A single market for natural gas
May 28th, 2008 by Pierre Noël, University of CambridgeThere is a broad consensus in Brussels on the need for an external energy policy to diversify suppliers and routes and loosen Russia’s grip on the European natural gas market.
Writing recently about the emerging European energy diplomacy, Benita Ferrer Waldner, Commissioner for external relations, said the European Union had signed or was negotiating agreements with Azerbaijan, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Algeria, Egypt, Morocco, Jordan, Iraq, the countries of the Gulf Co-operation Council and, “when the political situation will allow it”, it would negotiate with Iran.
The list looks impressive but, in fact, the scheme makes little sense. Almost everything in this vision – the availability of gas resources, the possibility to develop them, the political and commercial feasibility of the transport infrastructure – is hypothetical at best.
The recent announcements about Turkmen and Iraqi gas exports to Europe illustrate the virtual nature of the EU’s foreign energy policy. It is not clear whether Turkmenistan, given existing contractual commitments, has 10bn cubic metres of gas available for the EU. But it will not be tested as the proposed options to ship Turkmen gas to the western shore of the Caspian Sea are nowhere near credible. In any case no commercial contract has been signed. The Iraqi announcement (of 5bn cubic metres annually starting “in the next 3-4 years”) has even less commercial reality behind it.
The common denominator in these two announcements is the Nabucco project, a new “gas corridor” to Europe through Turkey that is the centrepiece of the European plan to diversify away from Russia. Yet there is no earmarked gas to feed Nabucco, either in central Asia or the Middle East. The pipeline is conceived as an enabling project that, once built, will gather gas from various sources.
But financing a multibillion euro international gas pipeline requires a long-term contract between buyers and an upstream company controlling a large resource base. Diplomatic involvement can help reduce non-commercial risk, but cannot substitute for commercial logic. EU officials are desperate to show there is potentially a lot of gas that could flow through Nabucco, but even if that is true it does not make it more likely to be built.
This is not necessarily worrying. The idea that Europe lacks, or will soon lack, access to a diversified and secure (read: non-Russian) natural gas supply is not backed by the data. Even as Russia expanded exports to Europe, its share of European imports (for the 27 current member states) has roughly been halved since 1980, from 80 per cent to about 40 per cent. Since 1990, 80 per cent of the rise in EU gas imports has been from non-Russian sources. Europe already enjoys a diversified natural gas supply. Russia’s failure (or unwillingness) to develop its resource base and expand exports to Europe is bound to make the European market all the more attractive for other exporters in the coming years – though it will also mean higher prices.
Europe faces three main gas security challenges. The first is to export gas supply diversity from western Europe to eastern Europe, where the rate of dependence on Russia is much higher but gas markets are much smaller. Market integration is the only way to do that. A single European gas market would create de facto solidarity between all consumers and the bilateral dependencies would become largely irrelevant.
The second challenge is to increase the ability of Europe as a whole to cope with supply disruptions, whatever their causes. Here again, market integration and competition is the way to go. A well-functioning market transforms any localised physical shortage into a universal price increase. Additional measures such as interruptible contracts and emergency inventories would help reduce the economic impact of supply shocks.
The third challenge is to remove the debilitating effect of the EU-Russia gas relationship on EU foreign policy towards Russia. A European integrated and flexible gas market would make eastern Europe more secure, just as it would make the relationship between Gazprom and large utility importers in Germany, Italy or France less cosy. This is a better position from which to speak with one voice to Moscow.
Building a well-functioning internal gas market is less grandiose than developing a foreign energy policy, but also more promising. This is what the Commission should concentrate on.
Pierre Noël, Researcher at the University of Cambridge (EPRG) and at the European Council on Foreign Relations
P.S. This article was published in the Financial Times on 14th May 2008.
May 28th, 2008 at 11:40 am
I dont know if I am being lame since I do not have that much knowledge about situation in Europe.But I read one blog sometime back on this forum itself that Europe(esp. France) is more into Nuclear energy and will be developing even more.So i think energy dependance on Russia should generally continue to decrease.
June 4th, 2008 at 4:48 pm
Dr. Noël makes a good case for a market—instead of a political—response to deal with both the perceived bargaining strength of Russia and the threat of gas supply disruptions (whether environmental or political). Governments seldom in history have made wise decisions on where to place gas pipelines on a continental scale. One should not expect the EU to do better.
Continental gas markets with the flexibility that Noël calls for cannot develop without genuine, short-term and responsive competition in pipeline transport. Such is the most important lesson from the tortured 100-year, trial-and-error history of the US gas market. And competition in gas transport in turn requires continent-wide transparency in available capacity and pricing as well as continent-wide standardized rules for the contractual leasing and sub-leasing of that capacity.
The barriers to Europe, west or east, of enjoying such a market are formidable. Those barriers are: (1) a stunning lack of transparency on Europe’s existing pipeline network; (2) no demonstrated ability within Europe’s legal system to write transport contracts that give shippers tradable property rights over actual point-to-point capacity; and (3) extensive vertical integration that leaves nobody but a disjoint and as-yet ineffective set of regulatory bodies to push for solutions to the first two barriers.
Europe is currently beset by long-term, oil-price-linked, gas contracts between vertically-integrated suppliers on an opaque transport network overseen by multiple regulators. Those barriers to a single European market—one that has the power to underwrite truly competitive commercial pipeline supply links—are truly daunting. But the work that Noël calls for lies there.
November 3rd, 2010 at 12:04 pm
Energy dependence on Russia will decrease further in the future as Western European countries are looking to become more energy-independent. While sustainable energy sources are still in the minority, countries such as France will look to increase their nuclear energy generation in parallel with developing wind energy and solar.