Energy Crisis

EU bans Russian coal imports – what lies ahead for global coal, gas, power prices

EU bans coal import from Russia, world to prepare for surge in coal, gas, power prices

Photo: WikimediaImages from Pixabay

Published

April 8, 2022

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

April 8, 2022

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Under the new package of sanctions against Russia, the European Union will ban imports of coal from August. The move is likely to prompt a rise in prices of coal, natural gas, and electricity prices worldwide, and boost power and gas bills for households and companies.

According to the Council of the EU, the fifth package of sanctions includes a prohibition to purchase, import or transfer coal and other solid fossil fuels into the EU if they originate in Russia or are exported from Russia, as of August 2022. Imports of coal into the EU are currently worth EUR 8 billion per year, the council said.

The EU imports more than 40 percent of the coal it consumes, and half is supplied from Russia. According to Rystad Energy, Germany and the Netherlands are the largest coal importers in the EU.

Russia covers 70 percent of the EU’s imports of thermal coal, which is crucial for power production

Looking just at thermal coal imports into the EU, the dependency is much higher as Russia covers 70 percent of all shipments from abroad – it is typically high-energy bituminous coal, crucial for power stations that are designed to run on such fuel, Rystad said.

Of note, in 2021 EU produced 14 percent of electricity from coal.

The EU’s move comes at a moment when coal prices are on the rise. Northwest coal futures prices have increased from around USD 70 per tonne in January 2021 to almost USD 450 in March 2022, and the current price is at USD 300.

Eastern Europe, Germany to experience hardest blow

Eastern Europe and Germany will be hit particularly hard as they generate a significant share of their electricity with Russian thermal coal, Rystad said.

It added that EU countries will have to find alternative sources of supply in a “market where prices have more than quadrupled in the past year.”

Rystad: Sanctions are a double-edged sword

“These latest sanctions are a double-edged sword. Russian coal exports are worth an estimated EUR 4 billion per year, and there is no easy like-for-like replacement for Russian coal in Europe’s power mix. European consumers – from large companies to households – should expect high prices for the remainder of 2022 as coal and gas are essential to meet the continent’s power demand,” said Carlos Torres Diaz, head of Rystad Energy’s Power Market Research team.

According to Reuters, the EU could turn to Colombia, South Africa, Indonesia and Australia for supplies, which could push coal importers such as China, Japan, India and South Korea to switch to Russian supplies.

However, imports from South America, Asia, and Australia come at a high cost due to expensive transport.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

serbia wind farm plandiste nis met dubravka djedovic

Government of Serbia interested in taking over Plandište wind project

25 July 2025 - Plandište is one of the projects that obtained feed-in tariffs under the first quota of 500 MW for wind power plants in Serbia

Project 81 MW solar park on coal mine in Montenegro

Project underway for 81 MW solar park on coal mine in Montenegro

24 July 2025 - The Government of Montenegro gave a provisional green light for a solar power plant of 81.1 MW in peak capacity on coal land in Pljevlja

croatia rp global novalja solar ebrd loan

RP Global gets EUR 12.2 million loan for Novalja solar project

24 July 2025 - In late April, Austrian company RP Global began the construction of the Novalja PV plant at the Zaglava site on the island of Pag

solarpower europe report 2025

EU faces first annual solar installation decline since 2015 – report

24 July 2025 - The EU is set to install less new solar in 2025 than it did in 2024 - the first annual drop in a decade, according to SolarPower Europe