industryterm:energy prices

  • Turkey blames sabotage, cyberattacks from US soil for power cuts — RT News
    https://www.rt.com/news/372957-turkey-power-grid-hacking

    Sabotage of underground powerlines and cyberattacks originating in the US were contributing factors in the power outages which Istanbul and other parts of Turkey have been experiencing since last week, the country’s energy minister said.

    “Yesterday, we faced an intense, US-originated cyber attack. These attacks have been carried out systematically on different parts of the Energy Ministry, but we have repelled them all,” Turkish Energy Minister Berat Albayrak said in an interview with A Haber TV.

    He added that ministry staff responding to power cuts discovered sabotage of underground lines in three districts of Istanbul.

    #Turquie #Electricité #Complot

    • Et pour quelques éléments d’explications moins complotistes : privatisation, météo, géopolitique, incompétence de l’État...

      Turkey’s energy watchdog EPDK imposes two-month cap on power prices
      http://energy.economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/power/turkeys-energy-watchdog-epdk-imposes-two-month-cap-on-power-prices/56386439

      ANKARA: Turkey’s energy watchdog EPDK imposed a two-month cap of 500 liras per megawatt hour on electricity prices on Friday after prices rose to their highest level in years.

      Turkey’s daily natural gas consumption has risen to record highs since December, largely due to colder-than-usual weather triggering higher power consumption.

      The day-ahead electricity price at Turkey’s energy exchange (EPIAS) rose to 586 lira ($162) per megawatt hour last month with hourly prices as high as 1,900 lira, data from the exchange showed. Such levels were the highest in years, traders said.

      In a decision announced in the Official Gazette on Friday, Turkey’s EPDK said a 500 liras ($138.06) per megawatt hour cap would be imposed on electricity prices from January 6 to March 1, 2017.

      “With this decision, the EPDK is attempting to protect the consumer, supplier and producer from prices rising and falling unpredictably, and reduce the effects of seasonal weather conditions on energy prices,” the EPDK said in a statement.

      Day-ahead power price in EPIAS on Friday stood at 176.03 lira per MWh, data on its website showed.

      Traders have criticised poor supply planning and lack of coordination by the state energy authorities.

      State pipeline operator Botas has cut 75 percent of supplies to gas-fired power plants and advised industrial firms to cut non-critical output.

      In addition to mounting demand triggered by persistent cold weather, Turkey decided not to set its clocks back as usual this winter which led to a rise in electricity consumption rather than the planned energy savings.

  • Forget Ukraine. It’s Business As Usual Between Europe and Russia
    http://www.newsweek.com/forget-ukraine-its-business-usual-between-europe-and-russia-369730

    It was just like the old days before the European Union imposed sanctions on Russia in 2014. At the Eastern Economic Forum in Vladivostok Gazprom clinched three major deals with some of Europe’s biggest energy companies.

    One of the most important was the revival of a lucrative asset swap between the Russian energy giant and Wintershall, the energy division of BASF, a German chemical company. BASF had abandoned that swap arrangement in December 2014 because of the geopolitical consequences of Russia’s invasion of eastern Ukraine and its annexation of Crimea.

    The asset swap and other deals signed in Vladivostok show how German as well as Austrian energy companies are loath to quit Russia. They also show how Gazprom wants to tie Europe’s lucrative gas market more closely to Russia. In 2013, Russia supplied the EU’s 28 countries with 30 percent of their gas needs.

    But more importantly, the deals confirm how Russia is determined to end Ukraine’s role as the major transit route for Russian gas to Europe. Half of the Russian gas imported by Europe crosses Ukraine.

    Under the terms of the deal between BASF and Gazprom, BASF’s subsidiary Wintershall will obtain a stake of 25 percent plus one share in the Urengoy natural gas fields in Siberia. Both firms will develop the fields.

    In return, Wintershall will transfer to Gazprom its jointly owned gas storage and trading business in Germany as well as a stake in its business in Austria. Through the asset swap, Gazprom will also receive a 50 percent stake in Wintershall’s exploration and production of oil and gas in the North Sea. These activities amounted to sales of over $13.4 billion in 2014, according to BASF.

