Listening to European Electricity Traders Is Very, Very Scary

From NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT

By Paul Homewood

h/t Dave Ward

Every week, the people who trade electricity in the UK get to quiz the managers of the national grid for an hour. The conference call, which anyone can monitor, offers an insight into what the men and women on the front line of the power market are worried about. Listening to them is getting scarier by the week — and suggests keeping the lights on this winter will be a lot more challenging than European governments are admitting.

Prices are worrying enough. British households were told on Friday that their power and gas bills will increase from Oct. 1 by 80%. The so-called energy price cap was set at £3,549 ($4,189) per year, up from £1,971 over the past six months and £1,277 during last winter.

But the industry’s teleconference suggests the problem is broader than just rising costs. Increasingly, the words “emergency” and “shortages” are being used, with participants focusing on when, rather than if, a crisis will hit. Imagine being able to overhear conversations between Wall Street executives and the Federal Reserve as the global financial crisis unfolded in 2008.

Here’s a question from last week’s session: “Are you war-gaming possible options for if/when cross-border trading collapses under security of supply pressures this winter?” And another: “Can we have a session where we talk through the emergency arrangements?” Another participant said that the forecast for demand-and-supply electricity balance showed “how bad the winter could be for anyone who can do the maths.” The same caller was blunt about the grid’s own predictions: “I don’t think you believe what you’ve written, and nobody else does.”

One intervention was particularly revealing. “Based on where winter ‘22 products are trading, where does this position yourself with respect to securing power over the winter?” asked one participant. The background? In the forward market, UK power for December 2022 is fast approaching £1,000 per megawatt hour, up 50% from current prices. The implication? Power shortages.

Compare the tone with the British government’s insistence that there’s nothing to worry about. “Households, businesses and industry can be confident they will get the electricity and gas that they need over the winter,” Downing Street said earlier this week. “That’s because we have one of the most reliable and diverse energy systems in the world.”

The weekly call is officially known as the “ESO Operational Transparency Forum,” and allows market participants to query the managers of the so-called Electricity National Control Centre, the hub that moves power around the UK from generators to traders to consumers. The forum typically deals with obscure power-trading problems. But in recent weeks, attention has shifted to crisis management. Another example from earlier this month: “If a system-stress event is active in both gas and power, how do the electricity system operator and gas control center communicate? Which stress event takes priority?” What’s particularly worrying is how few of the disaster scenarios appear to have been planned for.

A key concern is what happens if European countries introduce beggar-thy-neighbor policies by shutting down cross-border electricity flows, as Norway has already said it’s considering. “Please, the market needs to understand more fully how interconnectors are to be used in periods of very high prices and potential generation shortfall,” one market participant said last week.

Another topic is how much consumption might drop if households and businesses can’t afford elevated electricity and gas prices. “What level of demand reduction, demand destruction, are you forecasting for the winter ahead from commercial industrial consumers as a price response?” was one recent example. Another repeated the request: “What demand destruction, if any, is included in your demand forecast for this winter for residential and industry?” The grid managers were unable to supply any numbersto the callers.

To be sure, the call should focus on potential troubles ahead — it exists to anticipate and solve problems. Buthaving listened in on multiple occasions over the last few months, I have three takeaways. First, the looming power emergency is worse than many industry executives publicly acknowledge, and a lot more dangerous than the government admits. Second, high prices are a big problem, but security of supply is at risk, too. Third, time is running out to prepare before temperatures start to drop. 

The manager of the Finnish grid, in a rare example of the kind of transparency that’s badly needed, told citizens earlier this week to prepare for shortages this winter. European governments have a duty to come clean with their voters about the magnitude of the coming crisis. Minimizing the scale of the problem or, worse, pretending there’s not an issue, won’t keep the power running this winter.

https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2022-08-26/european-energy-crisis-listening-to-electricity-traders-is-very-very-scary#xj4y7vzkg

While we can blame Russia for the current gas supply problems, the real cause of this looming disaster has been the government enforced shutdown of most of our coal generating capacity during the last decade:

https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/electricity-chapter-5-digest-of-united-kingdom-energy-statistics-dukes

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August 30, 2022 12:30 am

Headline:”Horror as State Pension could pay £324 less than average energy bill
here

August 30, 2022 12:35 am

this is very true. what is particularly worrying is i read yesterday that german officials are atting themse levs on the back that their gas resevres will be at 85% in september.
85% ffs? they need to be a 500% or whatever five months supply is.
i am buying loads of wood, a small ups and cheap generator.

August 30, 2022 12:41 am

While we can blame Russia for the current gas supply problems, the real cause of this looming disaster has been the government enforced shutdown of most of our coal generating capacity during the last decade:

But the shutdown of coal was caused by Green campaigning.
And who do you think funded the Green campaigns?
CLUE: Qui Bono?

