‘Green’ Europe Self-Destructs As Energy Crisis Decimates Key Industries

Europe needs its industrial companies to save energy amid soaring costs and shrinking supplies, and they are delivering – demand for natural gas and electricity both fell in the past quarter.

It is far too early to rejoice, though. The drop is not just because industrial companies are turning down thermostats, they are also shutting down plants that may never reopen.

And while lower energy use helps Europe weather the crisis sparked by Russia’s war in Ukraine and Moscow’s supply cuts, executives, economists, and industry groups warn its industrial base may end up severely weakened if high energy costs persist.

Energy-intensive industries, such as aluminum, fertilizers, and chemicals are at risk of companies permanently shifting production to locations where cheap energy abounds.

Even as an unusually warm October and projections of a mild winter helped drive prices lower, natural gas in the United States still costs about a fifth of what companies pay in Europe.

“A lot of companies are just quitting production,” Patrick Lammers, management board member at utility E.ON (EONGn.DE) told a conference in London last month. “They actually demand [to] destruct.”

Eurozone manufacturing activity this month hit its weakest level since May 2020, signaling Europe was heading for a recession.

The International Energy Agency estimates that European industrial gas demand fell by 25 percent in the third quarter from a year earlier. Analysts say widespread shutdowns had to be behind the drop because efficiency gains alone would not produce such savings.

“We are doing all we can to prevent a reduction in industrial activity,” a European Commission spokesperson said in an email.

But a survey released on Wednesday showed companies in Europe’s industrial powerhouse Germany were already scaling back because of energy costs.

More than [one in four businesses] in the chemicals sector and 16 percent in the auto sector said they were being forced to cut production, a survey of 24,000 businesses by the German chambers of commerce and industry (DIHK) showed.

Moreover, 17 percent of auto sector companies said they were planning to move some production abroad.

“The effects are clearly visible: energy-intensive producers of intermediate goods in particular are cutting back on production,” said DIHK Managing Director Martin Wansleben, referring to critical semi-finished products, such as chemicals and metals.

Exodus Fears

European industry has been shifting production to locations with cheaper labor and lower other costs for decades, but the energy crisis is accelerating the exodus, analysts said.

“If the energy prices stay so elevated that part of European industry becomes structurally uncompetitive, factories will shut down and move to the U.S. where there is an abundance of cheap shale energy,” said Daniel Kral, senior economist at Oxford Economics.

For example, EU primary aluminum output was halved, cut by one million tonnes, over the past year.

Trade figures compiled by Reuters show all nine zinc smelters in the bloc have either cut or stopped production, which was replaced by imports from China, Kazakhstan, Turkey, and Russia.

Reopening an aluminum smelter costs up to 400 million euros ($394 million) and is unlikely given Europe’s uncertain economic outlook, Chris Heron at the industry association Eurometaux said.

“Historically, when these temporary closures happen, permanent closures come as a consequence,” he added.

Western efforts to secure supplies not just for energy but also for key minerals used in electric vehicles and renewable infrastructure are also at risk from high energy prices.

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Header image: Philip Morris International

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Comments (2)

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    Tom

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    Silly green energy is the death of life and freedom.

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  • Avatar

    VOWG

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    I have zero empathy for those who self destruct.

    Reply

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