    The second deal agreed to in Vladivostok involves Gazprom and a European consortium building a second Nord Stream pipeline under the Baltic Sea. This will enable Russia to send more of its gas directly to Germany, bypassing Ukraine.

    The consortium consists of BASF, German energy company E.ON, French electricity company Engie, Austrian oil and gas firm OMV and Royal Dutch Shell. Gazprom will own a 51 percent share of a new company called New European Pipeline AG, which will develop the project. The other partners will have a 10 percent stake, except for Engie, which will own 9 percent.

    The fact that the global energy majors participate in the project bespeaks its significance for securing reliable gas supply to European consumers,” stated Alexey Miller, chairman of the Gazprom Management Committee.

    Tell that to Poland and the Baltic states—and Ukraine. They had criticized the first Nord Stream pipeline, which was agreed to under the then German chancellor Gerhard Schröder in 2005. At the time, Warsaw argued that the deal increased Europe’s dependence on Russian energy.

    Since then, however, Europe has been diversifying its energy supplies, spurred by the 2009 Ukraine gas crisis, which disrupted supplies to Europe because of a dispute between Russia and Ukraine over energy prices.

    Also, through its Third Energy Package, the European Commission is introducing more competition in the energy sector by breaking the hold any one company can have over the production, distribution and trading of gas. That is one of the main reasons why in December 2014 Russia pulled out of the South Stream project, which was to transport gas across the Black Sea to Southeastern Europe. Under the terms of the commission package, Russia would have had to open up the gas pipeline to competition.

    The third deal reached in Vladivostok involves OMV’s participation in the Urengoy oil and gas fields. When the deal is concluded, OMV will acquire a 24.8 percent stake in the project in exchange for Gazprom obtaining some of the assets of OMV.

    • Sans trop de surprise, le projet de #North_Stream_2 ne plait pas à l’Ukraine…

      Ukraine PM calls second Russia-Germany pipeline ’anti-European’ - Yahoo News
      http://news.yahoo.com/ukraine-pm-calls-second-russia-germany-pipeline-anti-173441635.html

      Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk on Thursday criticised as “anti-Ukrainian and anti-European” a deal between Russia’s energy giant Gazprom and several Western firms to build a second gas pipeline under the Baltic Sea.

      In June, Gazprom agreed with Anglo-Dutch Shell, Germany’s E.ON and Austria’s OMV to build the new gas pipeline — dubbed Nord Stream-2 — to Germany, bypassing conflict-torn Ukraine and also EU neighbour Poland.

      When the first Nord Stream was built, it brought the European Union no additional energy independence,” Yatsenyuk said after talks with Slovak counterpart Robert Fico in Bratislava.

      The construction of Nord Stream-2 is affecting the security of the continuous gas supply of the EU’s southeastern countries. It is a monopolisation of gas supply routes to the EU,” he told reporters.

      This project is anti-Ukrainian and anti-European.

  • Russia sanctions: Why the U.S. and Europe are not quite in step - CNN.com
    http://edition.cnn.com/2014/03/07/business/russia-sanctions-why-the-u-s-and-europe-are-not-quite-in-step/index.html?hpt=hp_c2

    How important is Russia’s economy?

    Russia is the eight biggest economy in the world, with GDP of more than $2 trillion. Its economy — which is heavily reliant on commodities, particularly oil and gas — is expected to grow only slightly in 2014 to around $2.4 trillion. Hopes it would be one of the decade’s powerhouse economies have faded, with its GDP growing just 1.3% last year compared to 2012, one of the sharpest slowdowns in the emerging markets.

    Russia boomed in the late 1990s and early 2000s as energy prices rose, then stumbled as demand for commodities contracted. But its energy supplies remain vitally important for the European Union, to which it supplies a third of its natural gas. Germany, the eurozone’s biggest economy, imports around 40% of its gas from Russia.

    But Russia’s relationship with the West has fractured over the Ukraine crisis, and it now risks being economically isolated by the U.S. and the European Union. Visa bans have been introduced, and harsher sanctions threatened.