IanE
Reply to  M Courtney
August 30, 2022 1:26 am

Also, of course, as with covid, it is the response by the West to Russian activities that has increased the problems and NOT the Russian actions per se!

Robert Hanson
Reply to  IanE
August 30, 2022 5:15 pm

Yes, but not just Putin. Qatar, one of the top producers of LNG, is also a major secret contributor to the Green alarmism in the West. The money is funneled thru various ‘non-profits’ who then send it on to the green NGOs, to conceal the source of the funding. 

EppingBlogger
August 30, 2022 12:48 am

On these numbers over 75 per cent of coal generating capacity has been destroyed since Cameron-Clegg came into office. All with the enthusiastic support an d encouragement of all opposition parties, the BBC and the rest of the MSM. It is my understanding this loss ofcoal capacity is not through mothballing (as in Germany) which can be rapidly brought back into use, but by the physical destruction of the assets.

Just as with Covid, wrong policies were followed because nobody who had thought it through was allowed to have a public platform. Those we pay (well!) to look after these things simply did not do the maths and tell government and tell us what were the implications.

Robert Hanson
Reply to  EppingBlogger
August 30, 2022 5:18 pm

Oh, they’ve thought it through all right. The Great Reset isn’t happening by accident. 

Martin
August 30, 2022 1:07 am

I stocked up on candles last week

griff
August 30, 2022 1:38 am

The only causes of this crisis are fossil fuel – gas – prices and political action by Russia.

More coal generation in the UK would not have removed the problem of rising home heating costs, given the amount of gas home heating in the UK.

Reply to  griff
August 30, 2022 5:13 am

Wrong. Fire up 10GWe of coal and you free up 20GW of gas to heat homes. Equivalent to 1 LNG tanker every two days saved. We did this in the aftermath of Fukushina when we still had coal capacity and LNG was relatively expensive. It’s not theory.

Reply to  griff
August 30, 2022 6:18 am

Great, now the UK’s heating is controlled by Qatar, and all that gas has to be brought in on some of the biggest tankers in the world, welcome to Green™ utopia.

observa
Reply to  griff
August 30, 2022 7:28 am

griff you and Nick and the rest of the watermelon fantasist climate changers are about to be consigned to the dustbin of history-
EU sets sights on energy market reform as prices soar (msn.com)
Shell boss warns energy crisis will not be limited to ‘just one winter’ and fuel could be rationed (msn.com)
They’re coming thick and fast now as you can feel the momentum building for the rush for the exits but you keep right on believing in cranking up those windmills and solar panels.

Robert Hanson
Reply to  observa
August 30, 2022 5:25 pm

The world must continue to extract oil and gas in order to sustain civilization, while also developing sustainable sources of energy, Tesla founder Elon Musk told reporters at a conference in Norway on Monday.
“Realistically I think we need to use oil and gas in the short term, because otherwise civilization will crumble,” Musk said on the sidelines of an energy conference in the southern city of Stavanger.

observa
Reply to  griff
August 30, 2022 8:01 am

Hey griff. When your solar/windmill powered EV wet dream turns into a nightmare it’s time to change the narrative quick smart and get on yer bike-
The age of the ‘car is king’ is over. The sooner we accept that, the better (msn.com)
Sense which way the wind is blowing and climb off the high horse. So predictable.

Dave Andrews
Reply to  griff
August 30, 2022 8:43 am

The UK would not be in its current dire position if it had not allowed the Rough storage facility in the North Sea to close in 2017 and instead of long term contracts rely on the spot market. Rough provided 70% of the UK’s gas storage capacity and could meet 10% of daily peak winter demand for nearly 3 months. The Government’s decision to allow the closure added £400m pa to consumers electricity bills.

August 30, 2022 2:41 am

We are screwed.

LARRY K SIDERS
August 30, 2022 3:30 am

These folks VOTED for expensive and unreliable energy…so let them suffer.

We won’t see the real body counts this winter…as truth in the Press has become more scarce than cheap energy.

Matt G
Reply to  LARRY K SIDERS
August 30, 2022 4:24 pm

For the UK there was no choice.

Which one would you have picked?

Conservatives – expensive and unreliable energy
Labour – expensive and unreliable energy
Lib Dems – expensive and unreliable energy
Green Party – expensive and unreliable energy

“The Green Party of England and Wales is leading the fight for climate action, a people’s vote, and a fairer society for all.”

They are all for net zero and the biggest mistake they will ever do.

Businesses will close because they can’t afford the huge energy bills and many people will be placed into significant poverty. The choice between eating or heating will lead to many increased deaths that could had been prevented during especially the Winter.

Tom Abbott
Reply to  Matt G
August 31, 2022 5:24 am

“Which one would you have picked?”

