Sunday, July 3, 2022

Germany Risks a Cascade of Utility Failures, Economy Chief Says - Bloomberg

Germany Risks a Cascade of Utility Failures, Economy Chief Says

by Alexander Kell

Germany should prepare for deeper cuts in Russian gas supplies because President Vladimir Putin is pursuing a conscious strategy of driving up prices to undermine European unity, Economy Minister Robert Habeck said.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-07-02/germany-risks-a-cascade-of-utility-failures-economy-chief-says?sref=woWS9Szx

Top German industries could face collapse because of cuts in the supplies of Russian natural gas, the country's top union official warned before crisis talks with Chancellor Olaf Scholz starting Monday. 

"Because of the gas bottlenecks, entire industries are in danger of permanently collapsing: aluminum, glass, the chemical industry," said Yasmin Fahimi, the head of the German Federation of Trade Unions (DGB), in an interview with the newspaper Bild am Sonntag. "Such a collapse would have massive consequences for the entire economy and jobs in Germany."

The energy crisis is already driving inflation to record highs, she said. Fahimi is calling for a price cap on energy for households. The rising costs for Co2 emissions mean further burdens for households and companies, Fahimi added. The crisis could lead to social and labor unrest, she said.  

Gas Shock

Potential German GDP losses due to production cutbacks in the case of natural gas rationing*

Source: Bundesbank

Note: Calculations based on the 2018 German input-output table produced by the Federal statistics office. * Shocks to non-prioritized industrial sectors and to services depending on the natural gas intensity of their activities.

Economics Minister Robert Habeck said on Saturday that the government is working on ways to address the surging costs both utilities and their customers face, without giving details. Earlier he had warned that the squeeze on Russian gas supplies risks creating deeper turmoil, likening the situation to the role of Lehman Brothers in triggering the financial crisis in 2008.

Russia has reduced shipments through Nord Stream pipeline by 60% and the pipeline is scheduled for a full shutdown this month for maintenance. Germany has raised doubts that Nord Stream will resume supply after that.

READ MORE...
    Up Next
    Germany Risks a Cascade of Utility Failures, Economy Chief Says
    Politics
    Economics

    Germany Risks a Cascade of Utility Failures, Economy Chief Says

    • Further gas cuts would be logical in Putin 'economic warfare'
    • High natural-gas prices risk creating domino effect: Habeck
    Robert Habeck
    Robert HabeckPhotographer: Liesa Johannssen-Koppitz/Bloomberg
    July 2, 2022, 3:48 PM EDT

    Listen to this article

    2:34
    Follow the authors

    Germany should prepare for deeper cuts in Russian gas supplies because President Vladimir Putin is pursuing a conscious strategy of driving up prices to undermine European unity, Economy Minister Robert Habeck said.

    "We aren't dealing with erratic decisions but with economic warfare, completely rational and very clear," Habeck, the deputy chancellor in Olaf Scholz's government, said Saturday on a panel. "After a 60% reduction, the next one logically follows."

    German leaders are stepping up warnings of impending turmoil and natural-gas shortages in Europe's biggest economy, which relies on Russia for about one-third of its energy. Putin has gradually reduced supplies after European countries imposed sanctions in response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

    German utilities are at risk of cascading failures that might require activating a legal clause that would allow them to pass on price increases outside of contract commitments, Habeck said.  

    Germany has refrained from activating the measure for now because it would lead to an "immediate price explosion" for consumers, he said at an event sponsored by the Die Zeit weekly. The government is working on an alternative, he said, without elaborating. 

    "If one company were to fail, or other companies were to fail, it's like a domino effect that would very quickly lead into a deep recession," he said.

    European energy companies are facing a squeeze after Russia curbed flows on a key gas link earlier this month, forcing utilities to buy fuel on the spot market at elevated prices. High power prices are increasingly prompting German factories and businesses to curb demand and the government has activated the second stage of a three-stage gas emergency plan. 

    Gas Shock

    Potential German GDP losses due to production cutbacks in the case of natural gas rationing*

    Source: Bundesbank

    Note: Calculations based on the 2018 German input-output table produced by the Federal statistics office. * Shocks to non-prioritized industrial sectors and to services depending on the natural gas intensity of their activities.

    Russia has reduced shipments through Nord Stream by 60% and the pipeline is scheduled for a full shutdown this month for maintenance. Germany has raised doubts that Nord Stream will resume supply after that.

