 0.857491
SLE 24.911374
SLL 22881.35249
SOS 622.389247
SRD 40.216212
STD 22585.077127
SVC 9.547525
SYP 14187.942197
SZL 20.062893
THB 37.303191
TJS 11.894024
TMT 3.816668
TND 3.38614
TOP 2.627363
TRY 41.393626
TTD 7.384167
TWD 36.279977
TZS 2887.360614
UAH 45.017145
UGX 3982.302352
USD 1.091173
UYU 45.991087
UZS 14088.434962
VES 75.934374
VND 27978.495271
VUV 134.624128
WST 3.095734
XAF 662.695102
XAG 0.03252
XAU 0.000346
XCD 2.954245
XDR 0.82136
XOF 662.695102
XPF 119.331742
YER 268.435174
ZAR 20.571038
ZMK 9821.877532
ZMW 30.709755
ZWL 351.357247
  • SCS

    0.1400

    11.46

    +1.22%

  • CMSC

    0.0600

    22.5

    +0.27%

  • BCC

    3.1600

    102.07

    +3.1%

  • RIO

    -0.3300

    59.9

    -0.55%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.83

    +0.04%

  • BCE

    -0.9600

    21.82

    -4.4%

  • RBGPF

    67.7200

    67.72

    +100%

  • NGG

    0.0000

    65.78

    0%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13.04

    +0.46%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    9.77

    -0.1%

  • GSK

    -0.2300

    37.64

    -0.61%

  • BTI

    -0.8500

    40.25

    -2.11%

  • RELX

    0.3100

    50.98

    +0.61%

  • AZN

    -0.3800

    72.22

    -0.53%

  • VOD

    -0.1500

    9.12

    -1.64%

  • BP

    0.0000

    33.81

    0%

Ukraine tensions jumble up Germany's energy puzzle
Ukraine tensions jumble up Germany's energy puzzle

Ukraine tensions jumble up Germany's energy puzzle

Rising tensions with Moscow over Ukraine have exposed Germany's problematic dependence on Russian gas, inflaming an already heated debate over soaring energy prices.

Text size:

As Germany pursues its target to transition to cleaner energy sources over the next decade, Europe's biggest economy has counted on gas temporarily filling the gap while it builds up its sun and wind energy capacity to replace nuclear and coal plants.

But with Russia now providing 55 percent of Germany's gas imports -- up from 40 percent in 2012 -- Berlin's best-laid plans may well go awry if Moscow were to march on Ukraine.

With gas making up 26.7 percent of Germany's total energy consumption and heating one in every two households, Chancellor Olaf Scholz's government has admitted that if sanctions had to be imposed on Russia, they will also hit the German economy.

More precisely, the controversial Nord Stream 2 pipeline, which was set to double supplies of cheap natural gas from Russia to Germany, now hangs in the balance.

In a warning hailed by the United States as "very, very strong", German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock has said the pipeline will be part of a sanctions package if Russia made a move on Ukraine.

- Energy security -

Long viewed as a problem by Western allies and Ukraine, the 10-billion-euro ($12 billion) pipeline had been seen by former chancellor Angela Merkel's government as a key stop-gap option while Germany shifts to renewables.

But critics have repeatedly warned that it would only serve to increase German dependence on Russian energy, and Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky has branded it a "dangerous geopolitical weapon of the Kremlin".

Yet weaning Germany off Russian energy will be painful.

"If we give up Russian gas and Nord Stream 2, it won't be lights out immediately, but it will be expensive, it will exacerbate unanswered gas supply questions for the future, and we'll have a problem," warned chairman of the mining, chemistry sector union IG BCE, Michael Vassiliadis.

With time pressing, the German government is launching a massive programme to build wind turbines covering two percent of the country's land surface, and require the installation of solar panels on roofs.

"Phasing out the burning of fossil fuels also strengthens Europe in geopolitical terms and protects the climate," Economy Minister Robert Habeck said earlier this month.

But with the nuclear energy phase-out due to be complete by year's end and coal power also to be halted by 2030, Germany will have to make up the difference by raising its gas capacity by a third over the next eight years, according to the Fraunhofer economic institute.

Already, Germany's gas consumption is on the rise. In 2021, it made use of 1.003 billion kWh, an increase of 3.9 percent on the previous year.

But the longer-term strategy does not solve the looming energy emergency at hand.

- 'Alternative' -

To reduce its dependency on Russia in the near future, the government is banking on diversifying its imports.

One "alternative" would be to exhaust the capacity of Europe's liquified natural gas terminals, a source in the economy ministry said.

This solution, in which fresh imports could be delivered from the United States, Australia or Qatar, would, however, come at a price, the source indicated.

Higher costs could give a fresh push to inflation, which has hit multi-year highs in Germany and the eurozone in recent months.

The situation is not made any easier by Germany's exceptionally low gas reserves, which currently sit below 42 percent of full capacity.

Nevertheless, the government sought to put a brave face on the issue.

Dismissing the risk of an acute shortage, Baerbock said on Friday that sufficient supply was "assured".

I.Mansoor--DT