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Europe Scrambles to Contain the Energy Shock


Yves here. Today we are providing a mini-tour d’horizon of the impact of the accelerating energy crisis on Europe and Asia (the Asia analysis by Satyajit Das launches shortly). As readers likely recognize, the European supply reductions and resulting price spikes come on top of the Russia-energy sanctions and resulting inflation and de-industrialization.

Par for the course, this article indicates that policy-makers see ECB rate hikes as the first line of defense, when all central banks can do is kill demand in a blunt way, as opposed to discourage consumption and direct supplies to critical sectors.

I hope readers in region can give sightings on the sort of prices increases they are seeing, since higher cost energy quickly propagates into other products. For instance, a friend in Slovenia says that food costs have increased by 10% in four months. That cannot be the result of fertilizer shortages, since the impact of reductions in planting this spring won’t show up until harvest time.

By Tsvetana Paraskova, an energy and commodities journalist who has contributed to Oilprice.com for nearly a decade, covering global energy markets, commodities, and the geopolitical and economic developments shaping supply and demand. Previously, she worked as a journalist and editor for financial and business news organizations, including iNVEZZ and SeeNews. Originally published at OilPrice

  • The Iran war-driven surge in oil and gas prices is pushing inflation higher and slowing economic growth in the EU and Eurozone.
  • Unlike the 2022 crisis, Europe is less vulnerable due to lower fossil fuel dependence, increased renewable energy capacity, and reduced energy consumption.
  • Rising energy costs have lifted Eurozone inflation to its highest level since 2023, strengthening expectations that the European Central Bank will raise interest rates

The European Union and the Eurozone are feeling the energy shock as the Iran war enters its fourth month.

The spike in oil and gas prices amid the Middle East crisis is raising inflation and moderating economic growth expectations in the EU and the Euro area, which are grappling with the second energy crisis in four years.

Comparisons with the 2022 inflation and gas supply shock in the wake of the Russian invasion of Ukraine are flawed as circumstances are different and the likelihood of runaway inflation is low, analysts and economists say.

Nevertheless, the European Commission and the European Central Bank (ECB) prefer to act earlier this time in terms of tweaking fiscal and policy response, even if the current price shock is still seen as transitory.

The European Commission, the executive arm of the EU, is considering giving the EU member states more flexibility in spending on energy-related measures outside the fiscal framework, sources with knowledge of the discussions told Bloomberg this week.

The EC mulls over a plan to allow EU member states to spend 0.3% of GDP on energy-related measures outside the EU’s fiscal framework as European nations scramble to contain the energy price shock.

The current energy crisis is different from the 2022 shock when Europe lost one-third of its pipeline gas supply. This time around, the EU has reduced its reliance on fossil fuels, both through the expansion of renewable energy, which is weakening the pass-through from gas to electricity prices and through a sizeable reduction in energy use by industry and households, the European Commission said in its Spring 2026 Economic Forecast last month. Related: The Strait of Hormuz May Reopen, But the System Has Already Broken

In this forecast, the Commission expects GDP growth in the EU to slow to 1.1% this year, down from 1.5% in 2025, and 0.3 percentage points lower than expected in the Autumn 2025 Forecast. Inflation is expected to rise to 3.1%, an upward revision of a full percentage point compared to the Autumn 2025 Forecast.

“The conflict in the Middle East has triggered a major energy shock. The EU must learn from past crises: keep support temporary and targeted, safeguard public finances, reduce reliance on imported fossil fuels, and accelerate reforms,” said Valdis Dombrovskis, Commissioner for Economy and Productivity.

The Commission noted in its spring forecast that “In response to higher inflation, the ECB and most other EU central banks are expected to tighten their monetary policy stance or, at a minimum, delay previously anticipated easing measures.”

An ECB rate hike is all but certain when the bank’s Governing Council meets in Frankfurt next week, as inflation in the Eurozone accelerated in May to the highest annual rate since September 2023, analysts say.

Euro area annual inflation is expected to be 3.2% in May 2026, up from 3.0% in April, the flash estimate from Eurostat, the statistical office of the European Union, showed on Tuesday.

Energy is expected to have the highest annual rate in May at 10.9%, compared with 10.8% in April, followed by services (3.5%, accelerated from 3.0% in April).

The inflation numbers bolster the case for an ECB rate hike at the June 11 meeting, even if a small 0.25-percentage-point hike would be a kind of ‘insurance’ hike to show the ECB’s determination to keep inflation expectations anchored, analysts at ING say.

“Given the 2022 experience, the ECB is likely to opt for an ‘insurance’ rate hike. Not that a rate hike will do a lot to affect inflation expectations, but it would be a symbolic move, stressing the ECB’s determination to act,” said Carsten Brzeski, Global Head of Macro at ING.

“Even if the war in the Middle East were to end tomorrow, the damage to inflation has already been done. Inflation has started – and will continue – to hit the eurozone economy,” Brzeski added.

“The only question is whether it will fall in the category of ‘transitory’ or whether supply chain disruptions could create more knock-on effects than ‘only’ on transportation and food prices.”

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