Finance

Heavy industry urges EU to tame ‘unbearably high’ energy prices

Published by Jessica Weisman-Pitts

Posted on December 23, 2021

2 min read

· Last updated: January 28, 2026

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By Kate Abnett and Susanna Twidale BRUSSELS (Reuters) – Energy intensive industries have urged the European Union to address soaring energy prices, saying the record costs have hit their competitiveness and could prompt European companies to relocate. Extending months of price rises, European gas hit record levels this week in response to low storage, cooler […]

EU Industries Urge Action on High Energy Prices

By Kate Abnett and Susanna Twidale

BRUSSELS (Reuters) – Energy intensive industries have urged the European Union to address soaring energy prices, saying the record costs have hit their competitiveness and could prompt European companies to relocate.

Extending months of price rises, European gas hit record levels this week in response to low storage, cooler temperatures and fears over supply from Russia.

The Dutch front month contract reached 184.95 euros per megawatt hour on Tuesday, having increased by more than 800% since the start of the year.

The gas price surge has inflated Europe’s power costs, also stoked to a lesser extent by CO2 permit prices and reduced French nuclear capacity, leading some industries to curtail production.

Benchmark German front-year power prices are around 500% higher than at the start of the year.

“A prolonged period of unbearably high energy prices could lead to severe losses, relocation of European companies and an increase of carbon leakage,” a group of European industry associations, among them cement group Cembureau, metals group Eurometaux, steel lobby Eurofer and Fertilizers Europe, said in a statement on Wednesday.

“Urgent actions are necessary at EU level to enable affected companies to overcome this situation, which is expected to last several months more, and continue investing in energy transition in Europe,” the groups said.

Carbon leakage would occur if companies left Europe to avoid paying for their emissions via the EU carbon market. Carbon permit prices have more than doubled this year, and the industry groups called for a reform of the market.

Around 20 of the EU’s 27 member states have rolled out emergency measures in response to the price surge, including energy tax reductions and subsidies for consumer bills.

EU countries are largely responsible for their national energy policy, but some want Brussels to reform how Europe sets electricity prices, to link them more closely to each nation’s generation mix.

Currently, power prices are set by the ultimate generation plant needed to meet demand – often, a gas plant.

Brussels has said the best defence against the volatile price of imported fossil fuels is for countries to shift to low-carbon, locally produced energy, as laid out under the EU’s climate change goals.

(Reporting by Kate Abnett in Brussels and Susanna Twidale in London; editing by Barbara Lewis)

Key Takeaways

  • Energy prices in Europe are at record highs, affecting competitiveness.
  • Industries warn of potential relocations due to high costs.
  • EU urged to reform carbon market to prevent carbon leakage.
  • Some EU states have implemented emergency measures.
  • Shift to low-carbon energy is suggested as a long-term solution.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the main topic?
The article discusses the impact of high energy prices on EU industries and calls for EU-level action.
Why are energy prices high in Europe?
Energy prices have surged due to low storage, cooler temperatures, and supply fears from Russia.
What are the potential consequences of high energy prices?
High energy prices could lead to company relocations and increased carbon leakage.

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