    What is Russia’s economic relationship with the U.S?
    Obama: The world should support Ukraine
    Obama orders sanctions over Ukraine

    The economic relationship between Russia and the U.S. is unbalanced. Russia is the 20th largest trading partner for the U.S., with $27 billion worth of trade exported across the Atlantic. On the flip-side, the U.S. is Russia’s fifth largest partner, with just $11 billion worth of trade.
    Barroso: Ukrainian goal is convergence

    According to Russian Foundation chair David Clark, trade is a “relatively unimportant” component of relations. Energy links are also weakening as the U.S. looks to shale gas for its energy supplies and heads towards self-sufficiency.

    However, on Thursday the U.S. State Department imposed a visa ban on Russian and Ukrainian officials and individuals “responsible for, or complicit in threatening the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine.” President Barack Obama also signed an Executive Order laying the groundwork to impose sanctions against individuals and entities responsible for the crisis.

    In a statement the White House said the move was a response to “Russia’s ongoing violation of Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity — actions that constitute a threat to peace and security and a breach of international law.”

    Clark said the U.S. could get greater leverage over Russia from financial sanctions aimed at the country’s banking system and stability of the ruble. Measures targeted at named individuals, similar to those contained in the Magnitsky Act, could also be effective. “Russia’s angry response to the act shows that it works,” Clark said.

    Russia has threatened to retaliate against sanctions but, according to Clark, it “has a great deal to lose by escalating too far. Seizing western property would make Russia a no-go zone for foreign investors who Russia desperately needs to modernize its economy and maintain energy production.”

    s Europe going to do the same?

    The EU is Russia’s largest trading partner, and there are deep economic links between the two. Almost half of Russia’s exports — $292 billion worth — end up in EU countries. Russia, in turn, is the third biggest trading partner for the EU, with $169 billion in imports.

    The EU has stepped more cautiously than the U.S. on sanctions. On Thursday, the EU threatened to impose sanctions on Russia if the negotiations between Moscow and Kiev did not prove effective in dealing with the Ukraine crisis.

    European Council President Herman Van Rompuy said negotiations needed to start in the next few days and “produce results.” Without that, he said, the EU would look to additional measures such as travel bans, asset freezes, and cancellation of the EU and Russia summit.

    Earlier, a document leaked from British government suggested the UK was happy to impose sanctions — but only those that would not cause harm to the country’s financial sector.

    And while G8 members — excluding Russia — are threatening to abandon a Sochi summit planned for later this year, Germany has also pushed for more diplomacy.

    Clark believes Russia could retaliate against any European sanctions, saying it would probably try and “pick-off some of the countries that have been most forceful in advocating tough measures against it — especially Poland and the Baltic States.” However, “it probably wouldn’t retaliate against the EU as a whole or against Germany.”

    Meanwhile, the West has offered $16 billion in aid for Ukraine, helping the country prop up its ailing finances. Ukrainian leaders have said they will be $30 billion in the hole by the end of 2015. About half of that debt comes due in 2014.

    Why the different approaches?

    The eurozone has only just emerged from its own crisis, and would be wary of cutting ties with such a powerful economic partner. Its reliance on gas out of Russia would also feed caution. In contrast, the U.S. is weaning itself off Russia’s energy supplies and its trade relationship is much less intertwined.

    But Louise Cooper, of financial blog CooperCity, said the West risks looking weak if it doesn’t follow tough talk with action. The EU has so far “only come up with a threat of symbolic sanctions, even after Crimea has effectively been taken over by Russia with a new pro-Russian government,” she noted. Even the U.S. visa ban “will have no impact on either the Russian economy or the American one,” she said.

    Meanwhile Russia risks isolating itself, Clark said. “It can maintain de facto control over Crimea indefinitely, but it will come at a very considerable long-term cost to Europe’s willingness to consider Russia as anything other than a source of trouble and insecurity.”

    #Russie
    #Ukraine
    #Etats-Unis
    #Europe

  • Le Moyen Orient reste incontournable pour approvisionner le monde en hydrocarbures.