There appear to be no good choices. The Delusion is wide and deep.

vboring
August 30, 2022 4:13 am

These problems are big and slow. It is probably too late to solve them for this winter. If the weather is bad, more people are going to die than usual.

Find someone with coal or wood heating and a big pile of fuel, become their best friend. It might save your life.

observa
August 30, 2022 6:19 am

“Households, businesses and industry can be confident they will get the electricity and gas that they need over the winter,” Downing Street said earlier this week. “That’s because we have one of the most reliable and diverse energy systems in the world.”

Not according to Benny-
Europe no longer has a ‘diversified energy system’ (msn.com)
So start saving energy now-
Switzerland’s engineering sector urges country to start energy saving now (msn.com)
The climate changers are in deep doo doo right now.

On the Outer Barcoo
Reply to  observa
August 30, 2022 1:19 pm

According to the IPCC, carbon dioxide causes global warming but over a few years, the term “global warming” has been replaced by “climate change”. This switch implies that carbon dioxide is to blame for both global cooling and global warming. The only missing piece of the puzzle is an explanation.of this logic.

Robert Hanson
Reply to  On the Outer Barcoo
August 30, 2022 5:30 pm

When Climate change makes it warmer, and Climate change makes it colder, when Climate change causes drought, and Climate change causes flooding, and when it’s just normal that’s caused by Climate change too…I have a hard time calling that “logic”.

roaddog
Reply to  observa
August 30, 2022 11:41 pm

How can you tell when a politician is lying?

mikee
Reply to  roaddog
August 31, 2022 3:03 am

The lips are moving!

John Garrett
August 30, 2022 8:42 am

Catastrophe Averted ???

30 August

(Bloomberg) — The European Union met its gas storage filling goal two months ahead of target as the bloc braces for a tough winter with Russia limiting supplies and energy contracts trading at elevated levels throughout the continent.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen celebrated the milestone on Monday, telling an audience at an energy conference in Denmark that the reserves hit an average of 80%, a target the EU had aimed to reach by Nov. 1…

…In Germany, gas stores are filling up fast and are expected to meet an October domestic target of 85% full already next month, Economy Minister Robert Habeck said in a statement on Sunday.

But even with full storage sites, Germany risks not being able to make it through the winter if Russia stops gas flows, Klaus Mueller, president of the Federal Network Agency, the country’s energy regulator, said in an interview with Bloomberg News earlier this month.

The latest data on storage levels is welcome relief for the market and helped push gas and power prices down further on Tuesday after drops of 20% or more for the benchmark contracts on Monday.

On the Outer Barcoo
Reply to  John Garrett
August 30, 2022 1:20 pm

And the next winter?

John Garrett
Reply to  On the Outer Barcoo
August 30, 2022 5:50 pm

“The solution to high prices is high prices.”
-T. Boone Pickens

roaddog
Reply to  John Garrett
August 30, 2022 11:43 pm

That actually used to be true. With the advent of activist board members on major energy firms, and a federal government that is actively attacking every known reliable source of fossil-fuel-based energy, it is today a lot less accurate.

McComberBoy
August 30, 2022 11:10 am

I love the quote “…we have one of the most reliable and diverse energy systems in the world.” It can’t be both. You can have reliable or you can have unicorn farts, but not both.

observa
Reply to  McComberBoy
August 30, 2022 6:37 pm

Diversity is very important for lefties which is why they have the woke jackboot for the politically correct type.

SAMURAI
August 30, 2022 9:55 pm

EU Leftists are utterly destroying their economies.
Inflation from excessive government spending/money printing is already hurting their economies, and to create even more pain for their citizens and corporations, EU governments’ insane CAGW energy polices are causing utility costs to increase 10 fold…
it’s like Leftists absolutely hate humans and will do anything to make their lives as miserable and hopeless as possible…

 

August 31, 2022 4:29 am

Talking of scary – check out this Jackson Hinkle Dive video – 4 min 30 seconds in:

https://youtu.be/IKIsX5xYuPg

Can anyone confirm that it’s actually true that ECCC – Environment and Climate Change Canada – are setting up operations that will include:

– Armed officials empowered to check premises without warrant

– Interrogation rooms

– firearms storage rooms

– detention rooms

– Unlimited power to intrude, inspect and make arrests for environmental infringements

– A militia accountable only to Trudeau.

If this is so, then calling this climate fascism is not just extravagant rhetoric. It’s now the literal reality.

Tom Abbott
Reply to  Phil Salmon
August 31, 2022 5:28 am

After watching the dictatorial tendencies of Trudeau, it wouldn’t surprise me a bit if he were to send the police busting through your doors to make you comply with his decrees.

Trudeau will probably wait until he has confiscated all your guns, though. I think he is working on that right now.