    Russia's goal is to keep energy prices high and "destroy the unity and solidarity of the country," Habeck said.

    Germany's government and energy giant Uniper SE are discussing stabilization measures. Finance Minister Christian Lindner said any additional government assistance would be in the form of a loan guarantee.

    Gas rationing -- if it came to that -- presents challenges because the grid often isn't separated between residential and commercial customers, Habeck said.

    If a factory is connected to the gas network and a whole part of the city is connected to it, then this factory can't be taken out of the network. 

    "That will probably then be regulated at the expense of the factories that are not connected to a mixed network," Habeck said. 

    Household customers in Germany are protected by law from gas shutoffs.


    Thursday, June 30, 2022

    Fwd: "Setback" is an understatement



    ---------- Forwarded message ---------
    From: Bloomberg Equality <noreply@mail.bloombergbusiness.com>
    Date: Thu, Jun 30, 2022 at 6:16 AM
    Subject: "Setback" is an understatement
    To: <jcase4218@gmail.com>


    Hi, It's Rebecca Greenfield, editor of Bloomberg Equality, here to talk about the global ripple effects of the end of Roe v. Wade in the US.
    View in browser
    Bloomberg

    Hi, 
    It's Rebecca Greenfield, editor of Bloomberg Equality, here to talk about the global ripple effects of the end of Roe v. Wade in the US. But first...

    This week's must-read news: 

    A Global Setback for Abortion Rights Starts in the US 

    Tedros Ghebreyesus, the director-general of the World Health Organization, on Wednesday called the end of legal abortion in the US a "setback" for a 40-year global trend toward increased abortion access around the world. 

    The US Supreme Court ruling has, in fact, made the country an outlier. Abortion is legal in every other G7 country, as it is in China and India; even conservative Catholic countries like Argentina and Colombia have liberalized their laws, as have Benin and the Democratic Republic of Congo

    "With this decision, the US joins a handful of autocratic, anti-democratic countries bent on denying human rights and restricting access to abortion," Ipas, an NGO working to increase abortion and contraceptive access globally, said in a statement.

    In spite of the progress many countries have made, the ruling also emphasized how precarious reproductive rights can be. South Korea, for example, legalized abortion more than a year ago but has yet to regulate the procedure, leaving access largely up to doctors' discretion. Mexico also decriminalized abortion last year, but it will take state-level action to make clinics and care readily available.

    Elsewhere the right to abortion is qualified and conditional. Japan, for example, is on the cusp of approving the pills used for inducing an abortion, but may require women get spousal consent to take them — already a requirement for getting an abortion procedure there. Israel this week loosened restrictions, but still requires women to make their case to a committee to get an abortion. 

    In other words, the right to choose still comes with a fairly large asterisk in many places, and some worry the US decision could trigger an anti-abortion wave around the world. "This is going to fuel the conservative elements in any other country that chooses to be inspired by it," said Margaret Thomas, a board member and past president of Aware, which advocates for gender equality in Singapore. 

    To that end, Ghebreyesus had this to say: "It is more important than ever to come together to protect women's right to safe abortion —everywhere."   —Rebecca Greenfield

    By the numbers

    93%
    The proportion of abortions done within the first trimester, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.

    What we're reading

    New Voices

    "All kinds of private companies commit acts of negligence... but legislatures have seen fit to offer these special protections only to gun manufacturers"
    Kristina Infante
    A Miami lawyer suing a gun manufacturer over the 2018 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.
    Bloomberg News supports amplifying the voices of women and other under-represented executives across our media platforms.

    From our partners at

    Ebony

    Bloomberg Media and EBONY are partnering to explore economic and societal inequities facing the Black community. Subscribe to Inside EBONY for more news from EBONY.com.

    Follow Us

    Like getting this newsletter? Subscribe to Bloomberg.com for unlimited access to trusted, data-driven journalism and subscriber-only insights.

    Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal. Find out more about how the Terminal delivers information and analysis that financial professionals can't find anywhere else. Learn more.

    You received this message because you are subscribed to Bloomberg's Equality newsletter. If a friend forwarded you this message, sign up here to get it in your inbox.
    Unsubscribe
    Bloomberg.com
    Contact Us
    Bloomberg L.P.
    731 Lexington Avenue,
    New York, NY 10022
    Ads Powered By Liveintent Ad Choices


    --