    IEA - November:- Light tight oil does not diminish the importance of Middle East supply, IEA says in latest World Energy Outlook
    http://www.iea.org/newsroomandevents/pressreleases/2013/november/name,44368,en.html

    Light tight oil does not diminish the importance of Middle East supply, IEA says in latest World Energy Outlook

    Report sees large disparities in regional energy prices affecting industrial competitiveness

    12 November 2013

    Technology and high prices are opening up new oil resources, but this does not mean the world is on the verge of an era of oil abundance, according to the International Energy Agency’s (IEA) 2013 edition of the World Energy Outlook (WEO-2013). Although rising oil output from North America and Brazil reduces the role of OPEC countries in quenching the world’s thirst for oil over the next decade, the Middle East – the only large source of low-cost oil – takes back its role as a key source of oil supply growth from the mid-2020s.

    The annual report, released today in London, presents a central scenario in which global energy demand rises by one-third in the period to 2035. The shift in global energy demand to Asia gathers speed, but China moves towards a back seat in the 2020s as India and countries in Southeast Asia take the lead in driving consumption higher. The Middle East also moves to centre stage as an energy consumer, becoming the world’s second-largest gas consumer by 2020 and third-largest oil consumer by 2030, redefining its role in global energy markets. Brazil, a special focus in WEO-2013, maintains one of the least carbon-intensive energy sectors in the world, despite experiencing an 80% increase in energy use to 2035 and moving into the top ranks of global oil producers. Energy demand in OECD countries barely rises and by 2035 is less than half that of non-OECD countries. Low-carbon energy sources meet around 40% of the growth in global energy demand. In some regions, rapid expansion of wind and solar PV raises fundamental questions about the design of power markets and their ability to ensure adequate investment and long-term reliability.

    “Major changes are emerging in the energy world in response to shifts in economic growth, efforts at decarbonisation and technological breakthroughs,” said IEA Executive Director Maria van der Hoeven. “We have the tools to deal with such profound market change. Those that anticipate global energy developments successfully can derive an advantage, while those that do not risk taking poor policy and investment decisions.”

    The availability and affordability of energy is a critical element of economic well-being and, in many countries, also of industrial competitiveness. Natural gas in the United States currently trades at one-third of import prices to Europe and one-fifth of those to Japan. Average Japanese or European industrial consumers pay more than twice as much for electricity as their counterparts in the United States, and even China’s industry pays almost double the US level. In WEO-2013, large variations in energy prices persist through to 2035, affecting company strategies and investment decisions in energy-intensive industries. The United States sees its share of global exports of energy-intensive goods slightly increase to 2035, providing the clearest indication of the link between relatively low energy prices and the industrial outlook. By contrast, the European Union and Japan see their share of global exports decline – a combined loss of around one-third of their current share.

  • Jordanie : suite du débat parlemantaire sur l’électricité
    MPs drag electricity issues into state budget debate | The Jordan Times
    http://jordantimes.com/mps-drag-electricity-issues-into-state-budget-debate

    the Financial Committee addressed the challenges facing the national economy, including the rise of energy prices and the influx of Syrian refugees into the country.

    “It is a waste of time and effort to discuss a yearly budget halfway through the year,” he said.

    The government structured its budget around the idea that electricity subsidies would be lifted, a move that has been wholeheartedly rejected, Tarawneh added.

    He suggested that the Lower House vote first on the electricity subsidies before discussing the budget.

    The major motivation behind the government’s decision to lift subsidies on electricity is to curb the state budget deficit.

    The move to increase the prices of electricity in the Kingdom is facing overwhelming parliamentary opposition.

    On Tuesday, Prime Minister Abdullah Ensour told deputies that the hike in electricity prices would only apply to bills that exceed JD50, and that the lifting of subsidies would not occur until 2014.

  • A Global Energy Shift

    http://www.globalpolicy.org/component/content/article/198-natural-resources/52101-a-global-energy-shift.html

    By James Parker
    The Diplomat
    November 28, 2012

    The International Energy Agency (IEA) has published the World Energy Outlook report in which a large shift in global energy production through 2030 is predicted. North America will undergo a “supply boom”, leading to lower global energy prices, following the extraction of shale gas and unconventional oil. However, these extraction processes, including oil from tar sands, raise environmental concerns. Simultaneously, in China, Japan and India the demand for natural resources will soar. This monumental shift in the world’s energy supply and demand could increase tensions in the Asia-Pacific and in the Middle East as the world’s largest economies are shifting their geopolitical focus according to their energy needs.